Conditions have been described for the selective growth, serial cultivation, and postconfluent morphological differentiation in vitro of normal adult human uroepithelial cells (HUC) on collagen gel substrates in a serum-free medium without the deliberate addition of undefined components and without a requirement for a polypeptide growth factor. The culture medium used (F12) was the standard Ham's F12 medium (0.3 mM calcium) supplemented with 1 microgram/ml hydrocortisone, 5 micrograms/ml transferrin, 10 micrograms/ml insulin, 0.1 mM nonessential amino acids, 2.0 mM L-glutamine, 2.7 mg/ml D-glucose, 10(-4) M ethanolamine or 10(-4) M phosphoethanolamine, and 5 X 10(-8) M selenium. HUC grown in F12 on Type I collagen gel substrates had a generation time of 33 hours and could be serially passed 3-5 times during log phase of growth (20-25 population doublings) before spontaneously senescing. Transmission electron microscopy showed that cultures of HUC grown entirely in serum-free F12 on collagen gel substrates morphologically differentiate postconfluence to resemble in some respects the stratified uroepithelium in vivo, although neither a basal lamina nor an asymmetric unit membrane develop. The addition of epidermal growth factor (EGF) to the F12 did not improve either the growth rate or the lifespan in vitro of HUC. In contrast, the addition of fetal bovine serum (FBS) to F12 was mitogenic to HUC in a dose-dependent manner in the concentration range 0.01-1.00% (4-400 micrograms/ml protein), but higher concentrations of FBS did not improve growth further. The generation time of HUC in 1% FBS-F12 decreased to 21 hours, and the potential population doublings in vitro increased to 31-36. Small amounts (140 micrograms/ml) of bovine pituitary extract (BPE) were similarly mitogenic to HUC in F12. Altering the calcium concentration in the standard Ham's F12 medium (0.3 mM), however, did not improve the growth of HUC in serum-containing or serum-free medium. Higher calcium concentrations (0.30-0.90 mM) were neither mitogenic nor inhibitory to HUC growth, but resulted in decreasing viability of HUC in growing cultures, suggesting an accelerating rate of cellular differentiation. In contrast HUC in low calcium, serum-free F12 (0.1 mM) failed to stratify and morphologically differentiate even in postconfluent cultures. This failure of HUC to differentiate in low calcium F12 medium did not confer a long-term growth advantage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
A peptide with an apparent molecular weight of 23,000 was isolated from the medium of cultured chick embryo tendons. Comparison of tryptic peptides derived from the medium peptide and from the amino-terminal, bacterial collagenase resistant portion of Type I procollagen indicated that the medium peptide represented the amino-terminal precursor-specific region of the pro alpha 1 (I) chain of procollagen. This conclusion was supported by the demonstration that antibodies against the medium peptide reacted with Type I procollagen in a radioimmune assay but did not react with a peptide derived from the carboxy-terminal propeptide of Type I procollagen. In addition, the reaction with Type I procollagen was inhibited with the purified amino-terminal, collagenase-resistant portion of pro alpha 1 (I) chains. Finally, amino acid sequencing demonstrated that the amino propeptide of dermatosparactic calf pN alpha 1 (I) chains and the medium peptide have similar amino-terminal sequences. Carbohydrate analysis established the presence of one residue of N-acetylglucosamine and a trace of mannose and galactose.
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