Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) is a potent mitogen for several types of cultured cells and tissues. We have studied the interaction of IGF-II with a panel of cultured human breast cancer cell lines, examining the possibility that these cells synthesize and secrete IGF-II activity which could have autocrine/paracrine functions. Synthetic IGF-II was mitogenic in five of seven cell lines tested, including the estrogen receptor-positive lines MCF-7L, ZR75-1, and T47D and the estrogen receptor (ER)-negative lines Hs578T and MDA-231. IGF-II was slightly less potent than IGF-I in stimulating DNA synthesis in MCF-71 cells, an effect that paralleled its ability to compete for [125I]IGF-I binding in these cells. Affinity labeling studies revealed that IGF-II could also compete for binding to the 130,000 mol wt alpha-subunit of the IGF-I receptor. A monoclonal antibody to the IGF-I receptor inhibited the mitogenic effects of IGF-II in MCF-7L and MDA-231 cells, suggesting that this receptor mediates the growth effects of IGF-II in these breast cancer cells. Using a RIA and a RRA, IGF-II-like activity was detected in conditioned medium extracts processed to remove IGF-binding proteins from several breast cancer cell lines, with the highest levels found in conditioned medium from MCF-7L and T47D cell lines. IGF-II mRNA transcripts in MCF-7L and T47D cells were identified by Northern blot analysis and were confirmed by RNase protection assay. IGF-II mRNA was increased by estrogen in MCF-7L cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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