## Abstract Friend erythroleukemic cells can be induced by a variety of agents to synthesize hemoglobin and to exhibit other characteristics suggesting erythroid maturation. Upon induction of hemoglobin synthesis with dimethyl‐sulfoxide (DMSO), the chloride flux in Friend cells gradually increases,
Comparison of chloride transport in mouse erythrocytes and friend virus-transformed erythroleukemic cells
✍ Scribed by Patricia A. Harper; Philip A. Knauf
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 803 KB
- Volume
- 98
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Friend erythroleukemic cells, which grow continuously in tissue culture, resemble in many respects early precursors of mouse erythrocytes. To determine whether or not the membranes of these cells exhibit the rapid and selective exchange of chloride, a specialized feature of the mature erythrocyte membrane, anion fluxes were compared in Friend cells and mouse erythrocytes. The chloride flux in Friend cells at 37°C was about 800‐fold lower than in mouse erythrocytes (extrapolated from data at lower temperatures). This difference could not be accounted for by the somewhat lower chloride concentration in Friend cells relative to erythrocytes. Comparison of chloride and sulfate fluxes revealed that the Friend cells had over a 1,000‐fold lower selectivity for chloride versus sulphate than did the mouse red cells. The temperature dependence of chloride fluxes in Friend cells corresponded to an Arrhenius activation energy of 17.9 kcal/mol, in contrast to over 30 kcal/mol for mature red cells. The chloride flux in Friend cells was also 10‐fold less sensitive to the inhibitor, furosemide, than was the flux in mature red cells. The selective chloride exchange system of the mature erythrocyte therefore does not seem to be functional at the stage represented by the Friend cell, and must appear at some later stage of erythroid maturation.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Proteins from normal and virally transformed mouse cells, capable of binding to calf thymus DNA, were isolated and compared by DNA cellulose chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In accordance with previous studies (Salas and Green, 1971; Tsai and
## Abstract The transport and phosphorylation of 2‐deoxy‐D‐glucose are separate and sequential events in both normal and virus‐transformed 3T3 cells. The apparent enhancement of 2‐dOG uptake by 3T3 cells accompanying virus transformation is not due to an effect on the transport process but to enhan
## Abstract Viral transformation models may be useful to detect and map human tumor suppressor genes. BK virus (BKV), a human papovavirus, readily transforms rodent cells but is unable to transform human cells, suggesting that oncosuppressive functions expressed in human cells control BKV oncogenic
## Abstract The removal of serum from the medium of uninfected fibroblasts decreased the rate of uptake of uridine, 2‐deoxyglucose, α‐aminoisobutyrate and thymidine. Its subsequent addition rapidly and reversibly stimulated the uptake of all the nutrients but thymidine and this response was not inh
## Abstract Recently we demonstrated that ethidium bromide altered the plasma and subcellular membrane glycoproteins in control and virus transformed cells. It is reported here that ethidium bromide also stimulated the membrane associated process of sugar transport. The K~m~ of the virus transforme