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The accumulation of three specific proteins related to glucose-regulated proteins in a temperature-sensitive hamster mutant cell line K12

✍ Scribed by Amy Shiu Lee


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1981
Tongue
English
Weight
968 KB
Volume
106
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

A temperature‐sensitive mutant K12 isolated from an established line of Chinese hamster fibroblasts has been identified as a cell‐cycle mutant blocked in G1 (Roscoe et al., '73a, b). While characterizing the phenotype of K12 in more detail, we observed that K12 cells are highly sensitive to the concentration of glucose in the culture medium as well as the temperature of incubation. Although overall cellular metabolism remains intact for at least 24 hours after shifting the cells to the nonpermissive temperature (40.5°C), the incorporation of ^3^H‐leucine into three specific cellular proteins of molecular weights 94, 78, and 58 K daltons is greatly increased. We have analyzed the K12 proteins by two‐dimensional, isoelectric focusing (IEF) sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis and found that the set of proteins which is overproduced by K12 cells at 40.5°C is the same as that produced at 35.0°C in medium depleted of glucose or supplemented with 10 mM glucosamine. In addition, the increased synthesis of these proteins cannot be suppressed by the addition of N‐acetylglucosamine to the medium. The relation ship of these proteins to the glucose‐regulated proteins in the chick embryo fibroblast system (Shiu et al., '77) is discussed.


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Identification of the glucose/glycosylat
✍ José A. Melero 📂 Article 📅 1981 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 784 KB

## Abstract The analysis of proteins synthesized by the temperature‐sensitive cell line K12 at the restrictive temperature or after glucose starvation revealed that two main polypeptides were enhanced under both conditions. Besides having the same apparent molecular weights, these new proteins show