Transformation of Rat Fibroblasts by FSV Rapidly Increases Glucose Transporter Gene Transcription
- 20 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 235 (4795) , 1495-1498
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3029870
Abstract
Elevation of glucose transport is an alteration common to most virally induced tumors. Rat fibroblasts transformed with wild-type or a temperature-sensitive Fujinami sarcoma virus (FSV) were studied in order to determine the mechanisms underlying the increased transport. Five- to tenfold increases in total cellular glucose transporter protein in response to transformation were accompanied by similar increases in transporter messenger RNA levels. This, in turn, was preceded by an absolute increase in the rate of glucose transporter gene transcription within 30 minutes after shift of the temperature-sensitive FSV-transformed cells to the permissive temperature. The transporter messenger RNA levels in transformed fibroblasts were higher than those found in proliferating cells maintained at the nonpermissive temperature. The activation of transporter gene transcription by transformation represents one of the earliest known effects of oncogenesis on the expression of a gene encoding a protein of well-defined function.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- A block to elongation is largely responsible for decreased transcription of c-myc in differentiated HL60 cellsNature, 1986
- Enhanced Transcription of c- myc in Bursal Lymphoma Cells Requires Continuous Protein SynthesisScience, 1985
- Sequence and Structure of a Human Glucose TransporterScience, 1985
- Activation of mouse genes in transformed cellsCell, 1983
- SV40 large tumor antigen can regulate some cellular transcripts in a positive fashionCell, 1982
- A cellular protein is immunologically crossreactive with and functionally homologous to the Fujinami sarcoma virus transforming proteinCell, 1982
- A strain of Fujinami sarcoma virus which is temperature-sensitive in protein phosphorylation and cellular transformationCell, 1980
- Isolation of biologically active ribonucleic acid from sources enriched in ribonucleaseBiochemistry, 1979
- Differential expression of Rous Sarcoma virus-specific transformation parameters in enucleated cellsCell, 1978
- The effects of reciprocal changes in temperature on the transformed state of cells infected with a Rous sarcoma virus mutantVirology, 1971