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Volume 270,
Number 48,
Issue of December 1, 1995 pp. 29018-29024
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Conservation of
Ligand Specificity between the Mammalian and Amphibian Fibroblast
Growth Factor Receptors
(Received for publication, June 23, 1995; and in revised form, September 28, 1995)
Kevin M.
Patrie
,
Arthur J.
Kudla
,
Bradley
B.
Olwin
, ,
Ing-Ming
Chiu
We have previously cloned and sequenced a newt keratinocyte
growth factor receptor (KGFR) cDNA which exhibited a unique spatial and
temporal expression pattern in the regenerating newt limb. In this
report, we further characterize the biochemical and functional
properties of this newt KGFR. A stable Chinese hamster ovary
transfectant overexpressing the newt KGFR was capable of binding both I-fibroblast growth factor-1 (FGF-1) and I-FGF-7 but not I-FGF-2, indistinguishable
from the human KGFR. Scatchard analysis and cross-linking studies
further support the conclusion that FGF-1 and FGF-7 are the ligands for
the newt KGFR. In addition to their ability to bind to FGFs, both the
human and the newt KGFR are also capable of repressing differentiation
in mouse MM14 myoblasts. MM14 cells express FGFR1 and are repressed
from differentiation by FGF-1, FGF-2, and FGF-4 but not FGF-7.
Co-transfection of MM14 cells with either a human or newt KGFR
expression construct conferred a response to FGF-7 as determined by a
human -cardiac actin/luciferase reporter construct. The response
to FGF-7 was similar to the endogenous FGF response as FGF-7 prevented
MM14 myoblasts from undergoing terminal differentiation. Thus, both the
human and the newt KGFRs transduce signals similar to those transduced
via the endogenous mouse FGFR1. Together these data indicate that this
newly isolated newt KGFR is a functional receptor as it binds two FGF
family members with high affinity and mediates signaling in skeletal
muscle myoblasts. Because the binding pattern of the newt KGFR is
similar to the pattern observed for its mammalian counterpart, it
emphasizes the strict conservation that this ligand/receptor system has
undergone through evolution.

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Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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