Nerve growth factor levels in cultured human skin cells: effect of gestation and viral transformation.

1995 
Abstract Extracts of cultured human keratinocytes and fibroblasts were assayed for nerve growth factor-like immunoreactivity (NGF) by a specific enzyme-linked immunoabsorbant assay. NGF levels were higher in primary cultured keratinocytes than in freshly isolated keratinocytes or culture through multiple passages. Viral transformation of keratinocytes with the human papilloma virus (HPV 16) significantly increased NGF levels, whilst transformation with the simian virus (SV40), which induces simple epithelial differentiation, reduced the concentration of NGF. Passaged epidermal keratinocytes contained more than twice as much NGF as did passaged fibroblasts. Oral keratinocytes and fibroblasts, and psoriatic fibroblasts, all from high turnover tissues, did not contain significantly different levels of NGF in culture than dermal keratinocytes or fibroblasts. Foetal fibroblasts contained five times as much NGF as did adult fibroblasts. These results suggest that basal keratinocytes are a major but not sole source of NGF in human skin, and that NGF may play a role in human skin development.
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