Kim I S, Pantazis N J
Exp Cell Res. 1985 Feb;156(2):391-404. doi: 10.1016/0014-4827(85)90546-4.
Nerve Growth Factor (NGF), a protein involved in the maintenance and differentiation of sensory and sympathetic neuronal cells [1], is synthesized by several different types of cells in culture [2-7]. In this paper, the biochemical and biological properties of NGF synthesized by a mouse S-180 sarcoma cell line were examined. These cells do not appear to produce the 7S-NGF molecule, a form of NGF found in high concentrations in the mouse submandibular gland [8]. The 7S-NGF is comprised of three distinct protein subunits named beta-NGF, alpha and gamma [9]. Although the S-180 cells do not produce 7S-NGF, the cells do synthesize one of the component subunits of 7S-NGF, the beta-NGF subunit. Biological, electrophoretic, immunological and molecular weight criteria were used to establish that the beta-NGF synthesized by the S-180 cells is very similar to the submandibular gland beta-NGF. The S-180 beta-NGF was bound to an unidentified binding component(s) which is not immunologically similar to either the alpha- or gamma-subunit. The functional significance of this interaction is not known.