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Comparative Study
. 1991 Nov;47(3):261-71.
doi: 10.1002/jcb.240470312.

Lung-derived growth factor that stimulates the growth of lung-metastasizing tumor cells: identification as transferrin

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Comparative Study

Lung-derived growth factor that stimulates the growth of lung-metastasizing tumor cells: identification as transferrin

P G Cavanaugh et al. J Cell Biochem. 1991 Nov.

Abstract

We have previously shown that culture medium conditioned by lung fragments contains mitogenic activity for lung-metastasizing tumor cells but not for their non-metastatic counterparts. The growth-promoting component from media conditioned by rat and porcine lungs has been purified and partially characterized as a Mr approximately 66,000 (unreduced) or Mr approximately 72,000 (reduced) glycoprotein [Cancer Res 49:3928, 1989; J Cell Biochem 43:127, 1990]. Here we report that this factor is the iron transport protein transferrin. Migration distances in sodium dodecyl sulfate and native gel polyacrylamide electrophoresis systems were similar, as were the specific activities and spectrum of mitogenic activities of the lung-derived growth factor and transferrin. Electrophoretically separated holo-rat transferrin and rat lung-derived growth factor displayed similar positive stains for iron. A polyclonal antibody generated against the lung-derived growth factor cross-reacted with human and rat transferrin in Western blots, and anti-human transferrin cross-reacted with rat lung-derived growth factor. All of the mitogenic activity contained in crude lung conditioned media could be removed by antibody-mediated transferrin depletion. The putative cell receptor molecular weights for the lung-derived growth factor and transferrin were similar as were the molecular weights of polypeptides produced by partial trypsin cleavage of the two. Finally, the amino acid sequence of certain regions of rat lung-derived growth factor demonstrated a high degree of homology to human transferrin. The physical and biochemical properties, antigenicity, and mitogenic activity of a previously unidentified lung-derived growth factor for lung-metastasizing tumor cells indicate that it is transferrin.

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