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. 1987 Jul;132(1):33-40.
doi: 10.1002/jcp.1041320105.

Regulation of DNA synthesis in human fetal hepatocytes by placental lactogen, growth hormone, and insulin-like growth factor I/somatomedin-C

Regulation of DNA synthesis in human fetal hepatocytes by placental lactogen, growth hormone, and insulin-like growth factor I/somatomedin-C

A J Strain et al. J Cell Physiol. 1987 Jul.

Abstract

Hepatocytes were isolated by gentle collagenase digestion of liver fragments from human fetuses of 8-16 weeks gestation obtained following prostaglandin-induced pregnancy terminations. They were maintained on collagen-coated tissue culture dishes in selective arginine-free medium for up to 72 hr, and the action of hormones and growth factors on DNA synthesis was studied by autoradiography following incubation with 3H-thymidine. The labeling index of hepatocytes was consistently enhanced by 25-250 ng/ml human placental lactogen (HPL), 25-250 ng/ml human growth hormone (HGH), 10-50 ng/ml insulin-like growth factor I/somatomedin-C (IGF I/Sm-C), and 10% dialyzed fetal calf serum, reaching a maximum of three- to four-fold greater than in basal medium alone. Under basal conditions, 30% of hepatocytes stained positively for the presence of IGF peptides using a monoclonal antibody raised against purified human IGF I/Sm-C. Although this proportion did not change following treatment with HGH and HPL, IGF I/Sm-C released by cells into culture medium was considerably increased in the presence of both hormones. Incubation with the SmC 1.2 monoclonal antibody abolished the increase in labeling index in response to IGF I/Sm-C and partially blocked the response to both HPL and HGH. These results indicate that both HPL and HGH stimulate DNA synthesis in human fetal hepatocytes and suggest that this effect is at least partly indirect through the release and paracrine action of IGF I/Sm-C.

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