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Fig. 4. Colchicine stimulates PAI-1 synthesis in quiescent R22 cells.
Growth-arrested cells were treated with DMSO (solvent control) or colchicine
(10 µM, final concentration) for 4 hours. The cellular microtubule network
and PAI-1 protein were visualized in fixed and permeabilized cells by indirect
immunocytochemistry with antibodies to tubulin and PAI-1, respectively (A).
Cells exposed to DMSO were well spread with a highly branched microtubule
network. Colchicine treatment disrupted the microtubule skeleton and
significantly reduced the cell-spread area
(Fig. 3, legend). PAI-1 protein
was virtually undetectable by immunocytochemistry (A) and resolved at only
extremely low levels by western blotting of extracts of control cells (B).
Abundant PAI-1 protein was easily identified, by contrast, by both techniques
in 4 hour colchicine-stimulated cells (A,B). Nuclei were stained with
DAPI.