Epidermal growth factor and expression of specific genes: effects on cultured rat pituitary cells are dissociable from the mitogenic response.

Abstract
Cultured rat pituitary tumor cells, GH3/D6, which synthesize growth hormone and prolactin, have cell-surface epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor sites (34,000/cell) that bind 125I-labeled EGF with a high affinity (Kd .apprxeq. 1 nM). Prolonged treatment of the cells with EGF did not stimulate cell division but did inhibit thyroid hormone-stimulated cell growth. EGF altered the morphology of the cells from a rounded to an elongated conformation. EGF also induced a perturbation of chromatin structure in GH3 cell nuclei that was detected by an increase (40%) in the number of rifampicin-resistant initiation sites for bacterial RNA polymerase. This was accompanied by an increased synthesis of prolactin and an inhibition of synthesis of growth hormone. In the presence of EGF, the synthesis of growth hormone was no longer inducible by thyroid hormone, but it remained responsive to glucocorticoids. EGF apparently can elicit major effects on the cellular phenotype and expression of specific genes in the absence of a proliferative response. Apparently, EGF can also regulate differentiated cellular functions.