ASPARAGINE-REQUIRING TUMOR CELL LINES AND THEIR NON-REQUIRING VARIANTS: CYTOGENETICS, BIOCHEMISTRY AND POPULATION DYNAMICS

Author:

Colofiore Joseph1,Morrow John2,Patterson Manford K3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66044

2. Department of Cell Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66044

3. Biomedical Division, The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc., Ardmore, Oklahoma 73401

Abstract

ABSTRACT Asparagine-requiring Jensen and Walker rat tumor cells and their asparagine-independent variants have been analyzed. The following results were obtained: (1) Both cell lines have very low levels of asparagine synthetase, and non-requiring revertants isolated from these lines have elevated levels of the enzyme. (2) No differences in chromosome number were detected between the parent Jensen line and five Jensen non-requiring revertants isolated from it. (3) Both Jensen and Walker cells undergo asparagineless death when deprived of this amino acid, although the Jensen cells do so at a more rapid rate. (4) Jensen requiring lines are at a selective advantage when grown in competition with non-requiring variants in complete medium, and their growth rate is more rapid when grown separately. The selective coefficients for the variant with respect to the asparagine-requiring parent ASN- line were 0.94 for the competition experiments and 0.83 for growth rate estimates. (5) A somatic cell hybrid between Chinese hamster cells (which require asparagine at low densities, and posses measurable synthetase activity) and the Walker line was found to be asparagine-independent, and it possessed enzyme levels equivalent to the hamster parent. The results of these investigations suggest a parallel with microbial auxotrophic mutants and can be understood in terms of alterations within nuclear structural genes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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