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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the isolation from two human
neuroblastoma
cell lines of an Arg-Gly-
Asp
-dependent integrin complex capable of binding to vitronectin, fibronectin, and type I collagen. The two
neuroblastoma
cell lines, SK-N-SH and IMR-32, exhibit specific attachment to fibronectin and type I collagen. SK-N-SH cells exhibit a much stronger attachment to vitronectin than the IMR-32 cells, which attach poorly to this substrate. Affinity chromatography of octylglucoside extracts of 125I surface-labeled cells on GRGDSPK-Sepharose columns resulted in the specific binding and elution with GRGDSP of three radiolabeled polypeptides with relative molecular masses of 135, 115, and 90 kD when analyzed by SDS-PAGE under nonreducing conditions. In the SK-N-SH cells the 135- and 90-kD polypeptides were more abundant whereas in the IMR-32 cells the 135- and 115-kD polypeptides were more highly expressed. Liposomes prepared from fractions containing all three polypeptides bound to vitronectin, fibronectin, and type I collagen, whereas liposomes prepared from the 135- and 115-kD polypeptides bound only to fibronectin and type I collagen. Polyclonal antibodies against the alpha/beta complexes of both the vitronectin receptor and the fibronectin receptor immunoprecipitated all three polypeptides. A monoclonal antibody against beta 1 immunoprecipitated only the 135- and the 115-kD polypeptides, whereas a monoclonal antibody against beta 3 subunit immunoprecipitated the 135- and 90-kD polypeptides. Although, the 115-kD polypeptide could be recognized by an anti-beta 1 antibody, a comparison of peptide maps generated by V8 protease digestion of the 115-kD polypeptide and beta 1 subunit immunoprecipitated from GRGDSPK-Sepharose flow-through material indicated that these two polypeptides are distinct. Depletion of the 90-kD polypeptide with an anti-beta 3 monoclonal antibody did not effect the ability of the 115- and 135-kD polypeptides to bind to GRGDSPK-Sepharose. These data indicate that the SK-N-SH and IMR-32
neuroblastoma
cells express a novel "beta 1-like" integrin subunit that can associate with alpha v and can bind to RGD. We propose to name this beta 1-like subunit beta n. The data reported here thus demonstrate that in these two cell lines alpha v associates with two beta subunits, beta n and beta 3, forming two heterodimers. The alpha v beta n complex mediates binding to fibronectin and type I collagen, whereas the alpha v beta 3 complex mediates binding to vitronectin.
...
PMID:Isolation of a novel integrin receptor mediating Arg-Gly-Asp-directed cell adhesion to fibronectin and type I collagen from human neuroblastoma cells. Association of a novel beta 1-related subunit with alpha v. 169 26
Subclones of F11 neuronal hybrid cells (
neuroblastoma
x dorsal root ganglion neurons) have segregated differing and/or overlapping neuritogenic mechanisms on three substrata--plasma fibronectin (pFN) with its multiple receptor activities, cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) for binding to ganglioside GM1, and platelet factor-4 (PF4) for binding to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. In this study, specific cell surface receptor activities for the three substrata were tested for their modulation during neuritogenesis by several experimental paradigms, using F11 subclones representative of three differentiation classes (neuritogenic on pFN only, on CTB only, or on all three substrata). When cycloheximide was included in the medium to inhibit protein synthesis during the active period, neurite formation increased significantly for all subclones on all three substrata, virtually eliminating substratum selectivity for differentiation mediated by cell surface integrin, ganglioside GM1, or heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Therefore, one or more labile proteins (referred to as disintegrins) must modulate functions of matrix receptors (e.g., integrins) mediating neurite formation. To verify whether cycloheximide-induced neuritogenesis was also regulated by integrin interaction with cell surface GM1, two approaches were used. When (Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser)-containing peptide A was added to the medium, it completely inhibited cycloheximide-induced neuritogenesis on all three substrata of all subclones, indicating stringent requirement for cell surface integrin function in these mechanisms. In contrast, when CTB or a monoclonal anti-GM1 antibody was also added to the medium, cycloheximide-induced neuritogenesis was amplified further on pFN and sensitivity to peptide A inhibition was abolished. Therefore, in some contexts ganglioside GM1 must complex with integrin receptors at the cell surface to modulate their function. These results also indicate that (a) cycloheximide treatment leads to loss of substratum selectivity in neuritogenesis, (b) this negative regulation of neurite outgrowth is affected by integrin receptor association with labile regulatory proteins (disintegrins) as well as with GM1, and (c) complexing of GM1 by multivalent GM1-binding proteins shifts neuritogenesis from an RGDS-dependent integrin mechanism to an RGDS-independent receptor mechanism.
...
PMID:Neurite outgrowth in dorsal root neuronal hybrid clones modulated by ganglioside GM1 and disintegrins. 182 96
A 23-kDa (p23k) rat brain protein was stereospecifically eluted from a 14 beta-bromoacetamidomorphine affinity column, purified to apparent homogeneity by reverse phase HPLC, and partially sequenced. Three degenerate oligodeoxynucleotide probes were synthesized based on this partial amino acid sequence. A rat brain cDNA library was screened using these probes, and a full-length cDNA was isolated. The deduced protein, 187 amino acids long, is rich in glutamic and
aspartic acid
residues, endowing p23k with a net negative charge at neutral pH. The protein lacks a signal sequence as well as any transmembrane domains. Based on predictions of secondary structure, p23k is a globular protein composed of 30% alpha-helices and 18% beta-pleated sheets. Northern blot analysis revealed p23k transcripts in rat brain, liver, and the mouse x rat
neuroblastoma
-glioma NG108-14 cell line. Although not an opioid receptor itself, this protein may be associated with such a receptor or be related to a protein that has been shown to be cross-linked to the opioid peptide beta-endorphin.
...
PMID:Purification, cloning, and tissue distribution of a 23-kDa rat protein isolated by morphine affinity chromatography. 197 48
Some neuron-derived cells, such as
neuroblastoma
cells, adhere and extend neurites on fibronectin (FN) substrata by processes that can be independent of binding to the Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser sequence (RGDS in FN) and independent of proteoglycan/ganglioside-binding activities of FN. Proteolytic fragments of various FNs have been used in this study to map a new adhesion-promoting domain in FNs that may be neural cell-specific. A thermolysin-generated fragment of human plasma FN (F110 containing the RGDS domain) or the analagous fragment from transformed human cell FN (F120, also containing the alternately spliced extra domain b[EDb]) facilitate RGDS-independent adherence and neurite extension of human
neuroblastoma
cells and an F11 hybrid neuronal line (by fusion of mouse
neuroblastoma
cells with rat dorsal root ganglion neurons) as effectively as adherence and neurite extension on intact FN. Since neither F110 nor F120 contains sequences from the alternately spliced IIICS region of FN, neurite-promoting activity in these fragments cannot be ascribed to a recently discovered cell-binding domain in this region. Furthermore, F120 could be cleaved into two subfragments retaining virtually all the sequence of the parent fragment: F35 from the C terminus of F120 containing the RGDS domain, and F90 from the N terminus containing most of the EDb region bordering the thermolysin cleavage site. These neuronal cells could adhere but not extend neurites on substrata coated with either F35 or F90 alone while 3T3 cells could adhere only on F35. Mixtures of F35 and F90 on substrata could reconstitute some, but not nearly all, of the neurite-promoting activity of F120. Therefore, these data identify a new cell-binding domain in common sequences of FNs on the N-terminal side of EDb and demonstrate cooperativity between this RGDS-independent domain and the RGDS-dependent domain for maximal differentiation of these neuron-derived cells. Several possibilities for a receptor directed to this new domain are discussed.
...
PMID:Requirement for two different cell-binding domains in fibronectin for neurite extension of neuronal derivative cells. 235 3
A membrane-bound adhesive protein that promotes neurite outgrowth in brain neurons has been isolated from rat brain (Rauvala, H., and R. Pihlaskari. 1987. J. Biol. Chem. 262:16625-16635). The protein is an immunochemically distinct molecule with a subunit size of approximately 30 kD (p30). p30 is an abundant protein in perinatal rat brain, but its content decreases rapidly after birth. In the present study the amino-terminal sequence of p30 was determined by automated Edman degradations. A single amino-terminal sequence was found, which is not present in previously studied adhesive molecules. This unique sequence has a cluster of five positive charges within the first 11 amino acid residues: Gly-Lys-Gly-
Asp
-Pro-Lys-Lys-Pro-Arg-Gly-Lys. Antisynthetic peptide antibodies that recognize this sequence were produced in a rabbit, purified with a peptide affinity column, and shown to bind specifically to p30. The antipeptide antibodies were used, together with anti-p30 antibodies, to study the localization of p30 in brain cells and in
neuroblastoma
cells as follows. (a) Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy indicated that p30 is a component of neurons in mixed cultures of brain cells. The neurons and the
neuroblastoma
cells expressed p30 at their surface in the cell bodies and the neurites. In the neurites p30 was found especially in the adhesive distal tips of the processes. In addition the protein was detected in ribosomal particles and in intracellular membranes in a proportion of cells. (b) The antibodies immobilized on microtiter wells enhanced adhesion and neurite growth indicating that p30 is surface exposed in adhering neural cells. (c) Immunoblotting showed that p30 is extracted from suspended cells by heparin suggesting that a heparin-like structure is required for the binding of p30 to the neuronal cell surface. A model summarizing the suggested interactions of p30 in cell adhesion and neurite growth is presented.
...
PMID:The adhesive and neurite-promoting molecule p30: analysis of the amino-terminal sequence and production of antipeptide antibodies that detect p30 at the surface of neuroblastoma cells and of brain neurons. 246 49
Very late antigen (VLA) 1 is a member of the family of integral plasma-membrane glycoproteins known as integrins. It is a heterodimer composed of an alpha subunit of Mr 200,000, noncovalently associated with a beta subunit of Mr 110,000 which is shared by other VLA molecules (VLA-2-5). Unlike most of the other VLA proteins which have been shown to be receptors for various extracellular matrix proteins, the ligand for VLA-1 is unknown. Utilizing polyclonal antisera against the human fibronectin receptor as well as alpha subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies and cDNA probes, we have been able to demonstrate that in two human
neuroblastoma
cell lines, IMR-32 and SK-N-SH, the common beta subunit is associated with alpha 1, alpha 2, alpha 3, and alpha 5 subunits. By culturing these two cell lines in the presence of a synthetic peptide, Gly-Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser-Pro, which contains the Arg-Gly-
Asp
cell attachment promotion tripeptide, we have isolated variant cell lines resistant to the detachment effects of this peptide. Peptide-resistant SK-N-SH and IMR-32
neuroblastoma
cells exhibit weaker attachment to type I collagen and laminin, but a similar level of attachment to fibronectin as compared to the parental cells. Although the peptide-resistant variant cell lines proliferate at a rate similar to that of the parental cell lines, they stably overproduce (up to 20-fold) the alpha 1 subunit (VLA-1) specifically; and in the IMR-32 variant cells, the common beta 1 subunit is also overproduced. The level of expression of alpha 2 and alpha 3 subunits, however, is considerably reduced and that of the alpha 5 subunit is unchanged relative to the parental cells. These data suggest that the expression of integrin alpha subunits can be regulated differentially and independently of the beta subunit and that the VLA-1 heterodimer has an important function in mediating Arg-Gly-
Asp
-dependent cell adhesion or other phenotypic properties in human
neuroblastoma
cells.
...
PMID:Specific overproduction of very late antigen 1 integrin in two human neuroblastoma cell lines selected for resistance to detachment by an Arg-Gly-Asp-containing synthetic peptide. 278 39
Adhesion responses of fibroblasts (Balb/c 3T3 cells) and human neuron-derived (Platt
neuroblastoma
) cells have been examined with plasma fibronectin (pFN) adsorbed to glass surfaces derivatized with an alkyl chain and six chemical end groups interfacing with the bound pFN to test regulation of pFN function. Using new derivatization protocols, the following surfaces have been tested in order of increasing polarity: [CH3], [C = C], [Br], [CN], [Diol], [COOH], and underivatized glass [( SiOH]). For all substrata, pFN bound equivalently using either a supersaturating amount of pFN or a subsaturating amount in competition with bovine albumin. Attachment of both cell types was also equivalent on all substrata. However, spreading/differentiation responses varied considerably. F-actin reorganization was tested in 3T3 cells with rhodamine-phalloidin staining. While stress fibers formed effectively on pFN-coated [SiOH] and [Br] substrata, only small linear bundles of F-actin and a few thin stress fibers were observed on the [COOH], [Diol], and [CN] substrata; the hydrophobic substrata [( CH3] and [C = C]) gave an intermediate response. When a synthetic peptide containing the Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser sequence required for integrin binding to FNs was included in the medium as an inhibitor, additional differences were noted: Stress fiber formation was completely inhibited on [SiOH] but not on [Br] and stress fiber formation was very sensitive to inhibition on the hydrophobic substrata while the F-actin patterns on the [CN] and [COOH] substrata were unaffected. Evaluation of neurite outgrowth by
neuroblastoma
cells on these substrata revealed both qualitative and quantitative differences as follows: [Diol] = [COOH] greater than [SiOH] much greater than [CN] = [Br] greater than [CH3] = [C = C]. While there was poor cytoplasmic spreading and virtually no neurites formed on the hydrophobic surfaces when pFN alone was adsorbed, neurite formation could be "rescued" if a mixture of pFN with an excess of bovine albumin was adsorbed, demonstrating complex conformational interactions between substratum-bound pFN and adhesion-inert neighboring molecules. In summary, these studies demonstrate that different chemical end groups on the substratum modulate pFN functions for cell adhesion, principally by affecting the conformation of these molecules rather than the amounts bound. Furthermore, these studies confirm multiple-receptor interactions with the FN molecules in cell type-specific adhesion patterns.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Modulation of fibronectin adhesive functions for fibroblasts and neural cells by chemically derivatized substrata. 280 41
Human
neuroblastoma
cells (Platt and La-N1) have previously been shown to adhere and extend neurites on tissue-culture substrata coated with a 120K chymotryptic cell-binding fragment (CBF) of plasma fibronectin (pFN), a fragment which lacks heparan sulfate- and collagen-binding activities, and to adhere to--but not extend neurites on--substrata coated with the heparan sulfate (HS)-binding protein, platelet factor-4 (PF4) (Tobey et al., Exp Cell Res 158 (1985) 395 [3]). The mechanisms of these processes on CBF, on the intact pFN molecule, or on heparin-binding fragments of pFN have been tested using a heptapeptide (peptide A) containing the Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser (RGDS) sequence which recognizes a specific 'receptor' on the surface of a variety of cells or a control peptide with a single amino acid substitution. Adherence and neurite extension were completely inhibited on the 120K CBF by peptide A but not by control peptide; these results indicate that the RGDS-dependent 'receptor' is solely responsible for adhesive responses to the 120K CBF-containing region of the pFN molecule. When peptide A was added to cells on CBF which had already formed neurites to test reversibility, retraction of all neurite processes was induced by 1 h and cells eventually detached. In contrast, on intact pFN, peptide A had very limited effects on either initial adherence or neurite extension, revealing a second 'cell-binding' domain on the fibronectin molecule outside of the 120K region competent for neurite differentiation; addition of peptide A at later times to pFN-adherent, neurite-containing cells could induce only a small subset of neurites to retract, thus supporting evidence for the presence of this second domain. A second 'cell-binding' domain was further confirmed by quantitation of neurite outgrowth on these substrata and by analyses of cells on substrata coated with mixtures of CBF/PF4. When substrata coated with chymotrypsin-liberated HBF were tested in a similar fashion, adherence was rapid but neurite outgrowth required much longer times and was completely sensitive to RGDS peptides; supplementation of cells with the complex ganglioside GT1b could not induce RGDS-resistant neurites on heparin-binding fragments (HBF). These latter results indicate that neurite extension on HBF is a consequence of a low concentration of RGDS-dependent activity in HBF (but not to HS-binding activity as characterized by Tobey et al. [3]) and that the second 'cell-binding' domain is sensitive to chymotrypsin digestion of pFN during the liberation of HBF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:A second cell-binding domain on fibronectin (RGDS-independent) for neurite extension of human neuroblastoma cells. 295 Dec 67
Human
neuroblastoma
cells (Platt and La-N1) adhere and extend neurites on a ganglioside GM1-binding substratum provided by cholera toxin B (CTB). These adhesive responses, similar to those on plasma fibronectin (pFN), require the mediation of one or more cell-surface proteins [G. Mugnai and L. A. Culp (1987) Exp. Cell Res. 169, 328]. The involvement of two pFN receptor molecules in ganglioside GM1-mediated responses on CTB have now been tested. In order to test the role of cellular FN binding to its glycoprotein receptor integrin, a soluble peptide containing the Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser (RGDS) sequence was added to the medium. It did not inhibit attachment on CTB but completely inhibited formation of neurites; in contrast, the RGDS peptide minimally inhibited attachment or neurite formation on pFN. Once formed, neurites on CTB became resistant to the peptide. In order to test the role of cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HS-PG), two approaches were used. First, the HS-binding protein platelet factor-4 (PF4) was used to dilute CTB or pFN on the substratum or, alternatively, added to the medium. Diluting the substratum ligand with PF4 had no effects on attachment on either CTB or pFN. However, neurite formation on CTB was readily inhibited and on pFN partially inhibited; the effects of PF4 were far greater than a similar dilution with nonbinding albumin. When PF4 was added to the medium of cells, attachment on either substratum was unaffected as was neurite outgrowth on pFN, revealing differences in PF4's inhibition as the substratum-bound or medium-borne component. In contrast, PF4 in the medium at low concentrations (1 microgram/ml) was highly inhibitory for neurite formation on CTB. The second approach utilized the addition of bovine cartilage dermatan sulfate proteoglycan (DS-PG), shown to bind to pFN as well as to substratum-bound CTB by ELISA, or cartilage chondroitin sulfate/keratan sulfate proteoglycan (CS/KS-PG) to the substratum or to the medium. At low concentrations, DS-PG but not CS/KS-PG actually stimulated neurite formation on CTB while at higher concentrations DS-PG completely inhibited attachment and neurite formation. While DS-PG partially inhibited attachment on pFN, it had no effect on neurite formation of the attached cells.
Neuroblastoma
cells adhered to some extent to substrata coated only with DS-PG, indicating "receptors" for PGs that permit stable interaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ganglioside-dependent adhesion events of human neuroblastoma cells regulated by the RGDS-dependent fibronectin receptor and proteoglycans. 296 69
Non-saturable penetration and the V and Km constants of saturable influx of leucine, lysine and glycine were always greater in cultured
neuroblastoma
(C1300) than in glioma (C6) cells.
Aspartate
uptake was detected only in glioma cells. Unstimulated efflux of the amino acids was initially fast in both cell types but soon slowed down. The efflux of glycine and aspartate exhibited no heteroexchange, the efflux of lysine was stimulated by extracellular leucine and that of leucine slightly by lysine and glycine but only in glioma cells.
...
PMID:Transport of leucine, lysine, glycine and aspartate in neuroblastoma C1300 and glioma C6 cells. 312 24
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