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. 1990 Mar;142(3):441-8.
doi: 10.1002/jcp.1041420302.

Epidermal growth factor and bombesin differ strikingly in the induction of early responses in Swiss 3T3 cells

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Epidermal growth factor and bombesin differ strikingly in the induction of early responses in Swiss 3T3 cells

A J Bierman et al. J Cell Physiol. 1990 Mar.

Abstract

Swiss 3T3 cells express receptors for both the polypeptide epidermal growth factor (EGF) and the tetradecapeptide bombesin and respond mitogenically to these substances. These cells thus provide a system to analyze potential signal transduction pathways involved in mitogenic stimulation. Here we have determined and compared the early ionic responses elicited by EGF and bombesin and their relation to diacylglycerol (DG) and inositolphosphate (InsPn) production. Whereas EGF fails to cause any significant change in intracellular Ca2+, bombesin effectively induces prompt and transient Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores. Further support of the idea that these receptors utilize distinct signalling pathways comes from the measurements of cytoplasmic pH (pHi). As in most target cells, EGF induces a delayed (1 min) but sustained intracellular alkalinization that reaches a new steady state after approximately 10 min. Bombesin, in contrast, elicits a biphasic response; within seconds, a rapid but transient rise in pHi is observed, followed by a further slower sustained alkalinization. Inhibition of the Na+/H+ exchanger prevents both EGF as well as bombesin-induced alkalinization. However, under these conditions, bombesin evokes a rapid and sustained acidification related to the Ca2+ response. Apparently, bombesin initiates a Ca2(+)-dependent acidifying process immediately after binding of the hormone to its receptor. Furthermore, we could demonstrate that the bombesin-induced alkalinization depends on protein kinase C activation whereas the EGF response does not. Determination of the total DG and InsPn accumulation revealed that EGF is ineffective in stimulating phospholipase C-mediated production of these second messengers. In contrast, bombesin causes a rapid DG and InsPn production coinciding with the Ca2+ response and the first phase of the rise in pHi followed by a slower DG accumulation coinciding with the second alkalinization phase. Our results show that in Swiss 3T3 cells the bombesin receptor activates the hydrolysis of inositol lipids as a mechanism of signal transduction, which consequently causes changes in Ca2+i and pHi. Clearly, the EGF receptor utilizes different pathways to evoke mitogenesis and stimulates Na+/H+ exchange independently of DG production and protein kinase C activation.

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