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Publication
Journal: Gastroenterology
March/26/2003
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF), a member of the EGF family, is synthesized in the form of a membrane-anchored precursor (proHB-EGF), which subsequently is processed proteolytically to mature HB-EGF. This study describes the effects of HB-EGF on liver regeneration after 70% partial hepatectomy in proHB-EGF transgenic mice with liver-specific expression.
RESULTS
No significant differences in liver/body weight ratios and in bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)-labeling index (the ratios of BrdU-positive hepatocyte nuclei) were found between adult transgenic and wild-type mice. However, in regenerating liver after partial hepatectomy, transgenic mice had higher liver/body weight ratios than wild-type mice and at 120 hours reached a level equal to that before partial hepatectomy. The BrdU-labeling index was about 5 times higher in the livers of transgenic mice compared with the wild type (51.5% vs. 10.2%, respectively; P < 0.01) at 48 hours after partial hepatectomy. Activation of microtubule-associated protein kinase after partial hepatectomy was higher and earlier in the transgenic mice as compared with the wild-type mice. Soluble HB-EGF was increased in the liver (at 8 min) after partial hepatectomy, indicating that the shedding of proHB-EGF occurred after partial hepatectomy.
CONCLUSIONS
The transgenic expression of HB-EGF accelerates the proliferation of hepatocytes after partial hepatectomy, suggesting that HB-EGF functions as a hepatotrophic factor in vivo.
Publication
Journal: Cancer Research
November/24/2005
Abstract
Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like growth factor (HB-EGF) accumulates in the nucleus in aggressive transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) cells and this histologic feature is a marker of poor prognosis in human bladder cancer tissues. Here we report that HB-EGF can be exported from the nucleus during stimulated processing and secretion of the growth factor. Production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) resulted in mobilization of the HB-EGF precursor, proHB-EGF, from the nucleus of TCCSUP bladder cancer cells to a detergent-resistant membrane compartment, where the growth factor was cleaved by a metalloproteinase-mediated mechanism and shed into the extracellular space. Inhibition of nuclear export suppressed HB-EGF shedding. Production of ROS resulted in EGF receptor (EGFR) and Akt1 phosphorylation in HB-EGF-expressing cells. HB-EGF also stimulated cell proliferation and conferred cytoprotection when cells were challenged with cisplatin. These findings show that the nucleus can serve as an intracellular reservoir for a secreted EGFR ligand and, thus, can contribute to an autocrine loop leading to cell proliferation and protection from apoptotic stimuli.
Publication
Journal: Regulatory peptides
January/10/2005
Abstract
The mechanism by which neurotensin (NT) promotes the growth of prostate cancer epithelial cells is not yet defined. Here, androgen-independent PC3 cells, which express high levels of the type 1 NT-receptor (NTR1), are used to examine the involvement of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), mitogen-activated protein kinases (ERK, SAPK/JNK and p38), PI3 kinase and PKC in the mitogenic effect of NT. NT dose dependently (0.1-30 nM) enhanced phosphorylation of EGFR, ERK and Akt, reaching maximal levels within 3 min as measured by Western blotting. These effects were associated with an accumulation of EGF-like substance(s) in the medium (assayed by EGFR binding) and a 2-fold increase in DNA synthesis (assayed by [3H]thymidine incorporation). The DNA synthesis enhancement by NT was non-additive with that of EGF. The NT-induced stimulation of EGFR/ERK/Akt phosphorylation and DNA synthesis was inhibited by EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (AG1478, PD153035), metallo-endopeptidase inhibitor phosphoramidon and by heparin, but not by neutralizing anti-EGF antibody. Thus, transactivation of EGFR by NT involved heparin-binding EGF (HB-EGF or amphiregulin) rather than EGF. The effects of NT on EGFR/ERK/Akt activation and DNA synthesis were attenuated by PLC-inhibitor (U73122), PKC-inhibitors (bisindolylmaleimide, staurosporine, rottlerin), MEK inhibitor (U0126) and PI3 kinase inhibitors (wortmannin, LY 294002). We conclude that NT stimulated mitogenesis in PC3 cells by a PKC-dependent ligand-mediated transactivation of EGFR, which led to stimulation of the Raf-MEK-ERK pathway in a PI3 kinase-dependent manner.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Cell Science
December/9/2004
Abstract
In MDCK cells, hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) induces epithelial cell dissociation, scattering, migration, growth and formation of branched tubular structures. By contrast, these cells neither scatter nor form tubular structures in response to the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family of growth factors. Heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) is a member of the EGF family of growth factors and is synthesized as a membrane-associated precursor molecule (proHB-EGF). ProHB-EGF is proteolytically cleaved to release a soluble ligand (sHB-EGF) that activates the EGF receptor. Although recent studies suggest possible physiological functions, the role of proHB-EGF remains largely undefined. Using MDCK cells stably expressing proHB-EGF, a noncleavable deletion mutant of proHB-EGF or soluble HB-EGF, we show that epithelial cell functions differ depending on the form of HB-EGF being expressed. Expression of noncleavable membrane-anchored HB-EGF promoted cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions and decreased cell migration, HGF/SF-induced cell scattering and formation of tubular structures. By contrast, expression of soluble HB-EGF induced increased cell migration, decreased cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions and promoted the development of long unbranched tubular structures in response to HGF/SF. These findings suggest that HB-EGF can not only modulate HGF/SF-induced cellular responses in MDCK cells but also that membrane-bound HB-EGF and soluble HB-EGF give rise to distinctly different effects on cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Pediatric Surgery
August/27/2008
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
We have demonstrated that administration of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) protects the intestines from injury. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the effect of HB-EGF gene disruption on intestinal restitution, angiogenesis, and long-term survival after intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury.
METHODS
HB-EGF (-/-) and wild-type HB-EGF (+/+) littermate mice were subjected to 45 minutes of superior mesenteric artery occlusion followed by reperfusion. Functional recovery of the gut permeability barrier was evaluated with Ussing chamber studies, and microvessel density was evaluated immunohistochemically. Animal survival was evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method.
RESULTS
Histologic damage after ischemia was significantly higher in HB-EGF (-/-) mice compared with HB-EGF (+/+) mice, associated with a significantly higher number of incompetent (nonhealed, nonresurfaced) villi indicative of delayed structural healing by restitution. HB-EGF (-/-) mice had increased intestinal permeability after intestinal I/R. HB-EGF (-/-) mice had significantly lower microvessel density at 3 and 7 days after I/R, indicating that HB-EGF gene deletion resulted in delayed onset of angiogenesis. Two-week mortality rates were significantly higher in HB-EGF (-/-) mice.
CONCLUSIONS
Endogenous HB-EGF significantly enhances healing by restitution, prolongs survival, and enhances angiogenesis in mice subjected to intestinal I/R injury. These findings support our hypothesis that HB-EGF administration may improve outcome in patients with intestinal I/R injury, including necrotizing enterocolitis.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Urology
June/9/2003
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Smooth muscle cells (SMC) of the bladder undergo hypertrophy and hyperplasia following exposure to sustained mechanical overload. Although superficial similarities in the response of the heart and bladder to hypertrophic stimuli suggest that similar molecular mechanisms may be involved, this remains to be demonstrated. In this study we compared signal transduction pathway activation in primary culture bladder SMC and cardiac myofibroblasts in response to cyclic stretch. The effects of growth factor stimulation on pathway activation in bladder SMC were also investigated.
METHODS
Primary culture rodent bladder SMC or cardiac myofibroblasts were subjected to cyclic stretch-relaxation in the absence or presence of pharmacologic inhibitors of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase, (PI3K)/Akt, extracellular signal-regulated kinase-mitogen activated protein kinase (Erk-MAPK) or the p38 stress-activated protein kinase-2 (SAPK2) pathways. In parallel experiments human bladder SMC were treated with platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB), heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) or fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2). In each case the extent of DNA synthesis was determined by uptake of tritiated thymidine, and activation of specific signaling intermediates was determined by immunoblot analysis using antibodies to the non-phosphorylated and phosphorylated (activated) forms of Akt, p38 and Erk1/2.
RESULTS
Akt and p38 were rapidly phosphorylated in stretched bladder SMC and cardiac myofibroblasts, and stretch-induced DNA synthesis in these cells was ablated with inhibitors of PI3K or p38 but not Erk-MAPK. Similarly, PDGF-BB up-regulated DNA synthesis in bladder SMC in a p38 and Akt-dependent manner.
CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that distinct stimuli, such as mechanical stretch and PDGF-BB, promote DNA synthesis in bladder SMC through shared downstream signaling pathways. Furthermore, phenotypically similar cells from the bladder and heart show comparable pathway activation in response to stretch. These findings suggest that similar molecular mechanisms underlie the altered growth responses of the bladder and heart to mechanical overload. This study also provides the first report of Akt activation in bladder SMC and suggests that Akt, consistent with its pivotal role in cardiac hypertrophy, may also be a key regulator of remodeling in the SMC compartment of the bladder exposed to hypertrophic/hyperplastic stimuli in vivo.
Publication
Journal: Cancer
June/6/2007
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Cleavage of membrane-anchored heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (proHB-EGF) yields a soluble HB-EGF isoform (sHB-EGF), which is an activating epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligand and a C-terminal fragment HB-EGF-C acting directly in the nucleus. In bladder cancer, overexpression of both HB-EGF and EGFR have been observed, but to the authors' knowledge the prognostic significance of different modes of HB-EGF signaling have remained unclear.
METHODS
Expression and intracellular localization of HB-EGF and EGFR were examined by immunohistochemistry in paraffin-embedded specimens from 121 patients who underwent cystectomy for bladder cancer. Tumor stage was pTis/pT1 in 7 patients, pT2 in 41 patients, pT3 in 55 patients, and pT4 in 18 patients. Lymph node metastases were present in 32 patients.
RESULTS
Using an antibody directed against the C-terminal domain, HB-EGF expression was detected in the cytoplasm or in the nucleus of tumor cells. EGFR staining was uniform at the plasma membrane. The actuarial 5-year cancer-specific survival of patients with tumors with predominant nuclear HB-EGF staining was 28% compared with 57% if HB-EGF staining was predominantly cytoplasmic (P = .027). Disease outcome of patients with a 'mixed' HB-EGF staining pattern was found to be between that of the 2 former groups. In agreement with previous studies, strong EGFR expression was associated with poor prognosis. Despite strong EGFR expression, predominant cytoplasmic HB-EGF staining was associated with a more favorable outcome, whereas a predominant nuclear pattern defined a subgroup with extremely poor prognosis (5-year tumor-specific survival of 55% vs 13%, respectively; P = .026).
CONCLUSIONS
The current study results confirm that EGFR expression is significantly correlated with disease-specific mortality but that the outcome is also influenced by the mode of HB-EGF signaling. Additional nuclear HB-EGF signaling, indicative of increased cleavage of proHB-EGF, appears to enhance the adverse activities. Cytoplasmic HB-EGF staining likely reflects proHB-EGF, which may also exert antiproliferative effects.
Publication
Journal: Urology
May/29/2000
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
A highly effective treatment for interstitial cystitis (IC) remains elusive. We determined whether sacral third nerve root (S3) percutaneous neurostimulation (PNS) might be effective in relieving symptoms of IC, as well as in normalizing urinary factors that are specifically altered in IC.
METHODS
Six consecutive patients with symptoms and cystoscopic findings compatible with IC underwent 5 days of continuous S3 neurostimulation by way of leads placed percutaneously into the S3 foramen. Patients filled out voiding frequency diaries and pain and urgency questionnaires before PNS and at the end of PNS when the leads were removed. Urine specimens were collected at these two time points and measured for heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and for antiproliferative factor (APF) activity by (3)H-thymidine uptake by normal human bladder urothelial cells.
RESULTS
S3 PNS significantly improved all measured parameters toward normal values. Voiding frequency decreased twofold from 23.1 +/- 4.6 to 10.6 +/- 4.0 voids daily during PNS (P = 0.0001). Pelvic pain on a scale of 1 to 10 decreased from 7.0 +/- 1.6 to 2.3 +/- 3.2 (P = 0.05). Urinary urgency on a scale of 1 to 10 decreased from 6.0 +/- 2.2 to 1.8 +/- 1.7 (P = 0. 02). Urinary HB-EGF concentration increased sevenfold from 1.5 +/- 2. 1 to 11.0 +/- 1.7 ng/mL (P <0.0001), and urinary APF activity decreased from -76.1% +/- 31% to -4.5% +/- 8.8% (P = 0.005).
CONCLUSIONS
S3 PNS significantly decreased symptoms and normalized urinary HB-EGF and APF activity in patients with IC. These results suggest that permanent S3 PNS may be beneficial in treating IC.
Publication
Journal: Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
April/19/1999
Abstract
Dietary omega-3 fatty acids retard coronary atherosclerosis. Previously, we demonstrated that dietary omega-3 fatty acids reduce platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-A and PDGF-B mRNA levels in unstimulated, human mononuclear cells (MNCs). In a randomized, investigator-blinded intervention trial, we have now compared the effect of ingestion of 7 g/d omega-3, omega-6, or omega-9 fatty acids for 4 weeks versus no dietary intervention on PDGF-A, PDGF-B, heparin-bound epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), and interleukin-10 gene expression in unstimulated MNCs and in monocytes that were adherence-activated ex vivo in a total of 28 volunteers. In unstimulated MNCs, mRNA steady-state levels of PDGF-A, PDGF-B, and MCP-1 were reduced by 25+/-10%, 31+/-13%, and 40+/-14%, respectively, after omega-3 fatty acid ingestion, as assessed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (all P<0.05). In monocytes that were adherence-activated ex vivo for 4 and 20 hours, mRNA steady-state levels of PDGF-A, PDGF-B, and MCP-1 were reduced by 25+/-13%, 20+/-15%, and 30+/-8%, respectively (all P<0.05). Interleukin-10 and HB-EGF mRNA steady-state levels were not influenced by omega-3 fatty acid ingestion. Expression of all respective mRNAs in control volunteers or in those ingesting omega-6 or omega-9 fatty acids were not altered. We conclude that human gene expression for PDGF-A, PDGF-B, and MCP-1, factors thought relevant to atherosclerosis, is constitutive, is constant, and can be reduced only by dietary omega-3 fatty acids in unstimulated and adherence-activated monocytes.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Neuroscience
November/23/1999
Abstract
The epidermal growth factor (EGF) family of ligands interacts with the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) to produce numerous direct and indirect actions on central nervous system cells. They induce the proliferation of astrocytes and multipotent progenitors ('stem' cells) and promote the survival and differentiation of postmitotic neurons. Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF) interacts with both EGF-R and a related receptor, ErbB4, whereas transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha) interacts only with EGF-R. Because of the unique characteristics of HB-EGF and the potential utility of EGF family members in brain repair, we examine the effects of HB-EGF on rat and mouse CNS cells in vitro and compare them to those of TGFalpha. We find that, like TGFalpha, HB-EGF stimulates the proliferation of CNS astrocytes and multipotent progenitors. These proliferative effects require the expression of EGF-R, as no such effects are observed in cells derived from EGF-R-/- mice. Both HB-EGF and TGFalpha enhanced the survival of neurons derived from the neocortex and the striatum. Within these neuron-enriched cultures, nestin-positive cells but not neurons express EGF-R mRNA, indicating that the neurotrophic actions of EGF-R ligands are a result of indirect stimulation mediated by non-neuronal cells. The neurotrophic actions of HB-EGF and TGFalpha are accompanied by an elevation in immunoreactive dual phosphorylated mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) in neurons, providing evidence that the MAP kinase cascade mediates these actions. In situ hybridization studies demonstrate that HB-EGF mRNA is present within the brainstem as early as E14 and subsequently is found in the developing cortical plate, hippocampus, cerebellar Purkinje cells and ventrobasal thalamus, among other brain areas. These findings indicate that HB-EGF may be an important trophic factor in the developing CNS and is a useful candidate molecule for brain repair strategies.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
December/11/2007
Abstract
Loss of cell-matrix adhesion is often associated with acute epithelial injury, suggesting that "anoikis" may be an important contributor to cell death. Resistance against anoikis is a key characteristic of transformed cells. When nontransformed epithelia are injured, activation of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) by paracrine/autocrine release of soluble ligands can induce a prosurvival program, but there is generally evidence for concomitant dedifferentiation. The EGFR ligand, heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF), is synthesized as a membrane-anchored precursor that can activate the EGFR via juxtacrine signaling or can be released and act as a soluble growth factor. In Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, expression of membrane-anchored HB-EGF increases cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion. Therefore, these studies were designed to test the effects of juxtacrine HB-EGF signaling upon cell survival and epithelial integrity when cells are denied proper cell-matrix interactions. Cells expressing a noncleavable mutated form of membrane-anchored HB-EGF demonstrated increased survival from anoikis, formed larger cell aggregates, and maintained epithelial characteristics even following prolonged detachment from the substratum. Physical association between membrane-anchored HB-EGF and EGFR was observed. Signaling studies indicated synergistic effects of EGFR activation and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling to regulate apoptotic and survival pathways. In contrast, although administration of exogenous EGF partially suppressed anoikis in wild type cells, it also led to an increased expression of mesenchymal markers, suggesting dedifferentiation. Taken together, we propose a novel role for membrane-anchored HB-EGF in the cytoprotection of epithelial cells.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
October/6/1999
Abstract
Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) transduces mitogenic signals through the EGF receptor (EGFR). There are two forms of HB-EGF, the membrane-anchored form (pro-HB-EGF) and the soluble form (sHB-EGF). We studied the biological activity of pro-HB-EGF by using a model in which pro-HB-EGF-expressing effector cells was co-cultured with EGFR-expressing target cells. The DER cell, an EGFR-expressing derivative of the interleukin-3-dependent hematopoietic 32D cell line, grows well in the presence of EGF or sHB-EGF without IL-3. When DER cells were co-cultured on a monolayer of Vero-H cells overexpressing pro-HB-EGF, growth inhibition and subsequent apoptosis were induced in the DER cells even in the presence of excess amounts of EGF or sHB-EGF. Such growth inhibition of DER cells was abrogated when specific antagonists for pro-HB-EGF were added in the culture medium or when direct contact of DER cells with Vero-H cells was prevented, indicating that pro-HB-EGF is involved in this inhibitory effect. Pro-HB-EGF-induced apoptosis of DER cells was also observed even in the presence of IL-3. This rules out the possibility of simple competition between soluble EGFR ligands and pro-HB-EGF. Moreover, 32D cells expressing EGFR mutant composed of the extracellular and the transmembrane domain of EGFR and the cytoplasmic domain of erythropoietin receptor did not undergo apoptosis by co-culture with Vero-H cells, indicating that the inhibitory signal induced by pro-HB-EGF-expressing Vero-H cells is mediated to DER cells via EGFR and that the cytoplasmic domain of EGFR is essential for pro-HB-EGF-induced apoptosis. From these results, we concluded that pro-HB-EGF has unique biological activity through cell-cell contact that is distinct from the activity of sHB-EGF.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Cell Research
October/31/1999
Abstract
The effects of specific mitogens and substrates on the proliferative capacity and the differentiated phenotypic plasticity of neural precursor cell populations isolated from the adult rat subventricular zone (SVZ) were examined. SVZ cells were grown on uncoated tissue culture plastic, extracellular matrix, or poly-D-ornithine with either laminin or fibronectin. SVZ neural precursor cells could not be generated with platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor, stem cell factor, heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF), granulocyte colony stimulating factor, or ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), but could be with EGF, fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2), and FGF2 plus heparin. Varying combinations of substrate and mitogen resulted in very different expansion rates and/or lineage potential. Neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes differentiated from all cultures, but EGF-generated neural precursor cells were more restricted to an astrocytic lineage and FGF2-generated neural precursor cells had a greater capacity for neuronal differentiation. In both EGF- and FGF2-generated cell populations, CNTF increased the number of differentiated astrocytes, triiodothyronine oligodendrocytes, PDGF neurons, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor neurons only from EGF cells. Electrophysiological analysis of differentiated cells showed three distinct phenotypes, glial, neuronal, and presumed precursor cells, although the neuronal properties were immature. Collectively, these data indicate that CNS neural precursor cell populations isolated with different mitogens and substrates are intrinsically different and their characteristics cannot be directly compared.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
January/30/2000
Abstract
Ligands that bind to the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor are initially synthesized as integral membrane proteins that are released from the cell surface by regulated proteolysis. To study the role of the membrane-anchoring domain in ligand release, we made two artificial ligands. The first possessed the membrane-anchoring domain from EGF whereas the second had the corresponding domain from heparin binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF). Both ligands lacked amino-terminal extensions, and were epitope-tagged at the carboxyl terminus. Following stable expression in human mammary epithelial cells, their cellular localization and rate of proteolytic release were examined. We found that constructs with the membrane-anchoring domain from EGF were found primarily at the cell surface and displayed a relatively high rate of constitutive release. Constructs with the HB-EGF membrane-anchoring domain displayed a higher internalized fraction and a very low rate of constitutive release. The two ligand constructs also displayed different patterns of stimulated release. Proteolysis of the chimera with the HB-EGF membrane-anchoring domain was stimulated by activation of protein kinase C, but release of EGF from constructs with the EGF membrane-anchoring domain was insensitive to this. Calcium ionophores, calmodulin antagonists, and tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors stimulated the release of both ligands. Furthermore, the release of the two constructs showed different sensitivity to metalloprotease inhibitors. Despite a large fold-increase in ligand proteolysis following cell stimulation, only a small fraction of total cell-associated ligand was released per hour. Our results show that the membrane-anchoring domain of EGF-like ligands can specify both their localization and proteolytic processing. The structures of the membrane-anchoring region of this class of ligands can thus regulate their activity.
Publication
Journal: Cytokine and Growth Factor Reviews
September/27/2004
Abstract
Heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF), a member of the EGF family, is synthesized as a membrane-anchored precursor (proHB-EGF) that is cleaved to release a soluble HB-EGF by specific metalloproteases. Proteolytic cleavage of proHB-EGF yields amino- and carboxy-terminal fragments (HB-EGF and HB-EGF-C). Recent studies indicate that the processing of proHB-EGF is strictly regulated and involved in a variety of biological processes and that not only HB-EGF but also HB-EGF-C functions as a signaling molecule. ProHB-EGF generates dual intracellular signaling molecules by its proteolytic cleavage.
Publication
Journal: FASEB Journal
May/30/2012
Abstract
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease that is associated with airway remodeling, including hyperplasia of airway epithelial cells and airway smooth muscle cells, and goblet cell differentiation. We wished to address the potential role of histamine, a key biogenic amine involved in allergic reactions, in airway remodeling through the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway. Here, we demonstrate that histamine releases 2 EGFR ligands, amphiregulin and heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF), from airway epithelial cells. Amphiregulin and HB-EGF were expressed in airway epithelium of patients with asthma. Histamine up-regulated their mRNA expression (amphiregulin 3.2-fold, P<0.001; HB-EGF 2.3-fold, P<0.05) and triggered their release (amphiregulin EC(50) 0.50 μM, 31.2 ± 2.7 pg/ml with 10 μM histamine, P<0.01; HB-EGF EC(50) 0.54 μM, 78.5 ± 1.8 pg/ml with 10 μM histamine, P<0.001) compared to vehicle control (amphiregulin 19.3 ± 0.9 pg/ml; HB-EGF 60.2 ± 1.0 pg/ml), in airway epithelial cells. Histamine increased EGFR phosphorylation (2.1-fold by Western blot analysis) and induced goblet cell differentiation (CLCA1 up-regulation by real-time qPCR) in normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells. Moreover, amphiregulin and HB-EGF caused proliferation and migration of both NHBE cells and human airway smooth muscle cells. These results suggest that histamine may induce airway remodeling via the epithelial-derived EGFR ligands amphiregulin and HB-EGF.
Publication
Journal: Mechanisms of Ageing and Development
September/21/2011
Abstract
Aging of human breast tissue is accompanied by certain structural and functional variations and several studies suggest a possible contribution of these changes to an aging-related breast cancer development. At the cellular level, aging of human mammary epithelial cells is associated with significant morphological and functional alterations such as an increased cell size and a reduced proliferation. Cellular senescence of HMEC cannot be explained by a single mechanism but represents an interaction of numerous extra- and intracellular events and the complexity of such orchestrating pathways is still hardly understood. Besides the contribution of reactive oxygen species and telomere dysfunction to aging, it is the aim of this mini-review, to compare distinct changes to extracellular signals by certain matrix metalloproteinases including MMP-7 and associated growth factor pathways mediated by HB-EGF activation in young and aging HMEC. Such changes can alter hormone receptor levels within aged HMEC, induce tissue fibrosis and promote epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition as a potential prerequisite for breast cancer development. Moreover, an accumulation of aging cells during the normal life span of the breast tissue may also substantially effect and interact with adjacent neighboring populations in the local microenvironment to provide optimized growth conditions which would also support neoplastic cells.
Publication
Journal: FASEB Journal
September/17/2006
Abstract
Endothelin-1 (ET-1), a powerful vasoconstrictor, is involved in vasospastic diseases such as coronary artery disease and subarachnoidal hemorrhage, as well as in renal and cardiovascular fibrotic remodeling. Transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mediates ET-1 signaling in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and isolated arteries. Moreover, EGFR is required for a full constrictive response to ET-1. However, the relevant mechanisms mediating EGFR transactivation in response to ET-1 have not been identified. The present study used isolated arteries and VSMCs to investigate the role of the EGFR ligand heparin binding-epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF) in ET-1-induced transactivation of EGFR, intracellular calcium mobilization, and VSMCs contraction. While baseline blood pressures were similar in HB-EGF-deficient and in wild-type littermate mice, the vasoconstrictor actions of ET-1 were attenuated in HB-EGF-/- animals. In isolated mouse carotid artery segments mounted in an arteriograph, ET-1 caused only a weak increase in isovolumetric tone in HB-EGF-deficient vessels, and this effect was mimicked by inhibition of EGFR tyrosine kinase or phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) in wild-type arteries with or without endothelium, indicating a specific role in VSMCs. EGFR or PI3K inhibitors had no effect on KCl-induced contraction, which was normal in HB-EGF-deficient mice. To confirm that the abnormal responses in HB-EGF-deficient mice were due to impaired EGFR signaling, we studied VSMCs from waved-2 (wa2) mice; these animals have a mutation causing a partial loss of function of EGFR tyrosine kinase activity. The ET-1-induced calcium peak was reduced by 30% in VSMCs from wa2 mice and from HB-EGF-/- mice. This effect was reproduced by preincubation of wild-type VSMCs with EGFR inhibitor AG1478 and PI3K inhibitors LY294002 and wortmannin. ProHB-EGF is bound to the cell membrane and released after cleavage by metalloproteinases; its action may contribute to effects of GPCR agonists on cell growth. Pretreatment of mouse VSMCs with batimastat, a metalloproteinase inhibitor, significantly attenuated ET-1-induced [Ca(2+)](i) response in wild-type cells. Human proHB-EGF has been shown to be the endogenous receptor for Corynebacterium diphteriae toxin (DT). Mutated DT toxin (CRM197) is devoid of toxicity but it neutralizes HB-EGF binding to EGFR. Pretreatment of human VSMCs from internal mammary arteries with CRM197 significantly blunted ET-1-stimulated calcium transients. In conclusion, these findings suggest that the mechanism of ET-1-induced vasoconstriction involves HB-EGF-mediated transactivation of the EGFR. This functional cascade requires modulation of agonist-induced calcium transient by EGFR and PI3K with extremely fast kinetics, suggesting a novel paradigm for GPCR-mediated calcium signaling, which may offer future therapeutic targets.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Immunology
March/3/2009
Abstract
We previously described a population of regulatory macrophages that produced high levels of IL-10 and low levels of IL-12/23. We now describe and characterize the expression of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like growth factor (HB-EGF) by these macrophages. HB-EGF has previously been associated with a number of physiological and pathological conditions, including tumor growth and angiogenesis. The induction of HB-EGF in regulatory macrophages is due to new transcription and not to increased mRNA stability. The transcription factor Sp1 is a major factor in HB-EGF production, and knockdown of Sp1 substantially diminishes HB-EGF production. Sp1 was recruited to three sites within the first 2 kb of the HB-EGF promoter following stimulation, and the site located at -83/-54 was required for HB-EGF promoter activity. These regions of the promoter become more accessible to endonuclease activity following macrophage activation, and this accessibility was contingent on activation of the MAPK, ERK. We show that several experimental manipulations that give rise to regulatory macrophages also result in HB-EGF production. These observations indicate that in addition to the secretion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, another novel characteristic of regulatory macrophages is the production of angiogenic HB-EGF.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
March/11/2013
Abstract
Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) is essential for maintaining normal function of the adult heart and is known to play an important role in myocardial remodeling. In the present study, we observed that heart-specific HB-EGF transgenic (TG) mice had systolic dysfunction with decreased fractional shortening (FS%), increased end-systolic diameter (LVIDs) at 5 months of age, increased heart fibrosis, and increased mRNA expression of Col1α1 and Col3α1 at 1, 3, 5 and 7 months of age compared to nontransgenic (NTG) littermates. However, the left ventricular anterior wall thickness at end-systole (LVAWs) of the TG mice was not different than the NTG mice. Phosphorylation levels of Akt, mTor and p70s6k were increased due to HB-EGF expression in TG mice compared with the NTG mice at 3 and 7 months of age. Additionally, activated Akt, mTor and p70s6k were co-localized with vimentin to cardiac fibroblasts isolated from TG mice. Furthermore, HB-EGF significantly increased phosphorylation levels of Akt, mTor and p70s6k and increased expression of type I collagen in cultured primary cardiac fibroblasts. Rapamycin (Rapa) and CRM197, inhibitors of mTor and HB-EGF respectively, could inhibit the expression of type I collagen in the cultured primary cardiac fibroblasts and Rapa suppressed interstitial fibrosis of the heart tissues in vivo. In addition, a BrdU assay showed that HB-EGF increased proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts by 30% compared with cells without HB-EGF treatment. HB-EGF-induced proliferation was completely diminished in the presence of Rapa. These results suggest that HB-EGF induced heart fibrosis and proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts occurs through activation of the Akt/mTor/p70s6k pathway.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
April/18/2013
Abstract
Wound healing is primarily controlled by the proliferation and migration of keratinocytes and fibroblasts as well as the complex interactions between these two cell types. To investigate the interactions between keratinocytes and fibroblasts and the effects of direct cell-to-cell contact on the proliferation and migration of keratinocytes, keratinocytes and fibroblasts were stained with different fluorescence dyes and co-cultured with or without transwells. During the early stage (first 5 days) of the culture, the keratinocytes in contact with fibroblasts proliferated significantly faster than those not in contact with fibroblasts, but in the late stage (11(th) to 15(th) day), keratinocyte growth slowed down in all cultures unless EGF was added. In addition, keratinocyte migration was enhanced in co-cultures with fibroblasts in direct contact, but not in the transwells. Furthermore, the effects of the fibroblasts on keratinocyte migration and growth at early culture stage correlated with heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF), IL-1α and TGF-β1 levels in the cultures where the cells were grown in direct contact. These effects were inhibited by anti-HB-EGF, anti-IL-1α and anti-TGF-β1 antibodies and anti-HB-EGF showed the greatest inhibition. Co-culture of keratinocytes and IL-1α and TGF-β1 siRNA-transfected fibroblasts exhibited a significant reduction in HB-EGF production and keratinocyte proliferation. These results suggest that contact with fibroblasts stimulates the migration and proliferation of keratinocytes during wound healing, and that HB-EGF plays a central role in this process and can be up-regulated by IL-1α and TGF-β1, which also regulate keratinocyte proliferation differently during the early and late stage.
Publication
Journal: Endocrinology
December/23/2002
Abstract
Peptide growth factors have been implicated in progression of prostate cancer (PCa) to the androgen-independent state; however, much of the evidence linking diffusible mitogens and survival factors to this process remains circumstantial. Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF), a prostate stroma-derived factor, promotes survival, proliferation, and neuroendocrine differentiation of androgen-dependent LNCaP PCa cells in vitro. To test whether sustained exposure to HB-EGF can confer an androgen-independent phenotype, we generated stable populations of LNCaP cells that express constitutively a secreted form of HB-EGF (LNCaP/sHB). LNCaP/sHB cells proliferated more rapidly under androgen-depleted conditions in vitro and formed larger tumors with higher frequency in intact and castrated severe combined immunodeficient mice, in comparison to control cells. LNCaP/sHB tumors also expressed higher levels of the neuroendocrine marker, neuron-specific enolase, compared with control tumors. In castrates, increased neuron-specific enolase expression in LNCaP/sHB tumors was associated with reduced androgen receptor (AR) levels. In vitro, AR protein levels were reduced in LNCaP/sHB cells, and in transient transfection assays using an androgen-responsive promoter (mouse mammary tumor virus-long terminal repeat), LNCaP/sHB cells showed reduced sensitivity to dihydrotestosterone compared with controls. This is the first demonstration that continuous exposure of AR-positive PCa cells to a single growth factor can promote an androgen-independent phenotype in vivo. These findings also emphasize the potential role of pathways other than the AR axis in acquisition of androgen independence.
Publication
Journal: Growth Factors
May/18/2005
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
June/16/1999
Abstract
Jun is a transcription factor belonging to the activator protein 1 family. A mutated version of Jun (v-Jun) transduced by the avian retrovirus ASV17 induces oncogenic transformation in avian cell cultures and sarcomas in young galliform birds. The oncogenicity of Jun probably results from transcriptional deregulation of v-Jun-responsive target genes. Here we describe the identification and characterization of a growth-related v-Jun target, a homolog of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF). HB-EGF is strongly expressed in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) transformed by v-Jun. HB-EGF expression is not detectable or is marginal in nontransformed CEF. Using a hormone-inducible Jun-estrogen receptor chimera, we found that HB-EGF expression is correlated with v-Jun activity. In this system, induction of v-Jun is followed within 1 hr by elevated levels of HB-EGF. In CEF infected with various Jun mutants, HB-EGF expression is correlated with the oncogenic potency of the mutant. Constitutive expression of HB-EGF conveys to CEF the ability to grow in soft agar and to form multilayered foci of transformed cells on a solid substrate. These observations suggest that HB-EGF is an effector of Jun-induced oncogenic transformation.
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