scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Prolactin Receptors in Human Breast Cancer Cells in Long-Term Tissue Culture

Robert P. C. Shiu
- 01 Nov 1979 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 11, pp 4381-4386
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The hormone specificity and affinity for hormone of these human mammary tumor cells are very similar to that found for the rabbit mammary gland and should prove very useful to study the biology of prolactin receptors in living human cells and the role of Prolactin in the tumorigenesis of the human breast.
Abstract
Prolactin receptors have been identified for the first time in a number of human breast cancer cell lines and a normal human breast cell line maintained in long-term tissue culture. Optimal conditions for determining the binding of 125I-labeled human prolactin to these cells were established. Five different tumor cell lines have different content of prolactin receptors ranging from 2,300 to 26,000 sites/cell. All tumor cell lines contained more prolactin receptors than does one normal breast cell line (1700 sites/cell). The prolactin receptors in these human mammary tumor cells not only bind human prolactin but also recognize other lactogenic hormones such as human growth hormone, human placental lactogen, and sheep prolactin, but not animal growth hormone, which are not lactogenic. The affinity (Ka) of binding of human prolactin to these cells is 4 × 109 m-1 (Kd = 2.5 × 10-10 m). The hormone specificity and affinity for hormone of these human mammary tumor cells are very similar to that found for the rabbit mammary gland. These human mammary tumor cell lines in long-term culture should prove very useful to study the biology of prolactin receptors in living human cells and the role of prolactin in the tumorigenesis of the human breast.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Prolactin in Mammary Carcinoma

TL;DR: Findings indicate that antagonists of PRL/PRL receptor interaction or PRL receptor-associated signal transduction may be of considerable utility in the treatment of human breast cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elevated insulin receptor content in human breast cancer

TL;DR: The insulin receptor content is increased in breast cancers and the possibility that the insulin receptor may have a role in the biology of these tumors is raised.
Journal Article

Epidermal Growth Factor Binding by Breast Tumor Biopsies and Relationship to Estrogen Receptor and Progestin Receptor Levels

TL;DR: Correlation analysis between EGF binding and the percentage of malignant and nonmalignant cell types present in sections of tumor adjacent to the area assayed for EGF Binding indicated that the percentageof malignant cells is an important factor in determining the amount of EGFbinding in tumor homogenates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Activation of the prolactin receptor but not the growth hormone receptor is important for induction of mammary tumors in transgenic mice

TL;DR: Activation of the PRLR is sufficient for induction of mammary carcinomas in mice, while activation of the GHR is not sufficient for mammary tumor formation.
Related Papers (5)