Radioiodination of cell-surface proteins in a Drosophila cell line

1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 699-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger D. Dennis ◽  
Dieter Haustein
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Cioce ◽  
Beatriz Calle ◽  
Andrea Marchesi ◽  
Ganka Bineva-Todd ◽  
Helen Flynn ◽  
...  

Interactions between cells fundamentally impact biological processes. In cancer development, such interactions define key stages of disease that cannot be adequately recapitulated in cell monoculture. Complex co-culture studies have been key to unraveling the complexity of these processes, usually by sorting cells and transcriptome or bulk proteome analyses. However, these methods invariably lead to sample loss and do not capture aberrant glycosylation as an important corollary of cancer formation. Here, we report the development of Bio-Orthogonal Cell line-specific Tagging of Glycoproteins (BOCTAG). Cells are equipped with a biosynthetic AND gate that uses bioorthogonally tagged sugars to generate glycosylation precursors. The cellular glycosylation machinery then introduces bioorthogonal tags into glycoproteins exclusively in cell lines expressing the enzymes of the biosynthetic AND gate. Modification with clickable reporter moieties allows for imaging or enrichment with mass spectrometry-proteomics in a cell-specific fashion. Making use of glycans as a property of most cell surface proteins, we use BOCTAG as an efficient means for cell-specific protein tracing.


1980 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 866-873 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Hsieh ◽  
N Sueoka

Antiserum against a rat neuronal tumor cell line (B103) has been prepared in rabbit by intravenous injection of live cells. This immune serum (anti-B103) precipitates a few cell surface proteins recognizable by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis as common radioiodinatable spots in 15 different rat neural cell lines and in mouse and rat fibroblast cell lines. The apparent molecular weight of one major common protein (II4) is estimated by SDS gel electrophoresis to be somewhere between 80,000 and 90,000 and another protein (I3) to be 120,000. These two proteins are consistently recognized in various cell lines by this antiserum. Furthermore, at a 1:20 dilution, this serum causes monolayer cells to round up usually within 0.5 h and detach from the plate within 3 h. It also inhibits spreading of freshly plated cells. These effects of the antiserum are reversible. Upon absorption of the antiserum with cells (e.g., absorbed with a glial cell line, B27), the serum no longer causes the rounding up of the monolayer cells, it does not inhibit cell spreading, and it does not immune-precipitate the two common proteins from the cell surface of various cell lines. Antisera against several other rat cell lines also precipitate the same common proteins (II4 and I3) from the cell surface and prevent cell spreading. These data suggest that the antibody acts first at the cell surface and then inhibits cell spreading or rounding up of spread cells. The consistent pattern of the immunoprecipitated cell surface proteins on the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis makes these two common surface proteins (II4 or I3 or both) possible candidates for target proteins to which the antibody binds. Thus, they may play a critical role in cell spreading.


Author(s):  
Watt W. Webb

Plasma membrane heterogeneity is implicit in the existence of specialized cell surface organelles which are necessary for cellular function; coated pits, post and pre-synaptic terminals, microvillae, caveolae, tight junctions, focal contacts and endothelial polarization are examples. The persistence of these discrete molecular aggregates depends on localized restraint of the constituent molecules within specific domaines in the cell surface by strong intermolecular bonds and/or anchorage to extended cytoskeleton. The observed plasticity of many of organelles and the dynamical modulation of domaines induced by cellular signaling evidence evanescent intermolecular interactions even in conspicuous aggregates. There is also strong evidence that universal restraints on the mobility of cell surface proteins persist virtually everywhere in cell surfaces, not only in the discrete organelles. Diffusion of cell surface proteins is slowed by several orders of magnitude relative to corresponding protein diffusion coefficients in isolated lipid membranes as has been determined by various ensemble average methods of measurement such as fluorescence photobleaching recovery(FPR).


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