Ultrastructural and histochemical differences in cell surface properties of strain-specific and nonstrain-specific TA3 adenocarcinoma cells.
Open Access
- 1 March 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 72 (3) , 511-529
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.72.3.511
Abstract
Transmission and scanning electron microscopy and histochemical and biochemical methods were used to investigate differences in cell structure and cell surface properties between the strain-specific TA3-St and nonstrain-specific TA3-Ha ascites sublines of the TA3 murine mammary adenocarcinoma. The TA3-St subline is lethal only to the syngeneic strain A mouse (the strain of origin), whereas the TA3-Ha subline is lethal even to foreign species. In contrast to the TA3-St cell surface, which has numerous folds and irregular microprojections, the TA3-Ha cell has abundant long microvilli of uniform dimensions. An extensive cell surface coat which resembles the "fuzz" coat found on microvilli of normal epithelium was present on the TA3-Ha, but not on the TA3-St cells. After routine fixation, the surface coat of the TA3-Ha cell usually appeared as a filamentous network extending 30-50 nm from the plasmalemma; occasionally, longer filamentous or rod-like structures were found extending 200-400 nm from the plasmalemma. The cell coat material was more extensive on the microvilli than on the intermicrovillous membranes. Free virus-like particles associated with TA3-Ha cells have a similar-appearing surface coat on their outer membranes. The density of surface anionic sites, determined with polycationic ferritin, was greater on the TA3-Ha than on the TA3-St cell surface, consistent with the presence at the TA3-Ha cell surface of several-fold more neuraminidase-susceptible sialic acid groups. The observed surface features of the nonstrain-specific TA3-Ha cell, in comparison to the strain-specific TA3-St cell, are consistent with the suggestion that sialic acid-rich glycoproteins at the TA3-Ha cell surface mask histocompatibility antigens and enhance the ability of malignant cells to invade foreign species.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Properties of an oncornavirus glycoprotein: Evidence for its presence on the surface of virions and infected cellsVirology, 1973
- Transplantability and Antigenicity of Two Sublines of the TA3 TumorThe Journal of Immunology, 1973
- Assessment of Concanavalin A reactivity to murine ascites tumours by inhibition of tumour cell migrationExperimental Cell Research, 1972
- Glycoprotein coat of the TA3 cell. Isolation and partial characterization of a sialic acid containing glycoprotein fractionBiochemistry, 1972
- Comparison of an Immunoresistant and an Immunosusceptible Ascites Subline From Murine Tumor TA3. I. Transplantability, Morphology, and Some Physicochemical Characteristics2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1972
- Karyotypic and Surface Features of Murine TA3 Carcinoma Cells During Immunoselection in Mice and Rats2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1971
- Glycoprotein Coat of the TA3 Cell. I. Removal of Carbohydrate and Protein Material From Viable Cells23JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1970
- THE ENTERIC SURFACE COAT ON CAT INTESTINAL MICROVILLIThe Journal of cell biology, 1965
- Isolation of the Mouse Mammary Tumor Virus: Chemical and Morphological Studies2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1965
- The Significance of Studies with Transplanted TumoursBritish Journal of Cancer, 1948