Effect of transformation by Rous sarcoma virus on the character and distribution of actin in Rat-1 fibroblasts: A biochemical and microscopical study

Abstract
Actin has been measured in subcellular fractions from Rat-1 fibroblasts and in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed Rat-1 cells (VIT), using the DNase 1 inhibition assay. The transformed cells showed a significant shift in the actin monomer (G)in equilibrium with polymer (F) equilibrium within the cell cytosol, and a significant increase in actin in the Triton-insoluble cytoskeletal core in comparison with untransformed cells. This incorporation of actin into the cytoskeletal core fraction is associated with a change in filamentous actin assemblies from 'stress fibre' patterns to punctate filament aggregates. These differences have been correlated with changes in morphology, in actin, vinculin and alpha-actinin distribution, in adhesion plaque formation and with the production of pp60v-src-associated protein kinase activity in the transformed cells. Changes in actin distribution and its polymerization in response to src-gene expression may play an important role in the determination of the transformed cell characteristics.

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