Abstract

Insulin-like growth factors IGF-I and IGF -II are important mediators of growth. A family of six high affinity IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) modulate IGF action. IGFBPs have three domains, of which the N- and C-domains are involved in high affinity IGF binding. IGFBP-6 is unique in its 20-100-fold IGF-II binding specificity over IGF-I. The aim of this study was to determine the contributions of the N- and C-domains of IGFBP-6 to its IGF binding properties. We confirmed that differential dissociation kinetics are responsible for the IGF-II binding preference of IGFBP-6. The N-domain has rapid association kinetics, similar to full-length IGFBP-6, but both IGF-I and -II dissociate rapidly from this domain, thereby reducing its binding affinity for IGF-II approximately 50-fold. However, the N-domain binds IGF-I and -II with similar affinities and it has a similar IGF-I binding affinity to full-length IGFBP-6. This suggests that the C-domain confers the IGF-II binding preference of IGFBP-6; indeed, IGF-I bound inconsistently with very low affinity to the C-domain. Coincubation studies showed that isolated N- and C-domains of IGFBP-6 do not strongly cooperate to enhance IGF binding. The results of the binding studies are supported by the effects of the IGFBP-6 domains on IGF-induced colon cancer cell proliferation; the N-domain inhibited IGF-II induced proliferation with approximately 20-fold lower potency than IGFBP-6 and it was equipotent in inhibiting IGF-I- and IGF-II-induced proliferation. Coincubation of C-domain had no additional effect on N-domain-induced inhibition of proliferation. In conclusion, both the N- and C-domains of IGFBP-6 are involved in IGF binding, the C-domain is responsible for the IGF-II binding preference of IGFBP-6 and intact IGFBP-6 is necessary for high affinity IGF binding.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call