Literature DB >> 11748593

Insulin-like growth factor (IGF) binding protein-3 regulation of IGF-I is altered in an acidic extracellular environment.

K E Forsten1, R M Akers, J D San Antonio.   

Abstract

While extracellular acidification within solid tumors is well-documented, how reduced pH impacts regulation of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) has not been studied extensively. Because IGF-I receptor binding is affected by IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs), we examined how pH impacted IGFBP-3 regulation of IGF-I. IGF-I binding in the absence of IGFBP-3 was diminished at reduced pH. Addition of IGFBP-3 reduced IGF-I cell binding at pH 7.4 but increased surface association at pH 5.8. This increase in IGF-I binding at pH 5.8 corresponded with an increase in IGFBP-3 cell association. This, however, was not due to an increase in affinity of IGFBP-3 for heparin at reduced pH although both heparinase III treatment and heparin addition reduced IGFBP-3 enhancement of IGF-I binding. An increase in IGF-I binding to IGFBP-3, though, was seen at reduced pH using a cell-free assay. We hypothesize that the enhanced binding of IGF-I at pH 5.8 is facilitated by increased association of IGFBP-3 at this pH and that the resulting cell associated IGF-I is IGFBP-3 and not IGF-IR bound. Increased internalization and nuclear association of IGF-I at pH 5.8 in the presence of IGFBP-3 was evident, yet cell proliferation was reduced by IGFBP-3 at both pH 5.8 and 7.4 indicating that IGFBP-3-cell associated IGF-I does not signal the cell to proliferate and that the resulting transfer of bound IGF-I from IGF-IR to IGFBP-3 results in diminished proliferation. Solution binding of IGF-I by IGFBP-3 is one means by which IGF-I-induced proliferation is inhibited. Our work suggests that an alternative pathway exists by which IGF-I and IGFBP-3 both associate with the cell surface and that this association inhibits IGF-I-induced proliferation. Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11748593     DOI: 10.1002/jcp.10033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0021-9541            Impact factor:   6.384


  1 in total

1.  Ligand rebinding: self-consistent mean-field theory and numerical simulations applied to surface plasmon resonance studies.

Authors:  Manoj Gopalakrishnan; Kimberly Forsten-Williams; Theresa R Cassino; Luz Padro; Thomas E Ryan; Uwe C Täuber
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2005-04-06       Impact factor: 1.733

  1 in total

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