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Heparin potentiates the action of plasma membrane-associated growth stimulatory activity
Authors:T Nagasaki  M A Lieberman
Institution:Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0522.
Abstract:Plasma membranes prepared from mouse liver have been previously shown to contain growth stimulatory activity as determined with cultured mouse fibroblasts. This growth stimulatory activity, termed plasma membrane-associated growth stimulatory activity (PMGA), is highly mitogenic in the presence of platelet-poor plasma. We now demonstrate that the growth stimulatory action of PMGA is dramatically enhanced by the addition of heparin. The half-maximal effect of heparin was observed at 1-3 micrograms/ml. The synergistic effect was seen in two distinct assays; the stimulation of DNA synthesis in quiescent cells, and an increase of cell number over a 3-day culture period. Heparin, by itself, does not have any measurable influence on the growth of fibroblasts. The action of heparin is not unique to this glycosaminoglycan, as several other highly sulfated polysaccharides, including dextran sulfate, pentosan polysulfate, and fucoidan, also exhibited the highly synergistic effect. Among other glycosaminoglycans examined, chondroitin sulfate B and heparan sulfate had a small, but significant, effect on enhancing the growth stimulatory action of PMGA. Chondroitin sulfate A, chondroitin sulfate C, hyaluronic acid dextran, and poly-L-glutamic acid, however, had no detectable effect. Further experiments suggested that the effect of heparin is twofold, namely, both a potentiation of growth stimulatory activity and a protection of PMGA activity. The data presented here suggest that the association of various cell surface components, such as PMGA and specific proteoglycans, can modulate the growth potential of a cell.
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