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. 1980 Nov;105(2):235-46.
doi: 10.1002/jcp.1041050207.

Chemical and biological properties of a growth factor from human-cultured osteosarcoma cells: resemblance with platelet-derived growth factor

Chemical and biological properties of a growth factor from human-cultured osteosarcoma cells: resemblance with platelet-derived growth factor

C H Heldin et al. J Cell Physiol. 1980 Nov.

Abstract

A human osteosarcoma cell line, U-2 OS, cultured under serum-free conditions, was shown to produce a growth factor (osteosarcoma-derived growth factor, ODGF) for human-cultured glial cells, fibroblasts, and other cells. ODGF, collected from the spent medium of 2 OS cultures, was purified by a sequence involving heparin-Sepharose chromatography, hydrophobic chromatography, gel chromatography, and preparative gel electrophresis in SDS. Purified ODGF, at a concentration of 3 ng/ml, elicited a mitogenic response in human glial cells equivalent to 50% of that afforded by human serum at a final concentration of 1%. The preparation was estimated to be > 50% pure. The biological activity of ODGF resided in a cationic, relatively heat-resistant, reduction-susceptible protein with a molecular weight of 30,000 (by gel chromatography and SDS-gel electrophoresis). The electrophoretic behaviour of radioiodinated ODGF suggested that the protein was composed of two different polypeptide chains (about 13,000-14,00 and 16,000-17,000 daltons, respectively) linked via disulphide bonds. The molecular makeup of ODGF was thus similar to that of platelet-derived growth factor. 125I-ODGF could be precipitated by an antibody to platelet-derived growth factor, indicating that the two factors were immunologically related. Resemblance with platelet-derived growth factor was also indicated by the finding that the latter (but not, e.g., fibroblast growth factor or epidermal growth factor) competed with 125I-ODGF for binding to human-cultured glial cells.

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