PubMed:2521857 / 0-3
Phorbol ester or epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulates the concurrent accumulation of mRNA for the EGF receptor and its ligand transforming growth factor-alpha in a breast cancer cell line.
We have previously reported that both 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) can stimulate the synthesis rate of EGF receptors. We now show that the MDA468 breast cancer cells express the mRNA for the EGF-like molecule, transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), and demonstrate that TPA or EGF cause an accumulation of both EGF receptor and TGF-alpha mRNA. The levels of EGF receptor mRNA paralleled our earlier protein data, with peak accumulations of 2-3-fold with 10(-9) M EGF and 3-5-fold with 100 ng/ml TPA seen between 6 and 8 h. A 7-fold accumulation of TGF-alpha mRNA was seen following 4 h of treatment with TPA, and a 2-fold accumulation was seen after 8 h with EGF. These changes in EGF receptor and TGF-alpha mRNAs were observed in the absence of any change in the mRNA level of the alpha-subunit of hexosaminidase A (a lysosomal enzyme), demonstrating some degree of specificity. Detectable quantities of immunoreactive TGF-alpha accumulated in the cell culture medium of MDA468 cell treated with the blocking anti-EGF receptor monoclonal antibody B1D8 while no immunoreactive TGF-alpha was detected in the medium of cells with unblocked receptors. The concentration of B1D8 used was sufficient to block the binding of exogenously added 125I-EGF to undetectable levels but had only minor effects on cell growth and no effect on the expression of the TGF-alpha and EGF receptor mRNA.
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