Abstract

Incubation of serum-growth HeLa cells in serum-free medium causes a rapid (t1/2 3 min) 30-60% decrease in the binding of 125I-diferric transferrin to the cell surface. Addition of fetal bovine serum to cells in serum-free medium results in a rapid (t1/2 3 min) and concentration-dependent increase in binding activity. The loss or gain in ligand binding is a result of changes in surface receptor number rather than an alteration in ligand-receptor affinity. A variety of hormones (insulin, insulin-like growth factor, interleukin 1 and platelet-derived factor) were found to mimic the effect of serum on receptor number. The alteration in surface receptor number was found to be calcium-dependent. Changes in surface receptor number were independent of either receptor biosynthetic rate or the absolute cellular content of receptors. The effect of insulin or serum on Hela cell transferrin receptor distribution was unaffected by the presence of transferrin, demonstrating that receptor distribution in this cell type is ligand-independent. The ability of serum or insulin to modify surface transferrin receptor number was also observed in mouse L-cells, human skin fibroblasts, and J774 macrophage tumour cells. However, transferrin receptors on K562 and Epstein-Barr virus-transformed human lymphoblasts were unaltered by these agents. The quantities of receptors whose distribution is predominantly on the surface (i.e. epidermal growth factor or low density lipoprotein receptor) were unaltered by addition of the mitogenic agents. These results extend our previous studies [H.S. Wiley & J. Kaplan (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 7456-7460] demonstrating that mitogenic agents can induce redistribution of receptor pools in selected cell types.

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