Abstract

The WC5 rat cerebellar cell line, infected with a Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) that is temperature-sensitive for pp60v-src transformation, expresses high levels of the neural cell adhesion molecule, N-CAM, when grown at the non-permissive temperature for pp60v-src activity. At the permissive temperature, N-CAM expression is 4- to 10-fold reduced and the cells aggregate poorly. To evaluate the effects of variations in N-CAM expression, we compared the invasive ability of transformed WC5 cells that express low levels of N-CAM with transformed cells in which N-CAM-mediated adhesion was restored. WC5 cells were transfected with expression vectors containing cDNAs encoding the 120 or 180 kDa forms of chicken N-CAM linked to constitutive promoters. Several permanently transfected lines that expressed chicken N-CAM at the cell surface were isolated. These cell lines showed enhanced aggregation at the permissive temperature relative to untransfected WC5 cells or cells transfected with control constructs. By comparing the ability of control and transfected WC5 cells to invade reconstituted extracellular matrix, we tested the effect of variations in N-CAM-mediated adhesion on invasion. Clones that expressed high levels of N-CAM showed invasion rates that were similar to control cells, indicating that increasing N-CAM-mediated adhesion does not inhibit the invasiveness of RSV-transformed WC5 cells.

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