Abstract

The ganglioside composition of the so-called substrate-attached material (SAM), which remains tightly bound to the tissue culture dish after cells are detached by chelating agents, was compared with the ganglioside composition of released cell bodies in the cultures of normal and various virally-transformed Balb/c 3T3 cells. Regardless of whether the cells were untransformed or transformed, the SAM of their cultures shows a ganglioside structure characterized by a prevalence of the higher homologs, mainly GD1a, over the simpler gangliosides, even when the level of higher homologs was reduced in the cell bodies of transformed cells. This result cannot be ascribed to the presence of plasmamembranes in the SAM as shown by ganglioside analysis of the plasmamembranes of some of the cells under study. Only in a highly metastatic transformed cell line did the SAM contain the same low GD1a level as found in the cell bodies.

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