Selective Inhibition of Growth of Transformed Cells by Protease Inhibitors
- 1 December 1972
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 69 (12), 3825-3827
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.69.12.3825
Abstract
Five protease inhibitors with different modes of action were found to reduce the growth of transformed mouse (Py3T3, SV3T3, and 3T12) and hamster (PyBHK) cells. Some of these inhibitors caused the transformed cells to cease growth at saturation densities characteristic for nontransformed cells. The protease inhibitors were strikingly selective with regard to the transformed cells; they had essentially no effect on the growth of the nontransformed cells. From this result, it is concluded that the inhibitors block a protease-like activity that is required for the unrestrained growth of transformed cells. The inhibitors exerted their effect directly on the cells; they did not affect growth by interacting with serum components of the medium.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tumorigenesis in Mouse Skin: Inhibition by Synthetic Inhibitors of ProteasesScience, 1970
- Release from Density Dependent Growth Inhibition by Proteolytic EnzymesNature, 1970
- Proteolytic Enzymes Initiating Cell Division and Escape from Contact Inhibition of GrowthNature, 1970
- Surface antigen(s) of SV40-transformed tumor cellsVirology, 1970
- Structural Difference in Sites on the Surface Membrane of Normal and Transformed CellsNature, 1969
- SURFACE-SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS OF A CONTACT-INHIBITED CELL LINE CONTAINING THE SV40 VIRAL GENOMEProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1969
- A DIFFERENCE IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE SURFACE MEMBRANE OF NORMAL AND VIRALLY TRANSFORMED CELLSProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1969
- Density Dependent Inhibition of Cell Growth in CultureNature, 1967
- The initiation of cell division in a contact‐inhibited mammalian cell lineJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1965