Experiments undertaken to investigate the binding of epidermal growth factor by hepatocyte nuclei showed that: (a) isolated nuclei from both normal and regenerating rat liver are capable of binding 125I-epidermal growth factor, (b) the nuclear epidermal growth factor-binding protein is similar in molecular weight to the plasma membrane epidermal growth factor receptor, (c) monoclonal antibodies produced against the plasma membrane epidermal growth factor receptor recognize the nuclear epidermal growth factor receptor and (d) the nuclear receptor has an affinity for epidermal growth factor comparable to that of the plasma membrane receptor, but fewer (approximately 10%) nuclear receptors are available per protein unit compared with the plasma membrane.
Polypeptide growth factors, including epidermal growth factor (EGF), play a central role in regulating hepatocyte growth both in vivo and in primary culture. To characterize EGF gene expression in the pathogenesis of regenerative cirrhotic fibrosis, we employed biotinylated antisense oligonucleotide probes to localize hepatic mRNA transcripts in situ. In control tissue and regenerative hepatic nodules, EGF receptor (EGFR) mRNA transcripts were expressed constitutively. In contrast, oligonucleotide probes targeting the human EGF coding region showed that EGF transcription was extremely low in control liver but was highly elevated and localized to regenerative hepatic nodules and bile duct epithelia of cirrhotic liver. To determine whether EGF mRNA accumulation accompanied a comparable increase in the EGF peptide, we performed immunohistochemistry using an antibody specific for the nonprocessed peptide aminoterminus. We observed that positive localized EGF staining paralleled its mRNA transcript. These results indicate that EGF upregulation is a characteristic of cirrhotic liver disease and suggest that persistent de novo ligand synthesis and its signaling contribute to an autocrine-mediated hepatocyte proliferation within the regenerative nodule.
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