Inhibition of intercellular communication has been hypothesized to play a role in tumor promotion. The compound 2,2',4,4',5,5'-hexabromobiphenyl (245-HBB) is a tumor promoter in vivo and blocks intercellular communication in vitro. The scrape-loading/dye-transfer (SL/DT) assay was used to assess this in vitro effect at varying concentrations of 245-HBB. The SL/DT technique is based on the intracellular loading of a fluorescent dye, lucifer yellow (LY), and monitoring its transfer into adjacent cells via patent gap junctions. Confluent WB-F344 (rat epithelial) cells were exposed to various noncytolethal concentrations of 245-HBB. Transfer of LY was then quantified with anchored cell analysis/sorting (ACAS 470, Meridian Instruments, Okemos, Mich.). The results indicate an inverse correlation between the degree of fluorescence in secondary LY-recipient cells and the treatment concentration. The coupling of these two new methods of cellular biology provided rapid quantitative analysis of dye transfer in measuring the concentration/response of modulation of gap-junctional permeability in cultured cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15287398809531159DOI Listing

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