Cell-shape regulation and matrix protein p52 content in phenotypic variants of ras-transformed rat kidney fibroblasts. Functional analysis and biochemical comparison of p52 with proteins implicated in cell-shape determination.
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ABSTRACT: The 52 kDa transformation-sensitive protein p52 was previously identified as a major substrate-associated component of normal rat kidney (NRK) fibroblasts [Higgins & Ryan (1989) Biochem. J. 257, 173-182]. p52 selectively localized to cellular fractions enriched in substrate focal-contact sites and associated ventral undersurface elements. Rapid attachment/spreading of NRK cells on to prepared p52 matrices and inhibition of fibroblast spreading by antibodies to p52 indicated that this protein participates in shape determination or cell-to-substrate adhesion. NRK cells transformed with Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (KiMSV), with a temperature-sensitive mutant (ts-371 KiMSV) and maintained at the permissive temperature, or with the cloned EJrasval.12 oncogene, exhibited down-regulated accumulation of p52 in the ventral undersurface region. Immunochemical, lectin-affinity and electrophoretic analyses indicated that p52 shares considerable sequence similarity with plasminogen-activator inhibitor type-1, which is consistent with its subcellular localization and likely morphoregulatory activity. The marked down-regulation of p52 expression seen in four different ras-mediated transformation systems, its induction prior to butyrate-induced morphological reorganization in KiMSV-transformed cells, and the morphological consequences of exogenously added p52 or p52 antibodies on NRK fibroblasts suggest that this protein probably functions in cell-shape regulation. Abrogation of p52 matrix accumulation typically seen in ras transformants may contribute, therefore, to the aberrant cytoarchitecture characteristic of malignant fibroblasts.
SUBMITTER: Higgins PJ
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1149813 | biostudies-other | 1991 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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