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Sulfate transport-deficient mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells. Sulfation of glycosaminoglycans dependent on cysteine.
128
Citations
34
References
1986
Year
We isolated 59 Chinese hamster ovary cell mutants defective in 35SO4 incorporation into glycosaminoglycans. Thirty-five mutants incorporated [6-3H]glucosamine into glycosaminoglycans normally, suggesting that they were specifically impaired in sulfate incorporation. Cell hybridization studies revealed that the 35 mutants defined a unique complementation group. Pulse-labeling one of the mutants with 35SO4 showed that it possessed a defect in a saturable, 4-acetamido-4-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid-sensitive transport system required for sulfate uptake. Despite the dramatic reduction in 35SO4 incorporation, the mutant synthesized sulfated heparan and chondroitin chains. Incubation of the mutant with [35S]cysteine resulted in the formation of 35SO4, which was subsequently incorporated into the glycosaminoglycans. Similar results were obtained when wild-type cells were incubated in sulfate-free growth medium containing [35S]cysteine, and isotope dilution analysis indicated that about 15 microM of sulfate was derived from cysteine catabolism. We also found that the sulfate transport deficiency rendered the mutant resistant to 5 microM sodium chromate, whereas wild-type cells did not divide under these conditions. However, the mutant also did not proliferate in medium containing 5 microM chromate when grown in the presence of wild-type cells, suggesting that chromate was transported through cell-cell contacts. Since co-cultivating sulfate transport-deficient mutants with mutants defective in xylosyltransferase or galactosyltransferase I partially restored 35SO4 incorporation into glycosaminoglycans, intercellular sulfate transport occurred as well. Therefore, the availability of sulfate for glycosaminoglycan synthesis depends on sulfate uptake, turnover of sulfur-containing amino acids, and sulfate transport between cells.
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