Abstract

The ability of TGF-β1 (transforming growth factor-beta 1) to suppress growth factor induced proliferation of many cell types in vitro is well documented; however, TGF-β1 increases within a similar time frame as the hepatocyte mitogens HGF (hepatocyte growth factor), EGF (epidermal growth factor), and TGF-α(transforming growth factor-alpha) prior to hepatocyte proliferation during liver regeneration. This has raised the issue that TGF-β1 may have effects on hepatocytes additional to mito-inhibition and that these effects may be relevant to the regenerative process. To this end, we examined the effect of TGF-β1 on both the mitogenesis and the motility of growth factor stimulated primary rat hepatocytes and the hepatoblastoma cell line HepG2 in vitro. TGF-β1 significantly enhanced the chemotactic motility of EGF or TGF-α, and not HGF, stimulated hepatocytes on a collagen I substratum. TGF-β1 was not chemotactic when added alone and decreased the DNA synthesis of all hepatocyte cultures to near control levels. HepG2 cells were chemotactic toward HGF, EGF, and TGF-β1 alone and displayed an additive chemotactic response when TGF-β1 was added to either HGF or EGF. Additionally, HepG2 cells were refractory to the growth stimulatory effects of HGF or EGF and the growth inhibitory effects of TGF-β1. Hepatocytes plated onto other collagen-containing substrates (collagen IV, Matrigel, or ECL, an entactin-collagen IV-laminin matrix), but not on fibronectin or laminin alone, also displayed enhanced EGF stimulated motility by TGF-β1. The data indicate that an additional, novel role for TGF-β1 during liver tissue remodeling following PHx may include the synergistic enhancement EGF stimulated hepatocyte motility responses, and this enhancement is observed only on collagen-containing extra-cellular matrices. J Cell Physiol 170:57–68, 1997 © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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