Characterization of insulin-like growth factor (IGF) binding proteins and their role in modulating IGF-I action in BHK cells.

1992 
Abstract We have found that over one-half of the total cell surface 125I-insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) binding to BHK cells represents binding to IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) rather than to the IGF-I receptor. In addition to a number of secreted IGFBPs, we have now characterized two cell-associated IGFBPs with unique characteristics. The cell-associated IGFBPs have molecular weights of 30,000 (30K) and 25,000 (25K), as determined by the Western ligand blot technique. IGFBP-30K is located at the cell surface and can be readily labeled by affinity cross-linking with 125I-IGF-I. Surface expression of IGFBP-30K increases 5.4 +/- 1.2-fold (n = 11) with serum starvation. This induction is fully evident by 4 h, plateauing by 24 h, and is completely inhibitable by cycloheximide. The fasting-induced increase in IGFBP-30K is inhibited by IGF-I and by des-IGF-I and, to a lesser extent, by insulin. Unlike cell-associated IGFBP-30K, secretion of IGFBP was stimulated (6.8 +/- 0.5-fold, n = 2) by IGF-I, whereas IGFBP secretion was inhibited 54% by insulin. These results demonstrate coordinate regulation of IGFBP by serum starvation and IGF-I, such that at low concentrations of IGF-I, cell surface binding protein increases whereas binding protein secretion decreases. At high concentrations of IGF-I, IGFBP secretion increases and cell surface IGF-I receptor, as well as IGFBP, decreases. Taken together, these regulatory events regulate the availability of IGF-I for biologic signalling.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    18
    References
    21
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []