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Tomomi Miyamoto, Masaru Hayashi, Akihiko Takeuchi, Takayuki Okamoto, Sachiko kawashima, Takemasa Takii, Hidetoshi Hayashi, Kikuo Onozaki, Identification of a Novel Growth-Promoting Factor with a Wide Target Cell Spectrum from Various Tumor Cells as Catalase, The Journal of Biochemistry, Volume 120, Issue 4, October 1996, Pages 725–730, https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a021471
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Abstract
We have previously reported the purification from human erythrocyte extracts of a novel growth-promoting factor with a wide target cell spectrum. The factor has been identified as catalase. As cell extracts from a variety of tumor cell types exhibited both growth-promoting and catalase activities, the relationship between the two activities was examined using cell extracts from three different cell types, human myeloid cells (U937), human melanoma cells (A375-C6), and human B cells (Daudi). The growth-promoting and catalase activities were well correlated in these cell extracts. The antibody against human catalase absorbed not only catalase activity, but also the growth-promoting activity of extracts from these cell types. Treatment of the cell extracts from these cells with an irreversible catalase inhibitor, aminotriazole, abolished both the catalase and growth-promoting activities. In contrast, glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity was neither absorbed with the anti-catalase antibody, nor inhibited by aminotriazole. In addition, GSH-Px exhibited growth-promoting activity only in the presence of glutathione (GSH). These results, in conjunction with the effect of aminotriazole on the growth-promoting activity of catalase, suggest that catalase is the major growth-promoting molecule in the cell extractsand H2O2-decomposing activity is important. Northern blot analysis revealed that these cells contained authentic catalase mRNA, and the mRNA level was compatible with the catalase and growth-promoting activities in the cell extracts. These results suggest that the growth-promoting activity in the tumor cell extracts is due to catalase.