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Journal ArticleDOI

Production of fetal-like alkaline phosphatase by HeLa cells.

Norton A. Elson, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1969 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 6, pp 549-561
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TLDR
The data suggest that malignant cells in culture, HeLa, are producing a fetal-like alkaline phosphatase probably by “derepression of the genome” however, the electrophoretic and immunological characteristics of the enzyme are altered sufficiently so that it can be distinguished from the normally produced fetal enzyme.
Abstract
Alkaline phosphatase produced by HeLa cells differs in its chemical and physical properties from the enzyme found in adult organs and tissues (Cox and Griffin, 1967). In the present study HeLa cell alkaline phosphatase was compared to a fetal form of the enzyme found in human placenta. Both enzymes have approximately the same molecular weight as judged by sucrose density gradients, and the chemical and physical properties of these alkaline phosphatases are similar. The electrophoretic pattern of the HeLa cell enzyme resembles the placental alkaline phosphatase of the heterozygous FS phenotype except that it is slower moving. Double immunodiffusion using an antibody against HeLa cell alkaline phosphatase and placental and HeLa cell enzymes as antigens shows a single line of partial identity between the two enzymes, with a small spur suggesting additional antigenic sites on the HeLa cell enzyme. The data suggest that malignant cells in culture, HeLa, are producing a fetal-like alkaline phosphatase probably by “derepression of the genome.” However, the electrophoretic and immunological characteristics of the enzyme are altered sufficiently so that it can be distinguished from the normally produced fetal enzyme.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pericellular Hydrogel/Nanonets Inhibit Cancer Cells†

TL;DR: Pericellular hydrogel/nanonets of small molecules to exhibit distinct functions illustrates a fundamentally new way to engineer molecular assemblies spatiotemporally in cellular microenvironment for inhibiting cancer cell growth and even metastasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective dephosphorylation of proteins containing phosphotyrosine by alkaline phosphatases.

TL;DR: The so-called alkaline phosphatases may be a group of membrane-bound glycoproteins that represent a class of phospho-Tyr-histones that show selectivity for proteins phosphorylated at tyrosine residues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hormonal induction of alkaline phosphatase activity by an increase in catalytic efficiency of the enzyme

TL;DR: It is suggested that the enhanced catalytic activity of induced alkaline phosphatase is the result of an alteration in zinc ion binding which produces an entatic effect, lowering the energy requirements of the enzyme substrate transition state.
Book ChapterDOI

Isozymes And Cancer

TL;DR: The chapter describes the enzymes with multiple molecular forms (such as lactic, malate, isocitrate, alcohol, and aldehyde dehydrogenase respectively) and the isozymes present in both alkaline and acid phosphatases and presents a table summarizing the main distinctive isozymic modifications occurring in the serum of cancerous patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Production of human chorionic gonadotropin in HeLa cell cultures

TL;DR: It is found that HeLa65, cells produce the β subunit of HCG as measured by a specific radioimmunoassay and that sodium butyrate enhances production.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Method for Determining the Sedimentation Behavior of Enzymes: Application to Protein Mixtures

TL;DR: Sucrose gradient centrifugation is found to be a suitable method for determining sedimentation coefficients of enzymes in protein mixtures and the sedimentation behavior of several of the enzymes in the pathway of histidine biosynthesis in S. typhimurium has been determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

A histochemical procedure for localizing and evaluating leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activity in smears of blood and marrow.

TL;DR: Alkaline phosphatase activity was found only in neutrophilic granulocytes and was localized exclusively in the cytoplasm of these cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunology and biochemistry of Regan isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase in human cancer.

TL;DR: Derepression of the genome of the cancer cell may explain why certain cancer patients exhibit an isoenzyme of alkalineosphatase biochemically and immunologically indistinguishable from human placental alkaline phosphatase.
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