FGF-2 Protein (fgf-2 + protein)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Modifications of the fibroblast growth factor-2 gene led to a marked enhancement in secretion and stability of the recombinant fibroblast growth factor-2 protein

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2007
Shin-Tai Chen
Abstract Progress in FGF-2 gene therapy has been hampered by the difficulty in achieving therapeutic levels of FGF-2 secretion. This study tested whether the addition of BMP2/4 hybrid secretion signal to the FGF-2 gene and mutation of cys-70 and cys-88 to serine and asparagine, respectively, would increase the stability and secretion of active FGF-2 protein in mammalian cells using MLV-based vectors. Single or double mutations of cys-70 and cys-88 to ser-70 and asp-88, respectively, markedly increased the amounts of FGF-2 protein in conditioned media and cell lysates, which may be due to glycosylation, particularly at the mutated asp-88 residue. Addition of BMP2/4 secretion signal increased FGF-2 secretion, but also suppressed FGF-2 biosynthesis. The combination of BMP2/4 secretion signal and double cys-70 and cys-88 mutations increased the total amount of secreted FGF-2 protein >60-fold. The modifications did not alter its ability to stimulate cell proliferation and Erk1/2 phosphorylation in marrow stromal cells or its ability to bind heparin in vitro, suggesting that the modified FGF-2 protein was functionally as effective as the unmodified FGF-2. An ex vivo application of rat skin fibroblasts (RSF) transduced with the modified FGF-2 vector in a subcutaneous implant model showed that rats with implants containing cells transduced with the modified FGF-2 vector increased serum FGF-2 level >15-fold, increased growth of the implant, and increased vascularization within the implant, compared to rats that received implants containing ,-galactosidase- or wild-type FGF-2-transduced control cells. This modified vector may be useful in FGF-2 gene therapy investigations. J. Cell. Biochem. 100: 1493,1508, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Intracellular trafficking in neurones and glia of fibroblast growth factor-2, fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 and heparan sulphate proteoglycans in the injured adult rat cerebral cortex

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 4 2006
W. E. Leadbeater
Abstract The potent gliogenic and neurotrophic fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-2 signals through a receptor complex comprising high-affinity FGF receptor (FGFR)1 with heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPGs) as co-receptors. We examined the intracellular dynamics of FGF-2, FGFR1 and the HSPGs syndecan-2 and -3, glypican-1 and -2, and perlecan in neurones and glia in and around adult rat cerebral wounds. In the intact cerebral cortex, FGF-2 and FGFR1 mRNA and protein were constitutively expressed in astrocytes and neurones respectively. FGF-2 protein was localized exclusively to astrocyte nuclei. After injury, expression of FGF-2 mRNA was up-regulated only in astrocytes, whereas FGFR1 mRNA expression was increased in both glia and neurones, a disparity indicating that FGF-2 may act as a paracrine and autocrine factor for neurones and glia respectively. FGF-2 protein localized to both cytoplasm and nuclei of injury-responsive neurones and glia. There was weak or no staining of HSPGs in the normal cerebral neuropil and glia nuclei, with a few immunopositive neurones. Specific HSPGs responded to injury by differentially co-localizing with trafficked intracellular FGF-2 and FGFR1. The spatiotemporal dynamics of FGF-2,FGFR1,HSPG complex formation implies a role for individual HSPGs in regulating FGF-2 storage, nuclear trafficking and cell-specific injury responses in CNS wounds. [source]


From gene profiling to diagnostic markers: IL-18 and FGF-2 complement CA125 as serum-based markers in epithelial ovarian cancer

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 7 2006
Cécile Le Page
Abstract We used an oligonucleotide-based DNA microarray to identify potential markers in 39 primary cultures of ovarian cancer specimens compared with 11 primary cultures of normal ovarian epithelia. Differential gene expression of IL-18 and FGF-2 was validated on a subset of samples by quantitative PCR and by IHC, using an independent tissue array of 90 cores of 20 normal ovarian surface epithelia and 70 EOCs representing different grades and pathologies of ovarian disease. We further compared, by ELISA, these two markers with CA125 in sera from 25 cancer-free and 47 ovarian cancer patients. IL-18 and FGF-2 proteins were significantly elevated in tumor tissues (p<0.04) and sera (p<0.05) from patients with ovarian cancer. In combination, the three markers (IL-18, FGF-2, and CA125) showed similar sensitivity in scoring for ovarian cancer (35/45 patients) compared to that of CA125 alone (37/45) and significantly improved the specificity of detection (20/25 patients) compared to each marker individually (15/25 for CA125; 18/25 FGF-2; 16/25 for IL-18). In conclusion we show that a combination of the three serum markers (IL-18, FGF-2 and CA125) is associated with EOC, with higher specificity than CA125 alone. Prospective studies with a large cohort of susceptible ovarian cancer patients will be required to expand these findings. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]