Abstract
Deregulation of growth observed in malignant cell cultures has been assumed to be the result of increased secretion by these cells of autocrine growth factors, as well as the decreased sensitivity of these cells to inhibitory molecules which are diffused from normal or transformed cells. Our results show that PC-3 cells secreted into the medium, factors having stimulatory and inhibitory activities. We found an IGF-like molecule in medium conditioned by PC-3 cells. Its concentration was less than 1 ng/ml of conditioned medium. We demonstrated that PC-3 cells have receptors for IGF-I and are stimulated by this growth factor. However, the dose response curve shows that 1 ng/ml of IGF-I is not sufficient to indicate autocrine growth regulation by IGF of prostatic carcinoma cells. IGF-binding proteins of 90 000, 45 000, 34 000 and 28 000 molecular weight were also secreted by PC-3 cells. It is noteworthy that the secreted proteins which had the greatest inhibitory effect on chick embryo fibroblast growth also has the strongest IGF-binding activity. The probability that the IGF-binding protein secreted by PC-3 cells inhibited serum stimulation of DNA synthesis by preventing stimulation induced by IGF present in the serum is discussed. It is of interest that these IGF-binding proteins inhibited chick embryo fibroblast proliferation but did not inhibit PC-3 cells. This is in agreement with the assumption that IGF present in the medium is not an autocrine growth factor for these cells.