Abstract
Branching morphogenesis of the fetal mouse submandibular gland (SMG) can be modulated in vitro by stimulation or inhibition of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Because the mRNAs for EGF and EGFR are detectable in RNA of SMG rudiments isolated directly from fetuses, the EGF system probably operates physiologically as a regulator of SMG morphogenesis. However, neither EGFR protein nor its precise cellular localization has been characterized in the fetal SMG. Here we show EGFR protein in fetal mouse SMG by immunoprecipitation, affinity labeling, ligand-induced autophosphorylation, and immunohistochemistry. SMGs from E16 fetuses (day of vaginal plug = E0) were labeled with [35S]-cysteine/methionine and homogenized. After addition of specific antibody to EGFR, the immunoprecipitate was isolated, resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and detected by autoradiography. A single band of 170 kD was detected, corresponding to the EGFR protein. Affinity labeling with [125I]-EGF of the membrane fraction of E18 SMG also revealed a prominent band at 170 kD, showing that this EGFR protein can bind specifically to its ligand. Incubation of SMG membranes from E18 fetuses with EGF in the presence of [gamma-32P]-ATP, followed by immunoprecipitation with anti-phosphotyrosine antibody also showed a single band at 170 kD, demonstrating autophosphorylation of the EGFR in response to binding of its ligand. Immunohistochemical localization of the cellular sites of EGFR in the fetal SMG required use of a catalyzed signal amplification procedure, with biotinyltyramide as the amplifying agent. EGFR was localized predominantly, if not exclusively, in cell membranes of epithelial cells of the rudiment, whereas staining of mesenchymal cells was equivocal. Staining was strongest on duct cells, and weak on cells of the end-pieces. These findings clearly show that a functional EGFR protein is expressed in fetal SMG chiefly, if not exclusively, on epithelial cells.
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