Isolation of Chinese hamster ovary cell lines temperature conditional for the cell-surface expression of integral membrane glycoproteins.
Open Access
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 108 (2), 339-353
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.108.2.339
Abstract
A procedure is described to select mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells that are conditionally defective for the cell-surface expression of integral membrane glycoproteins, including the hemagglutinin (HA) of influenza virus. Using a combination of cell sorting and biochemical screening, seven cell lines were obtained that express more cell-surface HA at 32 degrees C than at 39 degrees C. The production of infectious vesicular stomatitis virus, whose growth requires insertion of an integral membrane protein into the plasma membrane, was also temperature conditional in the majority of these mutant cell lines. Five of the lines synthesized apparently normally core-glycosylated HA at the elevated temperature but the protein was neither displayed on the cell surface nor accumulated intracellularly. In these cell lines, little or no terminally glycosylated HA molecules were observed after synthesis at 39 degrees C. By contrast, the core glycosylation of HA and several other integral membrane proteins was abnormal in the remaining two cell lines at both permissive and restrictive temperatures, due to a lesion in a cellular gene(s) that affects the formation of and/or the addition of mannose-rich oligosaccharide chains to newly synthesized polypeptides. Although HA was transported to the plasma membrane at both 32 and 39 degrees C, it did not accumulate on the cell surface at the higher temperature, apparently because of an increased rate of degradation.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Semi-intact cells permeable to macromolecules: Use in reconstitution of protein transport from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi complexCell, 1987
- Posttranslational association of immunoglobulin heavy chain binding protein with nascent heavy chains in nonsecreting and secreting hybridomas.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Reconstitution of the transport of protein between successive compartments of the golgi measured by the coupled incorporation of N-acetylglucosamineCell, 1984
- Haemagglutinin of influenza virus expressed from a cloned gene promotes membrane fusionNature, 1982
- Mechanisms for the incorporation of proteins in membranes and organelles.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Cell-surface expression of influenza haemagglutinin from a cloned DNA copy of the RNA geneNature, 1981
- Isolation of Chinese hamster cell mutants defective in the receptor-mediated endocytosis of low density lipoproteinJournal of Molecular Biology, 1981
- Isolation of pure IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b immunoglobulins from mouse serum using protein A-SepharoseImmunochemistry, 1978
- The synthesis and properties of T25 glycoprotein in thy-1-negative mutant lymphoma cellsCell, 1978
- LIGAND-INDUCED MOVEMENT OF LYMPHOCYTE MEMBRANE MACROMOLECULESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1972