Abstract

Human fibroblasts have been used as an in vitro model to examine the morphology and origin of substrate-attached materials. In cultures of subconfluent cells, no ‘tracks’ or ‘pools’ of material could be detected on substrata by anodic oxide interferometry or electron microscopy. However, a continuous layer of densely staining material was present on Falcon plastic tissue culture dishes never exposed to cells or culture medium. Exposure of substrata to culture medium caused the adsorption of fetal calf serum (FCS) components onto the substratum within a few minutes. Although antigenic FCS components remained on the substrata for several days, they were seldom adsorbed to the cells. The hypothesis was formulated that adhesion was mediated by FCS components on the substrata, but not by cellular materials deposited extracellularly. Support for this hypothesis was obtained by studying serum-dependent differences in cell adhesion. Fibroblasts subcultured in the presence of FCS components were usually separated from the substratum by a distance of at least 30 Å. In the absence of FCS components, the cells were more closely adherent, in the range at which the near van der Walls forces were effective. Fibroblasts subcultured in the absence of serum components could be removed readily from the substratum, leaving lsfootprints’ of cell surface material behind. Although this material has been prepared similarly to ‘microexudates’ from other types of cultured cells, its relationship to those microexudates has not been determined.

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