Abstract
Cell adhesion in the sea urchin blastula is mediated by a 22S genus-specific glycoprotein complex consisting initially of six 160-kDa subunits that are processed proteolytically as development proceeds. Noncytolytic removal of the 22S particle from the surface with either 2.5% butanol or trypsin renders dissociated cells reaggregation incompetent, and addition restores reaggregation and development. Polyclonal antibodies against the 22S complex prevent reaggregation in a genus-specific manner while monoclonal antibodies stain cell surface structures in a pattern consistent with a code that specifies the position of a cell in the embryo by a unique combination of subunits in its cell adhesion particles. The existence of similar particles in Drosophila and amphibian embryos suggests that these glycoprotein complexes are a general class of organelles, the toposomes, that in the embryo mediate cell adhesion and express positional information.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Noll, H., Matranga, V., Cervello, M., Humphreys, T., Kuwasaki, B., & Adelson, D. (1985). Characterization of toposomes from sea urchin blastula cells: A cell organelle mediating cell adhesion and expressing positional information. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 82(23), 8062–8066. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.82.23.8062
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.