Literature DB >> 3902853

Rapid disappearance of statin, a nonproliferating and senescent cell-specific protein, upon reentering the process of cell cycling.

E Wang.   

Abstract

Statin, a 57,000-D protein characteristically found in nonreplicating cells, was identified by a monoclonal antibody produced by hybridomas established from mice injected with extracts of in vitro aged human fibroblasts (Wang, E., 1985, J. Cell Biol., 100:545-551). Fluorescence staining with the antibody shows that the expression of statin disappears upon reinitiation of the process for cell replication. The rapid de-expression is observed in fibroblasts involved in the in vitro wound-healing process, as well as in cells that have been subcultured after trypsinization and replated from a confluent culture. Kinetic analysis shows that 50% of the cell population lose their statin expression at 12 h after replating, before the actual events of mitosis. Immunogold labeling with highly purified antibodies localizes the protein at the nuclear envelope in nonreplicating cells, but not in their replicating counterparts. Immunoblotting analysis confirms the disappearance of statin in cells that have reentered the cycling process. Using the technique of flow cytometry to examine the large number of nonreplicating fibroblasts in confluent cultures, we have found that statin is mostly expressed in those cells showing the least amount of DNA content, whose growth is blocked at the G0/G1 stage of the cell cycle. This close correlation is rapidly altered once the cells are released from the confluent state. These results suggest that the expression of statin may be regulated by a fine mechanism controlling the transition from the nonreplicating to the replicating state, and that the protein is structurally associated with the nuclear envelope.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3902853      PMCID: PMC2113959          DOI: 10.1083/jcb.101.5.1695

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Biol        ISSN: 0021-9525            Impact factor:   10.539


  15 in total

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5.  Discrimination of human leukemia subtypes by flow cytometric analysis of cellular DNA and RNA.

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6.  Application of a unique monoclonal antibody as a marker for nonproliferating subpopulations of cells of some tissue.

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Authors:  B Azzarone; H Suarez; M C Mingari; L Moretta; A S Fauci
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8.  An intermediate filament-associated protein, p50, recognized by monoclonal antibodies.

Authors:  E Wang; J G Cairncross; W K Yung; E A Garber; R K Liem
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9.  Characterization of proliferating cell nuclear antigen recognized by autoantibodies in lupus sera.

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10.  Functions of cytoplasmic fibers in intracellular movements in BHK-21 cells.

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4.  Regulation of expression of growth arrest-specific genes in mouse fibroblasts.

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5.  Loss of expression of a differentiated function gene, steroid 17 alpha-hydroxylase, as adrenocortical cells senescence in culture.

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6.  Prohibitin, an evolutionarily conserved intracellular protein that blocks DNA synthesis in normal fibroblasts and HeLa cells.

Authors:  M J Nuell; D A Stewart; L Walker; V Friedman; C M Wood; G A Owens; J R Smith; E L Schneider; R Dell' Orco; C K Lumpkin
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7.  Characterization of two populations of statin and the relationship of their syntheses to the state of cell proliferation.

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Review 8.  Transcriptional reprogramming in cellular quiescence.

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  8 in total

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