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(Received for publication, May 15,
1995; and in revised form, January 2, 1996) We reported previously that the potency of heparin-binding
fibroblast growth factor-1 (FGF-1) as a mitogen for rat hepatocytes in
primary culture is as high as that of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and
hepatocyte growth factor. To gain insight into the pathophysiological
significance of FGF-1 in hepatocyte growth, we analyzed the cooperative
mitogenicity of FGF-1 and EGF. Results from a nuclear labeling assay
using [
Volume 271,
Number 14,
Issue of April 5, 1996 pp. 8221-8227
©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
H]thymidine suggest that most hepatocytes
in primary culture consist of two cell populations that differ in
response to FGF-1; one is an FGF-1-responsive cell population, and the
other is an EGF-responsive (but not FGF-1-responsive) cell population.
On the other hand, autoradiographic analysis of
I-FGF-1
binding demonstrated that high affinity FGF receptors were
homogeneously distributed on the surface of all hepatocytes.
Cross-linking
I-FGF-1 to the nonstimulated hepatocyte
surface indicated that the high affinity FGF receptors comprise two FGF
receptors that differ in molecular mass (128 and 79 kDa). Furthermore,
the 79-kDa receptor was preferentially down-regulated when the
hepatocytes were stimulated with EGF or hepatocyte growth factor. These
data suggest that the abundant expression of the 79-kDa FGF receptor on
some populations of hepatocytes is involved in their lack of response
to FGF-1. The 128- and 79-kDa FGF receptors were assigned as FGFR2
using an antibody specific to the ectodomain of FGFR2, whereas the
79-kDa receptor was not reactive to the antibody against the carboxyl
terminus of FGFR2. This 79-kDa FGF receptor was not
tyrosine-phosphorylated in response to FGF-1 stimulation, while the
128-kDa FGF receptor was recognized by anti-phosphotyrosine antibody
under the same conditions. Also, the heterodimer of 79- and 128-kDa FGF
receptors was less tyrosine-phosphorylated than the homodimer of
128-kDa FGF receptors. These data suggest that the 79-kDa FGF receptor
inhibits the function of the 128-kDa FGF receptor through their
heterodimerization. Thus, we surmise that the difference in response to
FGF-1 between the cell populations of normal rat hepatocytes was caused
by the different levels of the 79-kDa FGF receptor in each cell
population.
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