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[Cancer Research 41, 3077-3081, August 1, 1981]
© 1981 American Association for Cancer Research

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Characterization and Use of Neuraminidase-modified L1210 Plasma Membranes for Protection against Tumor Growth1

Alan E. Brandt, Alice K. Jameson and Jack H. Pincus

Life Sciences Division, SRI International, Menlo Park, California 94025

Purified plasma membranes were prepared from L1210 ascites tumor cells and analyzed for their protein and carbohydrate composition. Conditions were developed for treating the isolated plasma membranes with Vibrio cholerae neuraminidase (VCN) so that 88% of the N-acetylneuraminic acid was removed without changing membrane proteins or other membrane carbohydrate constituents. The VCN-induced modifications were characterized by labeling VCN-treated and untreated L1210 cells by the galactose oxidase:sodium [3H]borohydride procedure. This showed that N-acetylneuraminic acid is the predominant saccharide at the nonreducing terminus of plasma membrane glycoproteins and that galactose and/or N-acetylgalactosamine residues are penultimate to these. VCN modification exposed the penultimate residues and was not limited to any single plasma membrane glycoprotein. DBA/2J mice were given i.p. injections of VCN-treated or untreated membranes and were challenged 3 weeks later with 104 viable L1210 cells. Mice pretreated with VCN-treated membranes resisted the tumor challenge; those receiving untreated membranes or no treatment succumbed to the tumor. Our results demonstrate that appropriately modified plasma membranes can be used to induce resistance to tumor growth. They also suggest that tumor cell membrane carbohydrate structures have an important role in this phenomenon.

1 This work was supported by Contract NO1-CB-64053 from the National Cancer Institute.

Received 12/ 3/80. Accepted 5/ 7/81.







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Copyright © 1981 by the American Association for Cancer Research.