Identification and characterization of" injurin," an inducer of expression of the gene for hepatocyte growth factor.

K Matsumoto, H Tajima, M Hamanoue… - Proceedings of the …, 1992 - National Acad Sciences
K Matsumoto, H Tajima, M Hamanoue, S Kohno, T Kinoshita, T Nakamura
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992National Acad Sciences
The marked and rapid increase of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) mRNA in the intact lung of
rats after partial hepatectomy or unilateral nephrectomy suggests the existence of a humoral
factor mediating a signal of injury to distal organs and may induce the expression of HGF
gene in these organs. We have now identified a proteinous factor in the sera of rats with
injury of liver or kidney that increases HGF mRNA in the intact lung. When the serum of rats
with liver insult caused by partial hepatectomy or ischemic treatment was injected ip into …
The marked and rapid increase of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) mRNA in the intact lung of rats after partial hepatectomy or unilateral nephrectomy suggests the existence of a humoral factor mediating a signal of injury to distal organs and may induce the expression of HGF gene in these organs. We have now identified a proteinous factor in the sera of rats with injury of liver or kidney that increases HGF mRNA in the intact lung. When the serum of rats with liver insult caused by partial hepatectomy or ischemic treatment was injected i.p. into normal noninjured rats, it induced a marked HGF mRNA expression in the lung of the recipient rats. The addition of serum from rats with various hepatic or renal injuries to MRC-5 human embryonic lung fibroblasts in culture also led to the induction of HGF mRNA expression, so that the production of HGF by MRC-5 cells after treatment with the sera was remarkably increased in the culture medium. However, serum from the normal intact rat induced no HGF production and no HGF mRNA in the lung in vivo and lung fibroblasts in vitro. This factor, which increases HGF production, was purified greater than 200-fold from sera of CCl4-treated rats. The factor proved to be an acid- and heat-stable protein with an apparent molecular mass of 10-20 kDa in SDS/PAGE. Its activity markedly increased within 3-6 hr in the plasma of rats after various treatments that injured the liver or kidney. These results suggest that the factor specifically appears in the blood of rats with organ injury and may be involved in organ regeneration through the potential to increase the synthesis of HGF. Since the factor seems to mediate various organ injuries, we named it "injurin."
National Acad Sciences