Identification of a PDGF‐like mitoattractant produced by NIH/3T3 cells after transformation with SV40
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 123 (2) , 161-166
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041230203
Abstract
It has previously been shown that fibroblastic cells transformed by SV40 exhibit a reduced requirement for PDGF for growth. In addition, NIH/3T3 cells lose both their chemotactic response to PDGF and specific cell surface binding of PDGF after transformation with SV40. We have now examined whether the SV40 transformed NH/3T3 cells are producing a factor which acts similarly to PDGF. Our studies indicate that NIH/3T3 cells transformed with SV 40 produce a factor which shares many biological properties with PDGF. We were unable to detect this activity in conditioned media from non-transformed NIH/3T3 cells. The SV40/NIH/3T3 derived factor appears to possess both chemotactic and mitogenic activity for connective tissue cells but not endothelial or epithelial cells. Furthermore, in preliminary studies, this activity competes with 125I-PDGF for binding to smooth muscle cells. The biochemical properties of the SV40/NIH/3T3 derived factor are different from those of PDGF. The SV40 activity appears to reside in a heat labile acidic protein (pI < 7.0) of MW < 30,000 whereas PDGF is a heat stable basic protein (pI9.8) of 30,000 MW. Production of this factor may play a role in the decreased serum requirement for cell replication exhibited by SV40-transformed NIH/3T3 cells by supplying the cells with their own PDGF-like growth factor.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
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