Abstract
The ability was investigated of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) to stimulate DNA synthesis in hepatocytes isolated from C57B1/6J mice following 1, 3, 7, 30 and 90 days pre-treatment with the hepatomegalic drug, phenobarbitone (PB). A 3-fold increase in S-phase labelled hepatocytes was observed in the absence of growth factors after 3 days treatment with PB, which was not seen at other investigated time points. This suggests that the proliferative influence present in vivo at this time interval is maintained in the ex vivo model. Maximum labelling indices of > 5-fold the unstimulated control value were observed in hepatocytes isolated from control and 1 day PB pre-treated mice when cultured in the presence of 5 or 10 ng/ml EGF or HGF. Hepatocytes isolated from 3, 7, 30 or 90 day treated mice showed a considerably reduced responsiveness to growth factors; maximum labelling indices did not exceed by a factor of 2 the value obtained in the absence of growth factors. However, the apparent decrease in responsiveness to growth factors in hepatocytes isolated from 3 day pre-treated mice was due to an increased background level of proliferation and the attainment of a 'ceiling level' of DNA synthesis at approx. 35%. DNA synthesis was not further enhanced by addition of both EGF and HGF. This maximal level of stimulation may indicate that only a specific hepatocyte sub-population is capable of responding to growth factors under the conditions employed. The loss in sensitivity to mitogenic stimuli after 7 days PB pre-treatment correlates with a reported decrease in receptor protein and mRNA levels in rats and coincides with the in vivo shift from hyperplasia to hypertrophy.
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