Abstract

In this report, we describe the isolation from human urine of a predominant 160-kDa epidermal growth factor (EGF)-immunoreactive glycoprotein that exhibits affinity for heparin. The purification procedure involved concentration and dialysis of 20-30-liter batches of fresh urine on a high capacity ultrafiltration apparatus followed by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, heparin-agarose, and Sephacryl S-300. A nearly homogeneous preparation of 160-kDa protein was obtained with a yield of approximately 1 mg of 160-kDa protein from 25 liters of urine. The amino-terminal sequence of the purified 160-kDa protein, H2N-SAPQHXSXPEGTXA-, matched residues 21-34 of the predicted sequence of human prepro-EGF and established that the 160 kDa protein (pro-EGF) is a product of the prepro-EGF gene. Characterization of the carboxyl terminus of the purified protein by digestion with carboxypeptidase B and by immunoblotting with antisera against synthetic carboxyl-terminal and juxtatransmembrane peptides of prepro-EGF indicated that the carboxyl terminus has been truncated at an arginine residue that corresponds, most likely, to the carboxyl-terminal arginine of the EGF moiety. The intact 160-kDa pro-EGF is biologically active as evidenced by its specific binding to the EGF receptor and activation of the EGF receptor tyrosine kinase in A-431 cell membranes. Purified pro-EGF competitively inhibited the binding of 125I-EGF to human fibroblasts, and it stimulated the proliferation of these cells in culture. When immobilized onto culture dishes, the heparin-binding pro-EGF appeared to function both as an adhesion molecule and as a growth factor for serum-free mouse embryo cells.

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