Abstract
To assess the role in cell-cell adhesion of gp64, a putative cell-cell adhesion molecule ofPolysphondylium pallidum, we treated the cells with tunicamycin (TM), a known inhibitor of the synthesis of the N-linked oligosaccharide precursor, and examined TM's effect on cell-cell adhesion. The vegetative growth ofPolysphondylium cells was inhibited with TM in a dose-dependent manner. When cells were treated with TM (2.0 μg/ml) during only the first 4 hr of starvation and further starved for 8 hr without TM, the cells dissociated considerably, although even the growth phase cells ofPolysphondylium normally show EDTA-resistant (Ca2+-independent) cell adhesions. In parallel with the above effects, the amounts of intact gp64 decreased considerably in time with the lengths of incubation (0 hr>4 hr >8 hr). When TM-treated cells were washed free of TM, and shaken for a further 12 hr, the cells began to aggregate again, accompanied by an increase of gp64. In conclusion, TM affected cell-cell adhesion ofPolysphondylium cells, but we were not able to distinguish whether the inhibition of cell aggregation was due to defects in glycosylation on glycoproteins and/or due to reduced levels of glycoproteins themselves.
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