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. 1975 Oct;6(2):137-47.
doi: 10.1016/0092-8674(75)90004-5.

Effect of proteases on activation of resting chick embryo fibroblasts and on cell surface proteins

Effect of proteases on activation of resting chick embryo fibroblasts and on cell surface proteins

P M Blumberg et al. Cell. 1975 Oct.

Abstract

The relationship between activation of resting chick embryo fibroblasts by proteases and proteolytic alteration of the cell surface has been investigated. Five different proteases were examined: trypsin, collagenase, plasmin, alpha-chymotrypsin, and thrombin. All of these proteases, when added to the culture medium at concentrations of 0.08-2.2 mug/ml, stimulated deoxyglucose uptake and induced cell division. The absolute levels of stimulation depended on the specific protease. Activation ranged from a doubling in cell number in 24 hr for trypsin and thrombin down to a 47% increase in cell number for alpha-chymotrypsin. Except in the case of thrombin, the stimulatory effects of these proteases correlated with breakdown of Z, a protein which is the major chick surface protein as revealed by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination and which disappears upon transformation. In the case of thrombin, stimulatory concentrations brought about no detectable loss of surface components. Thus loss of Z is not a necessary condition for activation of chick fibroblasts; it may be a sufficient condition for activation of part of the cell population.

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