Cell growth and differentiation in vitro in mouse macrophages transformed by a tsA mutant of simian virus 40. I. Cellular response in proliferative and phagocytic activities to the shift of temperature differs depending on the culture state in mouse bone marrow cells transformed by the tsA640 mutant of simian virus 40
- PMID: 6309870
- DOI: 10.1002/jcp.1041160307
Cell growth and differentiation in vitro in mouse macrophages transformed by a tsA mutant of simian virus 40. I. Cellular response in proliferative and phagocytic activities to the shift of temperature differs depending on the culture state in mouse bone marrow cells transformed by the tsA640 mutant of simian virus 40
Abstract
It was shown previously that mouse bone marrow cells transformed by simian virus 40 (SV40) show a reversible cell density-dependent phenotypic transition between the nonmacrophage (rapidly growing) and the macrophage (stationary) states; cells in low-density cultures are in the growing phase, express SV40 T antigen strongly as revealed by immunofluorescence, and lose typical macrophage properties such as immune phagocytosis; whereas cells in high-density cultures are in the stationary (nongrowing) phase, express SV40 T antigen weakly, and recover their macrophage properties (Takayama, 1980). In the hope of clarifying the relationship between T antigen, cell growth, and macrophage-specific cellular function, we examined the behavior at 33 and 39 degrees C of mouse bone marrow cells transformed by an SV40 gene A mutant (tsA640) whose mutation renders the molecular weight of 90K (large) T antigen temperature sensitive. The results presented in this paper suggest that functional large T antigen is required for cells in the stationary phase to initiate multiplication when transferred at lower density and is not necessary for a majority of them to maintain the nongrowing state (viability) at both high and lower cell densities, whereas it is required for cells in the growing phase to keep multiplying without losing their viability. The results also suggest that the functional large T antigen does not play a direct role in maintaining the cells as either phagocytic or nonphagocytic. It is also suggested that the physiological or tsA mutation-mediated arrest of growth may or may not be accompanied by induction and/or maintenance of cellular phagocytic activity depending on the culture state.
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