Mechanisms of Kirsten murine sarcoma virus transformation-induced changes in the collagen phenotype and synthetic rate of BALB 3T3 cells.

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RESUMO

Specific viral transformation rather than cell selection can explain the previously observed increase in the proportion of type III procollagen compared to type I procollagen in BALB 3T3 cells transformed by Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (Ki-MSV). Two subclones of BALB 3T3 A31 were productively infected with with a temperature-sensitive Ki-MSV in the presence of helper murine leukemia virus (MLV), resulting in virtually complete transformation of cultures and eliminating selection of transformed foci. Analysis of radioactive collagen, derived from procollagen by pepsin treatment, showed that both of the tsKi-MSV/MLV-transformed subclones contained a 4-fold greater proportion of type III procollagen than did control MLV-infected cultures. A nonproducer derivative exhibited an even greater change (10-fold), indicating that viral replication was irrelevant. After 48 hr at a nonpermissive temperature, tsKi-MSV-transformed cells retained a high proportion of type III procollagen, suggesting that either this change is not induced by src protein or else there is a slowly reversible or irreversible step involved. Alternatively, type III procollagen mRNA may be long lived. In contrast, the relative rate of procollagen synthesis in transformed cells was clearly regulated by src protein. Translation of mRNA from cells preincubated at permissive or nonpermissive temperatures revealed that the decreased relative rate can be explained by a simultaneous small decrease in the level of procollagen mRNA and a large increase in mRNA for noncollagen proteins.

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