Occurrence of nuclear beta(II)-tubulin in cultured cells
Autor: | Keliang Xu, Consuelo Walss-Bass, Arlette Fellous, Sebastien David, Richard F. Ludueña |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Histology
Antineoplastic Agents Breast Neoplasms Biology Adenocarcinoma Cell Fractionation Microtubules Pathology and Forensic Medicine Immunoenzyme Techniques Isomerism Microtubule Neoplasms LNCaP Biomarkers Tumor Tumor Cells Cultured Humans RNA Neoplasm Cells Cultured Cell Nucleus Cell growth Cell Biology Fibroblasts Molecular biology Isotype Cell biology Tubulin Microscopy Fluorescence Cytoplasm Cell culture Cancer cell biology.protein Female Cell Nucleolus Subcellular Fractions |
Zdroj: | Cell and tissue research. 308(2) |
ISSN: | 0302-766X |
Popis: | Microtubules are cylindrical organelles that play critical roles in cell division. Their subunit protein, tubulin, is a target for various antitumor drugs. Tubulin exists as various forms, known as isotypes. In most normal cells, tubulin occurs only in the cytosol and not in the nucleus. However, we have recently reported the finding of the beta(II) isotype of tubulin in the nuclei of cultured rat kidney mesangial cells. Mesangial cells, unlike most normal cell lines, have the ability to proliferate rapidly in culture. In efforts to determine whether nuclear beta(II)-tubulin occurred in other cell lines, we examined the distribution of the beta(I), beta(II), and beta(IV) mammalian tubulin isotypes in a variety of normal and cancer human cell lines by immunofluorescence microscopy. We have found that, in the normal cell lines, all three isotypes are present only in the cytoplasm. However, the beta(II) isotype of tubulin is located not only in the cytoplasm, but also in the nuclei of the following cell lines: LNCaP prostate carcinoma, MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-435, and Calc18 breast carcinoma, C6 and T98G glioma, and HeLa cells. In contrast, the beta(I) and beta(IV) isotypes, which are also synthesized in cancer cells, are not localized to the nucleus but are restricted to the cytoplasm. We have also seen beta(II) in breast cancer excisions. In most of these cells, beta(II) appears to be concentrated in the nucleoli. These results suggest that transformation may lead to localization of beta(II)-tubulin in cell nuclei, serving an as yet unknown function, and that nuclear beta(II) may be a useful marker for detection of tumor cells. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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