Publication | Open Access
Evidence for the Synthesis of a Somatomedin Similar to Insulin‐Like Growth Factor I by Chick Embryo Liver Cells
43
Citations
23
References
1980
Year
Chick embryo liver cells were incubated in serum-free and hormone-free medium and shown to produce a mitogen starting after the first day in culture. This mitogen was purified by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography and identified by several assay systems as a somatomedin similar to human insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). This somatomedin stimulates thymidine incorporation into DNA of chick fibroblasts, it reacts in an IGF-specific protein binding assay and it cross-reacts immunologically with antibodies prepared against human IGF-I, but not with those against IGF-II. Its behaviour on ion-exchange chromatography and on sodium dodecylsulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is indistinguishable from that of authentic human IGF-I. Concomitantly with the mitogenic activity, chick liver cells produce IGF-binding protein. Addition of purified human IGF-I to the liver cells inhibits production of the binding protein. Chick liver cells may thus be used to study synthesis and regulation of IGF and its binding protein.
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