monensin and Hodgkin-Disease

monensin has been researched along with Hodgkin-Disease* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for monensin and Hodgkin-Disease

ArticleYear
Biochemical characterization and biosynthesis of the Ki-1 antigen in Hodgkin-derived and virus-transformed human B and T lymphoid cell lines.
    Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950), 1987, Sep-15, Volume: 139, Issue:6

    The Hodgkin-associated Ki-1 antigen was analyzed in different cell lines. In Hodgkin analogous L428 cells, biosynthetically labeled with radioactive amino acids, the Ki-1 antibody precipitated three glycoproteins with 90, 105, and 120 kDa, respectively. Surface-labeling revealed that the two larger components were membrane-associated forms of the Ki-1 antigen, although the 90-kDa molecule was shown in pulse-chase experiments to be the precursor of the 105- and 120-kDa forms. All three forms of the Ki-1 antigen possess a tunicamycin-sensitive 6-kDa N-linked carbohydrate moiety. O-Linked oligosaccharides could not be detected. Thus, the differences in m.w. are probably not due to glycosylation. The ionophore monensin prevented the appearance of the membrane-associated molecules, which demonstrated that they are assembled between the transcompartment of the Golgi complex and their insertion into the cell membrane. The 90-kDa precursor molecule cannot be generated by disulfide reduction from the two larger forms. After internal labeling with P-32, only the 105- and 120-kDa bands became visible, indicating that the Ki-1 molecule is phosphorylated after its processing into the two larger membrane-associated forms. Analysis of the Ki-1 antigens from other cell lines demonstrated that after external labeling of two other Hodgkin-derived cell lines, six Epstein-Barr virus lymphoblastoid cell lines and one human T leukemia virus I-positive T cell line, both the 105- and the 120-kDa membrane molecules could be detected, regardless of the presence or type of virus integrated.

    Topics: Antigens, Neoplasm; Antigens, Surface; B-Lymphocytes; Cell Line; Cell Transformation, Viral; Deltaretrovirus; Glycoproteins; Herpesvirus 4, Human; Hodgkin Disease; Humans; Molecular Weight; Monensin; Peptide Hydrolases; Phosphoproteins; T-Lymphocytes; Tunicamycin

1987