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Induction of Glucose Regulated Proteins During Growth of a Murine Tumor

Overview
Journal J Cell Physiol
Specialties Cell Biology
Physiology
Date 1993 Feb 1
PMID 8425905
Citations 16
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Abstract

Chronic anoxia, glucose starvation, low pH, and numerous other conditions induce the glucose-regulated system of stress proteins (GRPs), whose principal members are observed at 78, 94, and 170 kDa. These stresses may be expected to occur during growth in untreated tumors. To examine the possibility that GRPs are correspondingly induced, we have examined the protein profiles of small (< 0.1 g), intermediate (0.2-0.8 g), and large (> 1.8 g) radiation-induced fibrosarcoma (RIF) tumors grown on C3H mice. One and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis indicate that the principal GRPs at 78 and 94 are coordinately and substantially increased in large tumor masses, relative to the small, and may be partially increased in the intermediate tumors. Necrotic material removed from large tumors exhibited an identical pattern of GRP induction with no visible indication of protein degradation and also contained a significant fraction of viable cells. Western blot analysis using rabbit antisera raised against the 78 and 170 kDa GRPs also demonstrated the enhanced accumulation of these proteins in the large tumors. The antibody against the 170 kDa GRP was also capable of detecting the induction of this stress protein in large tumors by indirect immunofluorescence analysis. Northern blot studies using a probe for the GRP 78 gene also showed an increase in GRP 78 message in large tumors as well as in RIF cells exposed to anoxic stress in vitro. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis indicated that the major heat shock proteins at 70 and 90 kDa were not increased in the larger tumors, and the amount of the 90 kDa species was reduced. Finally, the quantity of vimentin and its degradation products is significantly diminished in large tumors and in anoxic cells. This study demonstrates that RIF tumor cells undergo a glucose regulated stress response in situ during tumor growth.

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