Abstract

Agglutination curves obtained on addition of low molecular weight poly- l-lysines (mol. wt 4 000–23 000) to HeLa cells, show a deviation from linearity at low polymer concentration. This probably indicates the existence of a ζ-potential which has to be lowered before agglutination can take place. Experiments with dilysine support the assumption that cell surface charge is lowered on addition of low concentrations of short chain poly- l-lysines. Long poly- l-lysine molecules (mol. wts 70 000; 100 000) yield linear agglutination curves already at the lowest polymer concentrations. This might indicate that these polymers are able to bridge the original repulsion gap between HeLa cells. After removal of peripheral sialic acid by neuraminidase, linear agglutination curves are obtained with all poly- l-lysines irrespective of their chain lengths. This is interpreted as evidence for involvement of sialic acid residues in the charge organization responsible for electrostatic repulsion. The magnitude of the presumed repulsion effect is shown to vary with the cell density at the time the HeLa cells were harvested from the culture. The largest repulsion effect is obtained with cells from density inhibited cultures which also have the lowest tendency for mutual adhesion. With fast growing cells from low density cultures linear agglutination curves are obtained with short chain poly- l-lysines. This is interpreted as evidence for a strong diminishment or absence of long-range electrostatic repulsion between such cells.

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