- Mitogenic effect of urokinase on malignant and unaffected adjacent human renal cells.
Mitogenic effect of urokinase on malignant and unaffected adjacent human renal cells.
Primary cultures of renal cell carcinomas and of the corresponding normal adjacent kidney tissue from 6 patients were analyzed for the effects of exogenously added urokinase-type plasminogen activator on cell proliferation as compared to the effects of tissue type plasminogen activator, plasmin and dihydrocortisone. Cell proliferation was studied over a period of up to 5 days by measuring 3H-thymidine incorporation as well as cell viability and cell count; conditioned media of the cultures were also analyzed for their plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator inhibitor content. Addition of urokinase stimulated cell proliferation in a time and dose dependent fashion; after 3 days 3H-thymidine incorporation was significantly increased in malignant renal cells (188.3 +/- 28.7%), while it reached in normal renal cells approximately 130% of the 3H-thymidine incorporation of untreated cultures. Tissue-type plasminogen activator had no effect and plasmin decreased cell proliferation slightly while dihydrocortisone inhibited cell proliferation significantly (34.1 +/- 4.9%) in malignant cells. It is concluded that urokinase-type plasminogen activator itself exhibits a mitogenic effect also on primary cultures of renal cell carcinomas.