Dramatic changes of sulfated proteoglycans composition in a tumorigenic SV-40-transformed renal proximal-tubule cell line.

J Biol Chem

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), U. 64 (Hôpital Tenon, Paris), France.

Published: November 1992

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how sulfated proteoglycans (PGs) change during the malignant transformation of epithelial cells, comparing normal rabbit renal proximal-tubule cells to a transformed SV-40 cell line.
  • Both cell types produced PGs that contributed to a basement membrane; however, the transformed cells exhibited notable differences, including an increase in sulfate radioactivity and the presence of free glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains not associated with PGs.
  • Most significantly, the transformed cells showed a shift from heparan sulfate to chondroitin sulfate in their GAG composition, which aligns with changes typically seen in epithelial tumors, suggesting these alterations may contribute to the cancerous characteristics of the cells.

Article Abstract

To characterize the sulfated proteoglycans (PGs) alterations associated with malignant transformation of epithelial cells in vitro, the localization, charge, size, and composition of cell-associated and secreted sulfated PGs have been compared in rabbit renal proximal-tubule cells in primary culture (Ronco et al., 1990) and in a derived SV-40 transformed cell line (RC.SV1) exhibiting a proximal phenotype and high tumor-inducing ability (Vandewalle et al., 1989). Both normal and transformed cells incorporated PGs into a thick basement membrane layer as shown by ruthenium red staining and immunodetection with a monoclonal antibody raised against the core protein of the bovine basement membrane heparan sulfate-PG (HS-PG). In primary cultures of normal cells, cell-associated PGs were almost identical to those extracted from renal tubule fractions in vivo by their size (Kav = 0.27 vs. 0.26 on Sepharose CL-6B) and composition characterized by the exclusive presence of heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan (HS-GAG) chains. In addition, the cells secreted a HS-PG with similar biochemical characteristics (Kav = 0.29; 100% HS-GAG chains). The SV-40-transformed RC.SV1 cells also synthesized and secreted a unique PG with the same charge and Kav values and apparently the same core protein (35 kDa) as in nontransformed cells, but three major differences were observed: (i) an increased proportion of PG-associated [35S]sulfate radioactivity released into the culture medium (36 vs. 21%), (ii) the emergence of free GAG chains unincorporated into PGs and detected only in the cell-associated fraction, and (iii) a dramatic change in the composition of GAG chains in which chondroitin sulfate replaced heparan-sulfate. The latter finding is in keeping with the known chondroitin sulfate increase and heparan-sulfate decrease in epithelial tumors. The alterations of PGs observed in this study may play a role in the acquisition and/or maintenance of the malignant phenotype.

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