“…Table 1 gives an overview of studies (20) NIH/3T3 18 kDa, 22 kDa, 22.5 kDa, 24 kDa Serum independent growth (50,56,57) NIH/3T3 18 kDa, hmw Altered growth and morphology (100) NIH/3T3 and A31 18 kDa, hmw Serum independent growth, transformed morphology, altered drug resistance (101) Cardiac myocytes Hmw Proliferation, binucleation, chromatin compaction (59,67) or mitotic arrest, chromatin disruption (68) Astrocytes and glioma cells 18 kDa, 22 kDa, 22.5 kDa, 24 kDa Proliferation (60) AR4-2J Hmw Proliferation (61,65,102) , differntial expression of PKC d and e, and ERK-1/2 activation (61,65) and c-Jun expression (61) HeLa Hmw Induction of a radioresistant phenotype (63) Sympathetic neurons 23 kDa Induction of a multinuclear phenotype (69) Bladder carcinoma cells 24 kDa Formation of metastasis (71,72) Schwann cell precursors Hmw Transdifferentiation into melanocytes (62) Schwann and PC12 cells 18 kDa, hmw Altered growth and differential regulation of neuronal or endocrine phenotype (103,104) Schwann cells 21 kDa, 23 kDa Sensory nerve cell recovery and axon myelination (70) Schwann cells 23 kDa Interaction with SMN (a factor in spliceosomal complexes) (52,78) SK-Hep1 18 kDa, hmw Transformation, tumorigenicity (105) SK-Hep-1 Hmw Interaction with antiapoptotic protein FIF (77) ABAE Hmw Immortalization (106) NIH/3T3 Hmw Binding to ribosomal protein L6/TAXREB107 (76) (In vitro) 18 kDa, 23 kDa Interaction with splicing factor SF3a66 (79) NIH/3T3 Exogenous 18 kDa Mitogenesis/Interaction with and stimulation of CK2 (90) NIH/3T3 Exogenous 18 kDa Mitogenesis/Interaction with and activation of ribosomal S6 kinase 2 (92)…”