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EFFECTS OF TRANSFORMING GROWTH-FACTOR-BETA ON COLLAGEN-SYNTHESIS BY NORMAL RAT-KIDNEY EPITHELIAL-CELLS
Author(s): CREELY JJ, DIMARI SJ, HOWE AM, HARALSON MA
Source: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY    Volume: 140    Issue: 1    Pages: 45-55    Published: JAN 1992  
Times Cited: 89     References: 58     
Abstract: The effects of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) on the growth of and collagen production by NRK52E cells, a clonal line established from normal rat kidney epithelial cells, have been characterized. NRK52E cells were grown in the absence or presence of TGF-beta for 4 days followed by incubation for 24 hours in serum-free medium containing [H-3]proline. The secreted and cell-associated collagens produced by control and experimental cultures were isolated by limited pepsin digestion and differential salt fractionation. TGF-beta inhibited proliferation by about 50% but did not affect overall culture morphology. Both protein and collagen synthesis were increased in experimental cultures, but the increase in total collagen production exceeded that of total protein synthesis. Although NRK52E cells grown in the presence of TGF-beta continued to produce the same types of collagen (types I, III, IV, and V), their relative amounts were changed. In the experimental cultures, type I collagen production was increased eightfold, types III and V collagen levels were increased twofold, but type IV production was only slightly enhanced. In addition to increasing total collagen production by about fivefold, TGF-beta increased the ratio of type I to type III about threefold but minimally affected the ratio of secreted to cell-associated molecules. These findings establish that TGF-beta specifically affects collagen production in NRK52E cells and that these alterations differ in many ways from the affects of epidermal growth factor. Because TGF-beta increased total collagen expression, these results provide additional evidence implicating this growth factor as a positive mediator of matrix accumulation in renal disease.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Addresses:
1. VANDERBILT UNIV, MED CTR, SCH MED, DEPT PATHOL, NASHVILLE, TN 37232 USA
Publisher: AMER SOC INVESTIGATIVE PATHOLOGY, INC, 428 EAST PRESTON ST, BALTIMORE, MD 21202-3993
Subject Category: Pathology
IDS Number: GZ636
ISSN: 0002-9440
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