Basic fibroblast growth factor from human keratinocytes is a natural mitogen for melanocytes.

Ruth Halaban(Yale University), Robert C. Langdon(Yale University), Nicholas Birchall(Yale University), Charles B. Cuono(Yale University), Andrew Baird(Yale University), Glynis Scott(Yale University), Gisela Moellmann(Yale University), Joseph McGuire(Yale University)
The Journal of Cell Biology
October 1, 1988
Cited by 491Open Access
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Abstract

To survive and proliferate in pure culture, human melanocytes require basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and cAMP. Without these factors, even in the presence of serum, the cells die. Melanocytes cultured in the presence of keratinocytes, however, survive for weeks without added bFGF and cAMP. We show here that the growth factor for melanocytes produced by human keratinocytes is bFGF because its activity can be abolished by neutralizing antibodies to bFGF and by a bFGF synthetic peptide that inhibits the binding of the growth factor to its receptor. The melanocyte mitogen in keratinocytes is cell associated and increases after irradiation with ultraviolet B. Northern blots reveal bFGF gene transcripts in keratinocytes but not melanocytes. These studies demonstrate that bFGF elaborated by keratinocytes in vitro sustains melanocyte growth and survival, and they suggest that keratinocyte-derived bFGF is the natural growth factor for normal human melanocytes in vivo.


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