CHANGE IN GLYCOSYLATION OF MEMBRANE-GLYCOPROTEINS AFTER TRANSFECTION OF NIH 3T3 WITH HUMAN-TUMOR DNA
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 44 (9) , 3730-3735
Abstract
Altered glycosylation of membrane glycoproteins was demonstrated in NIH 3T3 cells transformed by transfection with DNA from human neuroblastoma and bladder carcinoma cell lines. The oncogenes of these 2 cell lines were identified as N-ras and c-H-ras-1, respectively. The fucose-labeled membrane glycopeptides of transfection-induced transformants had decreased binding to concanavalin A-Sepharose when compared in dual-isotope experiments to those from NIH 3T3 cells, whereas binding ot lentil lectin-Sepharose and leukoagglutinating phytohemagglutinin-agarose was increased. Binding affinities to these immobilized lectins lead to the interpretation of the results as a decrease in biantennary glycopeptides with a simultaneous increase in tri- or tetraantennary glycopeptides. Sephadex G-50 profiles also indicated a size increase of the glycopeptides of the transformants. None of these changes was growth related. This altered glycosylation, representing a heretofore unreported effect of the onc genes, may be necessary for the transformed phenotype.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mutation Affecting the 12th Amino Acid of the c-Ha- ras Oncogene Product Occurs Infrequently in Human CancerScience, 1983
- Mechanism of activation of a human oncogeneNature, 1982
- Isolation of a transforming sequence from a human bladder carcinoma cell lineCell, 1982
- Structural determinants of concanavalin A specificity for oligosaccharidesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1979