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Title: Secretion and biological activities of heparin-binding growth-associated molecule. Neurite outgrowth-promoting and mitogenic actions of the recombinant and tissue-derived protein. Author: Raulo E, Julkunen I, Merenmies J, Pihlaskari R, Rauvala H. Journal: J Biol Chem; 1992 Jun 05; 267(16):11408-16. PubMed ID: 1597470. Abstract: The cDNA for the developmentally regulated, neurite outgrowth-promoting protein HB-GAM (heparin-binding growth-associated molecule) was recently cloned and shown to encode a novel lysine-rich sequence that is homologous with retinoic acid-induced sequences suggested to function in cell differentiation (Merenmies, J., and Rauvala, H. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 16721-16724). The same sequence was found for the mitogenic and neurite outgrowth-promoting protein pleiotrophin (Li, Y.-S., Milner, P. G., Chauhan, A. K., Watson, M. A., Hoffman, R. M., Kodner, C. M., Milbrandt, J., and Deuel, T. F. (1990) Science 250, 1690-1694). In this study, we have constructed a recombinant baculovirus using the cDNA that encodes the putative preprotein of HB-GAM. The putative secretion signal of HB-GAM is cleaved off in the baculovirus expression system, and the recombinant protein is rapidly secreted to the culture medium. Recombinant HB-GAM purified from the culture medium retains the biochemical characteristics and the neurite outgrowth-promoting activity found for the tissue-derived protein. Studies on the neurite outgrowth-promoting activity suggest that HB-GAM functions as an extracellular matrix-associated protein that enhances axonal growth in perinatal cerebral neurons of the rat. Since the same predicted amino acid sequence has been ascribed to a mitogenic protein, mitogenic activities of the recombinant HB-GAM and of tissue-derived HB-GAM fractions were also studied. Recombinant HB-GAM did not display any significant mitogenic activity, suggesting that tissue-derived HB-GAM preparations may contain other heparin-binding mitogenic factors. We identified in brain-derived HB-GAM fractions a 17-kDa protein (p17) that is detached from heparin by a slightly higher salt concentration as compared to HB-GAM. We suggest that p17 is structurally distinct from HB-GAM and responsible for the mitogenic actions of tissue-derived HB-GAM fractions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]