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STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells

Surface adsorption is studied in some detail because it is believed to be a major artifact in measurements of protein uptake by mammalian cells. Adsorption increases linearly with the I(131)-albumin concentration between 0.001 and 300 mg/ml. After short exposure to 300 mg/ml and two cell washings, t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ryser, H., Aub, J. C., Caulfield, J. B.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1962
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2106170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13983280
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author Ryser, H.
Aub, J. C.
Caulfield, J. B.
author_facet Ryser, H.
Aub, J. C.
Caulfield, J. B.
author_sort Ryser, H.
collection PubMed
description Surface adsorption is studied in some detail because it is believed to be a major artifact in measurements of protein uptake by mammalian cells. Adsorption increases linearly with the I(131)-albumin concentration between 0.001 and 300 mg/ml. After short exposure to 300 mg/ml and two cell washings, the adsorption amounts to 38 mg albumin per gm cell proteins. Further washings remove 80 per cent of this value, leaving a small irreversibly bound residue. At equilibrium, adsorbed albumin can be labeled by a simple albumin exchange. This labeling reaches a steady state within seconds and stays at constant level over 30 minutes. Significant increases above this initial level are measured over periods of 2 hours. In our experimental conditions these increases can be considered due to albumin uptake. This uptake rises linearly with the albumin concentration between 0.5 and 50.0 mg/ml, and reaches 0.2 mg/gm cell protein or 4 x 10(5) molecules per cell. Compared to the incorporation of free amino acids in similar conditions, this value does not appear to contribute significantly to the N-metabolism of the tumor cells. Adsorption was generally greater than uptake. Both processes are linear functions of the same variable over the whole range of concentration tested. It is suggested that albumin is taken up by pinocytosis.
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spelling pubmed-21061702008-05-01 STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells Ryser, H. Aub, J. C. Caulfield, J. B. J Cell Biol Article Surface adsorption is studied in some detail because it is believed to be a major artifact in measurements of protein uptake by mammalian cells. Adsorption increases linearly with the I(131)-albumin concentration between 0.001 and 300 mg/ml. After short exposure to 300 mg/ml and two cell washings, the adsorption amounts to 38 mg albumin per gm cell proteins. Further washings remove 80 per cent of this value, leaving a small irreversibly bound residue. At equilibrium, adsorbed albumin can be labeled by a simple albumin exchange. This labeling reaches a steady state within seconds and stays at constant level over 30 minutes. Significant increases above this initial level are measured over periods of 2 hours. In our experimental conditions these increases can be considered due to albumin uptake. This uptake rises linearly with the albumin concentration between 0.5 and 50.0 mg/ml, and reaches 0.2 mg/gm cell protein or 4 x 10(5) molecules per cell. Compared to the incorporation of free amino acids in similar conditions, this value does not appear to contribute significantly to the N-metabolism of the tumor cells. Adsorption was generally greater than uptake. Both processes are linear functions of the same variable over the whole range of concentration tested. It is suggested that albumin is taken up by pinocytosis. The Rockefeller University Press 1962-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2106170/ /pubmed/13983280 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1962, by The Rockefeller Institute Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ryser, H.
Aub, J. C.
Caulfield, J. B.
STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title_full STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title_fullStr STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title_full_unstemmed STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title_short STUDIES ON PROTEIN UPTAKE BY ISOLATED TUMOR CELLS : II. Quantitative Data on the Adsorption and Uptake of I(131)-Serum Albumin by Ehrlich Ascites Tumor Cells
title_sort studies on protein uptake by isolated tumor cells : ii. quantitative data on the adsorption and uptake of i(131)-serum albumin by ehrlich ascites tumor cells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2106170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13983280
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