Altered glycosylation of the env-sea oncoprotein inhibits intracellular transport and transformation |
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Authors: | AJ Crowe MJ Hayman |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology, State University of New York, Stony Brook 11794. |
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Abstract: | The transforming gene product of the S13 avian erythroblastosis virus, env-sea, is a member of the growth factor receptor class of tyrosine kinases. The env-sea precursor protein gp155env-sea is proteolytically processed into the mature cleavage products gp85env and gp70env-sea, which are subsequently terminally glycosylated and transported to the cell surface. Previous studies have shown that the abnormal glycosylation of gp155env-sea induced by the carbohydrate processing inhibitor castanospermine blocks the proteolytic cleavage of gp155env-sea and impairs its transforming ability. We have shown recently that an uncleaved but fully glycosylated sea-encoded protein retains the ability to transform chicken embryo fibroblasts, indicating that proteolytic processing is not essential for transformation by the env-sea tyrosine kinase. To address the question of how castanospermine blocks transformation by env-sea, differential sucrose gradient centrifugation was performed on env-sea-transformed cells treated with the inhibitor. This report shows that no surface forms of env-sea could be detected in inhibitor-treated cells, suggesting that castanospermine acts by blocking the transport of sea-encoded proteins to the cell surface. |
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