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  • Title: Recombinant interferon-gamma inhibits the mitogenic effect of platelet-derived growth factor at a level distal to the growth factor receptor.
    Author: Hosang M.
    Journal: J Cell Physiol; 1988 Mar; 134(3):396-404. PubMed ID: 2832421.
    Abstract:
    Highly purified preparations of recombinant human interferons (rIFNs)-alpha A, -beta, and -gamma all inhibited platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-induced DNA synthesis in normal human dermal fibroblasts, as monitored by incorporation of [3H]-thymidine into trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-insoluble material. rIFN-gamma was the most potent, since it blocked the PDGF response by 50% at about 10 U/ml or 0.3 ng/ml, whereas with rIFN-alpha A and rIFN-beta 4000 U/ml and 600 U/ml, respectively (10 ng/ml in both cases), were required to achieve the same effect. There was a close parallelism between the ability of these rIFNs to inhibit PDGF mitogenic activity and their capacity to inhibit cell proliferation in serum-containing medium. None of the rIFNs inhibited specific binding of 125I-PDGF to fibroblasts, and none interfered with receptor internalization. The mechanism of action of rIFN-gamma was analyzed further. rIFN-gamma did not inhibit uptake of [3H]-thymidine into these cells. However, it shifted if the time point of initiation of DNA synthesis from about 14 h after stimulation with PDGF to about 18 to 21 h and decreased significantly the rate of the DNA synthesis. rIFN-gamma could be added up to 6 h following stimulation with PDGF with no loss of its inhibitory effect. rIFN-gamma also blocked the mitogenic activity of epidermal growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor. Taken together these results implicate that rIFN-gamma exerts its antimitogenic effect by inhibiting a process that occurs late in the PDGF signaling pathway and onto which the activity pathways of other mitogens converge. In view of the important role PDGF may play in wound-healing and in the pathogenesis of the proliferative lesions of arteriosclerosis, these data point to a possible role IFN-gamma may play as a regulator of these processes in vivo.
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