Human diploid cell strains develop progressively higher levels of specific catalase activity as they grow. Following subculture activity falls again. A diploid cell strain heterozygous for the gene for acatalasia I (acatalasemia) was found to develop specific catalase activity at proportionately the
The influence of progressive growth on the specific catalase activity of human diploid cell strains. I. Effect of cellular genotype: Homozygous strains
โ Scribed by Yue-Liang Pan; Robert S. Krooth
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1968
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 621 KB
- Volume
- 71
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
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โฆ Synopsis
The specific catalase activity of human diploid cell strains increases with progressive growth of the culture, and falls again following subculture. Although the increase is small, it is readily demonstrable, and is exponential with time.
The response of catalase activity to progressive growth of the culture was studied in three abnormal human cell lines. A diploid cell strain, developed from a patient homozygous for the gene causing acatalasia I, had no detectable catalase activity throughout the life cycle of the culture. Another diploid cell strain, developed from a patient homozygous for the gene causing acatalasia 11, had about 5% normal catalase activity, but the proportionate increase in specific activity as the culture grew was the same as for normal cells. Thus the mutation causing acatalasia I1 does not change the responsiveness of the cell in terms of catalase activity to progressive growth of the culture. The behavior of a heteroploid line was similar to that of the normal diploid strains, but when the growth of the heteroploid cultures reached a plateau, their population densities were four times higher than those of the diploid strains and they had about twice the specific catalase activity.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
It was shown previously that the specific catalase activity of human diploid cell strains falls immediately after subculture and then progressively rises in an exponential fashion. In this paper evidence is presented suggesting that the rise in catalase activity cannot be due to an accumulation with