Publication | Closed Access
Absence of TGF-β Receptors and Growth Inhibitory Responses in Retinoblastoma Cells
321
Citations
33
References
1988
Year
Ocular DiseaseHuman GrowthRetinoblastoma Tumor CellsCell ProliferationRetinoblastoma CellsCell GrowthRetinal TherapiesTumor BiologyRetinaNormal Retinal CellsTgf-β ReceptorsCell SignalingHealth SciencesMolecular SignalingOphthalmologyCell BiologySignal TransductionGrowth Inhibitory ResponsesMedicineCancer GrowthRetinal Biology
The responses of retinoblastoma tumor cells and normal retinal cells to various growth inhibitory factors were examined. Whereas fetal retinal cells were highly sensitive to the antimitogenic effects of transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1), retinoblastoma tumor cell lines were all resistant to this factor. Binding assays and affinity labeling of these cells with radioiodinated TGF-β1 revealed that the cells did not have TGF-β receptors. The retinoblastoma cells lacked the three affinity-labeled proteins of 65, 95, and 300 kilodaltons typically seen in human cell lines and thus differed from normal retinal cells and from other types of neuroectodermal tumors that display the normal pattern of receptors. Loss of TGF-β receptors, which is a rare event among tumor cells, may represent one mechanism through which these cells escape from negative control and form retinoblastomas.
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