Vitamin A in serum is a survival factor for fibroblasts

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Abstract

Murine 3T3 cells arrest in a quiescent, non-dividing state when transferred into medium containing little or no serum. Within the first day after transfer, fibroblasts can be activated to proliferate by platelet- derived growth factor (PDGF) alone; cells starved longer than 1 day, however, are activated only by serum. We demonstrate that endogenous vitamin A (retinol) or retinol supplied by serum prevents cell death and that retinol, in combination with PDGF, can fully replace serum in activating cells starved longer than 1 day. The physiological retinol derivative 14-hydroxy-4,14- retroretinol, but not retinoic acid, can replace retinol in rescuing or activating 3T3 cells. Anhydroretinol, another physiological retinol metabolite that acts as a competitive antagonist of retinol, blocks cell activation by serum, indicating that retinol is a necessary component of serum. It previously has been proposed that activation of 3T3 cells requires two factors in serum, an activation factor shown to be PDGF and an unidentified survival factor. We report that retinol is the survival factor in serum.

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Chen, Y., Derguini, F., & Buck, J. (1997). Vitamin A in serum is a survival factor for fibroblasts. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 94(19), 10205–10208. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.94.19.10205

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