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Early changes in the membrane of HeLa cells adsorbing sendai virus under conditions of fusion

✍ Scribed by P. Fuchs; M. Spiegelstein; M. Haimsohn; J. Gitelman; A. Kohn


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
912 KB
Volume
95
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Adsorption of Sendai virus at high multiplicity (500‐1,000 HAU/10^6^ cells) to HeLa cells grown in monolayers causes immediate changes in the ion barrier of the cell membrane, as well as changes in the morphology of the virus‐treated cells. Within minutes of adsorption the cells begin to lose potassium and an extensive influx of ions into the cells occurs. Concomitantly with these changes, the cell membrane becomes depolarized, and the resting potential across its membrane decreases. Twenty to sixty minutes post adsorption the damage to the cell membrane is repaired, and both the potassium uptake and the resting potential return to their pre‐exposure values. Scanning electron‐micrographs of Sendai infected cells incubated at 37°C show formation of bridging microvilli in a zipper‐like fashion within two to five minutes post‐adsorption; 30 to 60 minutes thereafter the majority of cells in the monolayer are fused. Biochemical changes induced by virus adsorption and the role of Ca^++^ ions in the observed effects are discussed.


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## Abstract Adsorption of Sendai virus to HeLa cells induced in them an increased permeability to K^+^, Na^+^, Ca^++^, deoxyglucose, but not to fluorescein. The stimulation of uptake of ^42^K was temperature‐dependent, did not occur below 15°C, and was not inhibited by ouabain. The virus‐induced i