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Models of normal and transformed cell adhesion, and capping and locomotion in vitro

Authors :
R. Rajaraman
J. M. Macsween
R. A. Fox
Source :
Journal of theoretical biology. 74(2)
Publication Year :
1978

Abstract

It is proposed that patching, capping and endocytosis, and cell locomotion are manifestations of a single process whereby the cell discards foreign materials. Capping results from the binding to the cell surface of particulate (or molecular) objects which cannot function as immovable substratum. This might be described as unsuccessful or abortive cell adhesion in that the particles adhere to the cell rather than the cell adhering to the substratum. Lateral particle movements on the cell surface membrane are effected by the submembranous microfilament-microtubule system, resulting in capping without displacement of the cell. Successful adhesion of the cell to a substratum renders capping and endocytosis impossible and the cell attempts to discard the substratum by mechanisms analogous to capping. The cell achieves this by lateral movement and detachment of the trailing edge. The concept of abortive adhesion leading to capping has been amplified by the development of molecular models of normal and neoplastic cell adhesion in vitro in the presence and absence of serum. In these models, the normal cells have molecule A (adhesion sites) on their surface; they can spread on the substratum in the absence of serum. In the presence of serum, the A molecules on the normal cell surface bind with B molecules in serum, which may be substratum-bound or free in suspension. Binding of free B molecules with cell surface A molecules results in blockage of adhesion sites; these are cleared via capping. New adhesion sites ( A molecules) are produced at the active edges of the cell. Binding of cell surface A molecules with the substratum bound B molecules results in cell adhesion. Transformed cells do not have A molecules on their surface; they cannot spread in the absence of serum. The transformed cells may recruit A molecules from the serum to attain deformability and spreading. These models also relate to capping of gold or resin particles, cell locomotion and regulation of cell division, and lectin-induced agglutination of transformed cells.

Details

ISSN :
00225193
Volume :
74
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of theoretical biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....272af0075b5b73889b25c6292fec5656