Fibroblast growth factor-2

M Okada-Ban, JP Thiery, J Jouanneau - The international journal of …, 2000 - Elsevier
M Okada-Ban, JP Thiery, J Jouanneau
The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology, 2000Elsevier
Fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) is a heparin-binding growth factor which occurs in several
isoforms resulting from alternative initiations of translation: an 18 kD cytoplasmic isoform and
four larger molecular weight nuclear isoforms (22, 22.5, 24 and 34 kD). FGF-2 has
pleiotropic roles in many cell types and tissues; it is a motogenic, angiogenic and survival
factor which is involved in cell migration, cell differentiation and in a variety of developmental
processes. Although devoid of signal peptide, it could be secreted. It acts mainly through a …
Fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) is a heparin-binding growth factor which occurs in several isoforms resulting from alternative initiations of translation: an 18 kD cytoplasmic isoform and four larger molecular weight nuclear isoforms (22, 22.5, 24 and 34 kD). FGF-2 has pleiotropic roles in many cell types and tissues; it is a motogenic, angiogenic and survival factor which is involved in cell migration, cell differentiation and in a variety of developmental processes. Although devoid of signal peptide, it could be secreted. It acts mainly through a paracrine/autocrine mechanism involving high affinity transmembrane receptors and heparan sulfate proteoglycan low affinity receptors, but also through still unknown intracrine process(es) on intracellular targets. FGF-2 has many biological functions which are probably isoform-specific. Nevertheless, FGF-2 is not essential for embryonic development as knock-out mice for the growth factor are viable and fertile although they exhibit abnormalities in neuronal differentiation. Use of FGF-2 as therapeutic agent for the treatment of ischemic cardiovascular disease is promising and clinical trials are in progress.
Elsevier