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Title: Urinary transforming growth factors in neoplasia: separation of 125I-labeled transforming growth factor-alpha from epidermal growth factor in human urine. Author: Stromberg K, Hudgins WR. Journal: Cancer Res; 1986 Nov; 46(11):6004-10. PubMed ID: 3019543. Abstract: Purified human epidermal growth factor (hEGF) from urine promotes anchorage-independent cell growth in soft agar medium. This growth is enhanced by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), and is specifically inhibited by hEGF antiserum. Transforming growth factors of the alpha type (TGF-alpha), potentially present in normal human urine or urine from tumor-bearing patients, also promote anchorage-independent cell growth and compete with EGF for membrane receptor binding. Consequently, TGF-alpha cannot be distinguished from urinary hEGF by these two functional assays. Therefore, a technique for separation of TGF-alpha and related peptides from urinary EGF based on biochemical characteristics would be useful. Radioiodination of characterized growth factors [mouse EGF (mEGF), hEGF, and rat TGF-alpha (rTGF-alpha)], which were then separately added to human urine, was used to evaluate a resolution scheme that separates TGF-alpha from the high level of background hEGF present in human urine. Commercially available methyl bonded microparticulate silica efficiently adsorbed the 125I-labeled mEGF, 125I-labeled hEGF, and 125I-labeled rTGF-alpha that were added to 24-h human urine samples. Fractional elution with acetonitrile (MeCN) of the adsorbed silica released approximately 70 to 80% of the 125I-labeled mEGF and 125I-labeled hEGF between 25 and 30% MeCN, and over 80% of the 125I-labeled rTGF-alpha between 15 and 25% MeCN, with retention after dialysis of less than 0.2 and 1.7% of the original urinary protein, respectively. Consequently, a single-step enrichment of about 400-fold for mEGF and hEGF, and 50-fold for rTGF-alpha were achieved rapidly. Subsequent Bio-Gel P-10 chromatography indicated that 125I-labeled mEGF and 125I-labeled hEGF eluted later than would be predicted on the basis of their reported molecular weight of approximately 6000, whereas 125I-labeled rTGF-alpha eluted from Bio-Gel P-10 at an approximate molecular weight of 8000 to 9000. 125I-labeled rTGF-alpha bound to carboxymethyl cellulose and eluted at a less acidic pH than did hEGF. On reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography using a linear gradient of 18 to 35% MeCN over 120 min, 125I-labeled rTGF-alpha was comparatively hydrophilic, eluting at 22% MeCN in contrast to the more hydrophobic 125I-labeled hEGF, which eluted at 27% MeCN. These observed biochemical differences between hEGF and TGF-alpha provide a rationale for resolution of these and perhaps other related putative transforming growth factors from bulk urine of tumor-bearing patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]