Effect of long-term culture of a human laryngeal carcinoma cell line on epitectin production and tumorigenicity in athymic mice

Autor: Sharlene Washington, Veer P. Bhavanandan, Nancy A. Dilulio, Kazuo Yamakami
Rok vydání: 1994
Předmět:
Zdroj: Glycosylation & Disease. 1:21-30
ISSN: 0969-3653
DOI: 10.1007/bf00917465
Popis: Epitectin is a high molecular weight mucin-type glycoprotein over-expressed on the surface of human carcinoma cells. In cancer cells, it is proposed to play a protective function and to modulate cell surface properties such as antigenicity and cell adhesion. We have examined the effect of long-term culture on the cell curface expression of epitectin by a human laryngeal carcinoma cell line and the correlation between epitectin expression and tumor production in athymic mice. Indirect immunofluorescence labelling using an epitectin specific monoclonal antibody showed that the level of epitectin on the cell surface was significantly reduced after 78 or more generations in culture. Gel electrophoresis of cell extracts, followed by wheat germ agglutinin and peanut agglutinin overlay analyses, demonstrated similar losses in total cellular epitectin as a result of prolonged passage in culture. The levels of other glycoproteins reacting with wheat germ agglutinin were not significantly altered in high passage cells. Similar results were obtained when HMFG-2 monoclonal antibody was used to probe the levels of cell surface epitectin. In contrast to the above probes, the binding of HMFG-2 to epitectin is independent of glycosylation, therefore it can be concluded that the observed changes are not due to aberration in epitectin glycosylation with increasing passage number but rather due to lack of synthesis of epitectin. The ability of the low epitectin producing H.Ep.2 cells to grow as tumors in athymic mice was reduced compared to the high epitectin producing cells.
Databáze: OpenAIRE