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Distribution and binding properties of receptors for leukaemia inhibitory factor.

Authors :
Hilton DJ
Nicola NA
Metcalf D
Source :
Ciba Foundation symposium [Ciba Found Symp] 1992; Vol. 167, pp. 227-39; discussion 239-44.
Publication Year :
1992

Abstract

The pleiotropic biological actions of leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) on haemopoietic cells (macrophages and megakaryocytes), hepatocytes, osteoblasts, pre-adipocytes, embryonic stem cells, myoblasts and neuronal cells must be mediated through the interactions of LIF with specific cellular receptors. The demonstration by equilibrium binding analysis and autoradiography of LIF receptors on all of the above cells and cell lines suggests that each of these pleiotropic effects of LIF is mediated by direct interactions with the responding cells rather than by the indirect release of secondary cytokines. Despite the differing biological effects of LIF on these cells, equilibrium binding, kinetic analyses and receptor internalization studies have all suggested that these cells display essentially identical high affinity LIF receptors. Nevertheless, there is evidence on some cell types (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor [GM-CSF] transgenic peritoneal cells and F9 embryonal carcinoma cells) for a second class of low affinity LIF receptors (Kd = 1.5 nM versus Kd = 30 pM for high affinity receptors) which, LIF receptors (Kd = 1.5 nM versus Kd = 30 pM for high affinity receptors) which differ from the high affinity receptors only in kinetic dissociation rate. Moreover, the evidence suggests that low and high affinity receptors are structurally related and interconvertible, because detergent solubilization of LIF receptors from any cell type results in the quantitative conversion of high affinity receptors into low affinity receptors. As is the case for other related cytokine receptors, these data suggest that high affinity LIF receptors may be composed of two protein subunits--one responsible for LIF-specific low affinity binding and the other responsible for affinity conversion and cell signalling by the receptor. Such a model provides a possible explanation for the pleiotropy of LIF's biological actions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0300-5208
Volume :
167
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Ciba Foundation symposium
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
1425015
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470514269.ch14