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From the Institute of Pathology, University Hospital, Mainz, Germany; and the ABL Basic Research Program, Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Frederick, MD.
Hepatocyte growth factor-scatter factor (HGF-SF ) mediates mito-, moto-, and morphogenic effects through the MET receptor, a membrane bound tyrosine kinase. HGF-SF/MET signaling is mitogenic for a large number of epithelial and endothelial cells and activates organ regeneration. HGF-SF transcripts have been detected in various myeloid cell lines. Therefore, the potential role of HGF-SF/MET signaling for circulating cells of the immune system, especially under conditions of inflammation, was evaluated. Several B-lymphoid and myeloid cell lines were found to express HGF-SF or c-met transcripts, while activity of both genes was mutually exclusive with the exception of low level coexpression in two B-cell lines. HGF-SF transcripts were present in low quantities in freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs). In contrast, c-met expression was not detected in freshly isolated cells from peripheral blood, but was induced in monocytes by activation of monocytic or T-cell function. HGF-SF incubation led to an increased c-fos steady state transcript level in myeloblastic K562 cells and moderately promoted cell viability of freshly isolated preactivated monocytes. c-met expression is thus established in activated monocytes, in particular under conditions resembling inflammation, making these cells accessible to functional effects of HGF-SF.
HEPATOCYTE growth factor-scatter factor (HGF-SF ) is a multifunctional and pleiotropic cytokine of approximately 90 kD.1 HGF-SF exerts multiple stimulatory effects on different target cell types, in that it is mitogenic, motogenic, and morphogenic for epithelial and vascular endothelial cells as well as for melanocytes.1-4 In addition, there is evidence that HGF-SF is neurotrophic for specific subpopulations of central nervous system neurons,5 and at higher concentrations cytotoxic for a variety of tumor cell lines.6 Furthermore, HGF-SF appears to be an essential factor in the fetal morphogenesis of the placenta and the liver,7,8 as well as an important positive regulator of liver regeneration after injury.9-12 It has also been speculated that HGF-SF may play a role in tumor progression by stimulating tumor cell invasion and metastasis.13
All functions thus far attributed to HGF-SF can be mediated by the MET tyrosine kinase, the high affinity HGF-SF receptor. MET is the product of the c-met gene and is known to activate different intracellular signaling pathways through an intracytoplasmic multifunctional-docking domain.14-18 Costimulatory effects of HGF-SF together with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF ), interleukin-3 (IL-3), or erythropoietin have been demonstrated on blast and colony-forming units from bone marrow, suggesting that HGF-SF/MET signaling may serve as a hematopoietic regulator.19-22 Furthermore, moderate functional effects have been reported in B cells, T cells, and granulocytes after stimulation with HGF-SF.23-25
To further elucidate the potential role of HGF-SF in myeloic and lymphocytic cells, we have analyzed the expression and potential function of HGF-SF, as well as of c-met using a representative panel of permanent cell lines and primary cell cultures under different inducing conditions. Our results show the presence of HGF-SF and c-met expression in several myeloid cell lines. c-met is activated in peripheral blood monocytes after in vitro stimulation, rendering them functionally responsive to HGF-SF stimulation. These results suggest that activated monocytes in vivo respond to increased concentrations of HGF-SF as observed under conditions of inflammation.
Cell culturing and isolation of cells from peripheral blood.
The permanent cell lines described in Table 1 were obtained from the Deutsche Sammlung für Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen (Braunschweig, Germany); cell line U937 was kindly provided by B. Fleischer (Hamburg, Germany). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs) were separated by centrifugation over a Ficoll-Hypaque density gradient (Biochrom, Berlin, Germany) from heparinized peripheral blood samples obtained from healthy individuals. PBMNCs were recovered from the interface and washed twice in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). For a number of experiments, the PBMNCs were cultured for up to 7 days in RPMI 1640 medium (Biochrom) containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS).
HGF-SF and c-met expression in myeloid and B-lymphoid cell lines does not correlate with differentiation.
A panel of 12 myeloid and lymphoid cell lines (six myeloid, four B-lymphoid, and two T-lymphoid lines) was analyzed to determine whether HGF-SF and c-met are expressed in the lymphocytic and myeloic cell compartment and whether expression of both genes is limited to certain hematopoietic lineages or stages of maturation. The results (Fig 1 and Table 1) showed HGF-SF and c-met expression in some of the myeloid and B-lymphoid cell lines, whereas the T-cell lines expressed neither HGF-SF nor c-met transcripts. In separate experiments performed under nonstimulating conditions, the B-cell line, Raji, was positive for c-met transcripts, while the T-cell line, Jurkat, was negative for both HGF-SF and c-met transcripts (data not shown). All myeloid cell lines expressed either HGF-SF (KG-1, HL-60, HEL, MM6) or c-met (K562, U937), although expression of one gene appeared to exclude expression of the other. Furthermore, a tendency towards higher expression of HGF-SF was noted in less differentiated (ie, immature) myeloid cell lines, and expression of HGF-SF was thus highest in the myeloblastic cell line, KG-1. In B-lymphoid cell lines, low level expression of HGF-SF and c-met transcripts coexisted in cell lines, REH and OPM-2, while the cell line, JVM-2, with high HGF-SF expression, was c-met negative and neither HGF-SF nor c-met transcripts were detected in cell line, MN-60. Transcripts of approximately 6 kb, 3 kb, and 1.5 kb were present in all HGF-SF positive cell lines, with the full-size 6 kb transcript being the predominant and the 1.5 kb transcript the least abundant species. c-met transcripts of approximately 7 kb were found in cell lines, U937 and REH, while cell line U937 also expressed a second transcript of 5 kb. In contrast, the myeloblastic cell line, K562, showed c-met transcripts of 5.5 kb and subgenic species of 3.5 kb and 2.5 kb at similar quantities.
We analyzed the expression and significance of a potent pleiotropic growth factor, HGF-SF and its receptor c-met, in a representative panel of myeloid and lymphoid cell lines. HGF-SF or c-met expression is predominately detected in myeloid cell lines, while, with the exception of HGF-SF expressing B-cell line, JVM-2, expression in B- or T-lymphoid cell lines is absent or very low. This is supported by findings of other groups reporting HGF-SF expression in other myeloid cell lines, such as HL-6019 and THP-1.41 In contrast, only a single T-cell line has thus far been shown to express significant amounts of HGF-SF.42 Although a tendency towards higher expression of HGF-SF in less differentiated myeloid cell lines (ie, KG-1, HEL) was noted, a correlation between HGF-SF/c-met expression and differentiation or stages of maturation could not be established for the analyzed cell lines, despite a preference for myeloid differentiation and earlier stages of maturation. This absence of correlation was further supported by stimulation experiments using TPA, DMSO, and dbcAMP. Although these substances either activate (TPA and dbcAMP in some lines) or suppress (DMSO) HGF-SF expression, the resulting effects do not correlate with the differentiation-inducing activities of these substances on myeloid cells. In particular, DMSO and dbcAMP, both known to induce granulocytic differentiation of myeloid cells,39,43 did not correlate in their effect on HGF-SF expression. The observed stimulations thus represent specific effects of the substances used and are not coupled to differentiation induction in the myeloid cell lines.
Submitted July 8, 1997;
accepted July 23, 1997.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be hearly marked
``advertisment'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734 solely to
indicate this fact. This work represents part of the PhD thesis of M.B. from the Faculty of Biology at the University of Mainz. We thank P. Pulkowski and T. Böhm for photography and S. Hunger for typing the manuscript.
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