We have studied the expression of insulin-like growth factor type II (IGF-II) and its autocrine role during the proliferation and differentiation of the CaCo-2 colon carcinoma cell line. IGF-II RNA levels were high in proliferating cells and decreased by more than 10-fold when cells ceased to proliferate and differentiated. Immunoreactive IGF-II protein was high in the conditioned media of proliferating cells and decreased 20-fold in the media of differentiated cells. Reduced IGF-II expression was associated with a decrease in IGF-I receptor number that was high in proliferating cells (approximately 80,000 binding sites/cell) and reduced by 4-fold in differentiated cells. Exogenously added IGF-II was able to stimulate proliferation of serum-deprived cells in a dose-dependent fashion. IGF-II acted through the IGF-I receptor, since both basal and IGF-II-stimulated cell proliferation was inhibited by the monoclonal antibody alpha-IR3, which blocks the binding sites of the IGF-I receptor. The inhibition of CaCo-2 basal cell growth by the alpha-IR3 antibody suggests that IGF-II may act as an autocrine growth factor for these cells.
Expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-II and IGF-I receptor during proliferation and differentiation of CaCo-2 human colon carcinoma cells / R. Zarrilli, S. Pignata, M. Romano, A. Gravina, S. Casola, C.B. Bruni, A.M. Acquaviva. - In: CELL GROWTH & DIFFERENTIATION. - ISSN 1044-9523. - 5:10(1994), pp. 1085-1091.
Expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-II and IGF-I receptor during proliferation and differentiation of CaCo-2 human colon carcinoma cells
S. Casola;
1994
Abstract
We have studied the expression of insulin-like growth factor type II (IGF-II) and its autocrine role during the proliferation and differentiation of the CaCo-2 colon carcinoma cell line. IGF-II RNA levels were high in proliferating cells and decreased by more than 10-fold when cells ceased to proliferate and differentiated. Immunoreactive IGF-II protein was high in the conditioned media of proliferating cells and decreased 20-fold in the media of differentiated cells. Reduced IGF-II expression was associated with a decrease in IGF-I receptor number that was high in proliferating cells (approximately 80,000 binding sites/cell) and reduced by 4-fold in differentiated cells. Exogenously added IGF-II was able to stimulate proliferation of serum-deprived cells in a dose-dependent fashion. IGF-II acted through the IGF-I receptor, since both basal and IGF-II-stimulated cell proliferation was inhibited by the monoclonal antibody alpha-IR3, which blocks the binding sites of the IGF-I receptor. The inhibition of CaCo-2 basal cell growth by the alpha-IR3 antibody suggests that IGF-II may act as an autocrine growth factor for these cells.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Zarrilli et al, Cell Growth and Differ 1994.pdf
accesso riservato
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione
3.58 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
3.58 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.




