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Wiley, FEBS Letters, 22(580), p. 5161-5166, 2006

DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2006.08.068

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Transactivation of epidermal growth factor receptor by insulin-like growth factor 1 requires basal hydrogen peroxide

Journal article published in 2006 by Qiong Zhou, Dan Meng ORCID, Bing Yan, Bing-Hua Jiang ORCID, Jing Fang
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1) plays an important role in prostate cancer development. Recent studies suggest that IGF-1 has mitogenic action through epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). However, the mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrated in prostate cancer DU145 cells that IGF-1 induced EGFR transactivation, leading to ERK activation. Matrix metalloproteinase-mediated shedding of heparin-binding EGF is involved in this process. Antioxidants and catalase inhibited IGF-1-stimulated EGFR phosphorylation, indicating that H(2)O(2) is required for EGFR activation. However, exogenous H(2)O(2) did not activate EGFR or IGF-1R in DU145 cells. IGF-1 did not induced production of H(2)O(2) in DU145 cells. Our results suggest that transactivation of EGFR by IGF-1 requires basal intracellular H(2)O(2) in DU145 cells.