Abstract

We investigated the effect of somatomedin C (SM-C) on the growth of mouse mammary ductal epithelial cells in collagen gel culture. Epithelial cells, isolated by collagenase digestion of whole glands, were placed into primary serum-free collagen gel cell culture for 10-12 days, during which SM-C was added alone or in combination with other growth-promoting factors. Previous work has shown that these cells require a superphysiological concentration of insulin (10 micrograms/ml) for optimum growth in serum-free medium (a 1:1 mixture of Ham's F-12 and Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's medium) containing epidermal growth factor (EGF). When SM-C (1-250 ng/ml) alone was added to serum-free basal medium containing EGF, it stimulated growth (at concentrations greater than 25 ng/ml) to at least the same extent as insulin at 10 micrograms/ml. There was no additive stimulation of growth when optimal concentrations of insulin and SM-C were added together. The nonadditive stimulation at optimal concentrations of these hormones may indicate that the previous requirement for a superphysiological concentration of insulin for maximum growth was due to low affinity binding of insulin to the SM-C receptor. Rat insulin-like growth factor II (Collaborative Research) at 50-200 ng/ml did not stimulate growth in the presence or absence of insulin. SM-C could not stimulate growth alone. The presence of EGF or mammogenic hormones (progesterone and PRL) was required.

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