Abstract

Abstract 5′-Nucleotidase of 11 human lymphoid cell lines was measured. These cell ines were homogeneous B, T and Null cells, had an unlimited lifespan in vitro, and were subcultivated from leukemic cells of patients with Burkitt lymphoma, the blastic phase of chronic myelocytic leukemia, or acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 5′-Nucleotidase activities in normal human lymphocytes and in human fibroblasts (VA-13 and IMR-90) could be determined at a cellular protein concentration as low as 0.025 and 0.007 mg/ml, respectively. In all the eleven lymphoid cell lines, including 8 B-cell lines (RPMI 8422, B46M, RPMI 1788, DAUDI, HRIK, B411-4, B85 and DND-3-9A), 2 T-cell lines (MOLT 3 and RPMI 8402) and 1 Null cell line (NALM-1) 5′-nucleotidase was undetectable with the protein concentration range from 0.033 to 8.543 mg/ml. Previously 5′-nucleotidase activity was found to increase 10-, 6- and 20-fold in normal human embryonic lung (WI-38 and IMR-90 cells) and chick embryo fibroblasts, respectively, from a young rapidly proliferative to a senescent non-proliferative stage (Sun, A.S., Aggarwal, B.B. and Packer, L. (1975) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 170, 1 and Sun, A.S., Alvarez, L.J. Reinach, P.S. and Rubin, E. (1979) Lab. Invest. 41, 1). These data demonstrate that the large increase in 5′-nucleotidase activity occurs concomitantly with the in vitro senescence of these normal cell lines. The present study suggests that this large increase in 5′-nucleotidase activity during cell aging is absent in these permanently lymphoid cell lines. The undetectable 5′-nucleotidase activity may be a biochemical characteristic of these homogeneous B, T and Null cells originating from the aforesaid leukemias. The implications of these results for cell proliferation and aging are discussed.

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