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      Differential Expression of Vinculin between Weakly and Highly Metastatic B16‐Melanoma Cell Lines

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          Abstract

          We previously reported on the altered expression of a third actin in mouse‐B16 melanoma associated with malignant progression. White further investigating the relationship of cytoskeletal proteins to malignancy, we found that the expression of vinculin was higher in weakly metastatic B16‐F1 cells than in highly metastatic B16‐F10 cells. By Northern blot analysis, the mRNA expression of vinculin in B16‐F1 was also shown to be higher than in B16‐F10. Immunofluorescence staining showed a clear dotted distribution of vinculin in B16‐F1, but only a weak and diffuse distribution in B16‐F10. The dotted distribution tended to be larger in B16‐F1 and when cultured on Matrigel and fibronectin than on laminin and type IV collagen. An alteration in the expression of vinculin was also observed in other cell systems. Vinculin was detected in both normal 3Y1 and in relatively weakly malignant transformed 3Y1 cell lines, while vinculin was either scarcely detected or not detected at all in more malignant cell lines. These results suggest that the suppression of vinculin is closely related to malignant progression in both the B16‐melanoma and 3Y1 cell systems.

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          Most cited references19

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          Selection of successive tumour lines for metastasis.

          I J Fidler (1973)
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            Patterns of organization of actin and myosin in normal and transformed cultured cells.

            The patterns of distribution of intracellular actin and myosin were examined by specific immunofluorescence in a series of normal, simian-virus-40-transformed, and revertant cell lines of rat and mouse origin. A consistent correlation was found between sensitivity to anchorage-dependent growth control and the presence of large, thick sheaths of actin-containing material. The presence of these sheaths was temperature-dependent in a rat line transformed by a temperature-sensitive mutant in the complementation group A of the oncogenic virus simian virus 40.
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              Vinculin: a cytoskeletal target of the transforming protein of Rous sarcoma virus.

              Vinculin, a protein associated with the cytoplasmic face of the focal adhesion plaques which anchor actin-containing microfilaments to the plasma membrane and attach a cell to the substratum, contains 8-fold more phosphotyrosine in cells transformed by Rous sarcoma virus than in uninfected cells. Because the transforming protein of RSV, p60src, is a protein kinase that modifies cellular proteins through the phosphorylation of tyrosine and because phosphotyrosine is a very rare modified amino acid, this result is a very rare modified amino acid, this result suggests that vinculin is a primary substrate of p60src. Only trace amounts of phosphotyrosine were detected in myosin heavy chains, alpha-actinin, filamin, and the intermediate filament protein vimentin. The modification of vinculin by p60src may be responsible in part for the disruption of the microfilament organization and for the changes in cell shape and adhesiveness which accompany transformation by Rous sarcoma virus.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Jpn J Cancer Res
                Jpn. J. Cancer Res
                10.1111/(ISSN)1349-7006a
                CAS
                Japanese Journal of Cancer Research : Gann
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0910-5050
                1876-4673
                June 1992
                : 83
                : 6 ( doiID: 10.1111/cas.1992.83.issue-6 )
                : 625-630
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medical Institute for Bioregulation, Kyushu University 69, Maidaski 3‐1‐1, Higashi‐ku, Fukuoka 812
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] 1To whom correspondence should be address.
                Article
                CAE625
                10.1111/j.1349-7006.1992.tb00135.x
                5918885
                1644665
                f27bea0f-3247-4e00-b470-93ee925c2e1a
                History
                Page count
                References: 22, Pages: 6
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                June 1992
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.6.9 mode:remove_FC converted:04.11.2015

                key words,actin,vinculin,cytoskeleton,melanoma
                key words, actin, vinculin, cytoskeleton, melanoma

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