## Abstract The effect of EGF on the soft agar colonyβforming ability of fresh human tumor cells was assessed in 40 specimens obtained from various types of carcinoma including those of the breast, endometrium, ovary, and other sites. Cells from four established human tumor cell lines (three breast
Effect of epidermal growth factor on rat pleural mesothelial cell growth
β Scribed by A. Van Der Meeren; F. Levy; A. Renier; M. C. Jaurand; A. Katz
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 666 KB
- Volume
- 144
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
We recently reported that the growth of normal rat pleural mesothelial cells (RPMCs) is inhibited by conditioned media from either in vivo or in vitro transformed RPMCs. In this study we report that the growth of normal RPMCs is inhibited by epidermal growth factor (EGF). This was demonstrated by using three methods of investigation. Two types of studies were carried out with growing cells. First, cell counts indicated that the number of cells was reduced in EGFβtreated cultures when compared with untreated cultures. Second, the percentage of S cells detected by flow cytometry following treatment with EGF was lower than without EGF. In other experiments, incorporation of tritiated thymidine in confluent cells was decreased by EGF treatment, either in the presence or absence of fetal calf serum; these effects were dose dependent and were observed from 2 ng/ml EGF. Lower EGF concentrations did not significantly modify thymidine incorporation when compared with untreated cells. Analysis of ^125^I EGF binding experiments by the Scatchard method indicated that RPMCs possess EGF receptors (about 10^5^ per cell) with low ligand binding affinity (Kd = 1.7 Β± 0.4 nM). These results indicate that EGF might modulate the growth of RPMCs.
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The objective of this study was to determine if adenosine alters growth of mammary epithelium. Mouse mammary epithelial cells (NMuMG) were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum. After serum starvation for 24 h, EGF (0-100 ng/ml) and/or adenosine (0-100 microM) was added. Adenosine
## Abstract The effects of epidermal growth factor (EGF) were studied in rat pituitary tumor cells, GH~3~, grown in serumβsupplemented and serumβfree chemically defined media. EGF (1 nM) increased the cell number to 132% of the control cultured in the defined medium during a 6βday incubation period