Growth response to nerve growth factor (NGF) was tested in the primary melanoma cell line WM 164, which expressed a low level of NGF cell-surface receptor, and in WM 164 cells transfected with cDNA for the cell-surface receptor (TrWM 164 cells), which expressed a higher level of the cell-surface rec
Nerve growth factor regulates neuroectodermal tumor cell responses to mitogenic growth factors
✍ Scribed by Raquel Castellon; Bernard L. Mirkin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 181 KB
- Volume
- 72
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Previous studies showed that nerve growth factor (NGF) decreases the proliferation of neuroectodermal tumor (NET) cells (C‐1300 and Neuro2A murine neuroblastoma, PC12 rat pheochromocytoma) within 5–7 days in a dose‐dependent manner. This effect is regulated by the concentration of serum in the culture medium. Therefore, we hypothesized that NGF exerts its antimitogenic activities by interfering with the proliferative action of other growth factors. We studied the effects of short‐term vs. long‐term as well as endogenous vs. exogenous NGF on NET cell proliferation in response to various mitogenic growth factors. Retrovirus‐mediated transfer of the β‐NGF gene into NET cells activated TrkA and consistently decreased their proliferative responses to insulin‐like growth factor (IGF)‐I, IGF‐II, fibroblast growth factor‐2, and epidermal growth factor (EGF), down‐regulating EGF and IGF‐I binding sites. It also decreased tyrosine phosphorylation of ERK‐1, STAT3, and EGF or IGF receptors after treatment with IGF‐I or EGF. Long‐term incubation of NET cells with NGF mimicked the responses induced by β‐NGF gene transfer, albeit in a reversible manner. Short‐term NGF treatment augmented the proliferative responses to IGF‐I or EGF by enhancing cell survival. It also increased tyrosine phosphorylation of signal transducing proteins after exposure to IGF or EGF, an effect opposite to that of long‐term NGF treatments. Hence, long‐term NGF exposure in vitro might better reproduce the effects of NGF in vivo than short‐term treatments. Only long‐term exposure to NGF decreased the responses of NET cells to mitogenic growth factors by down‐regulating their receptors and attenuating signal transduction events required for cell proliferation. These results suggest that NGF could exert similar actions on cellular responses to growth factors in vivo. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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