Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) and keratinocyte growth factor (KGF, also designated FGF-7) are paracrine growth factors secreted by mesenchymal cells and active on a variety of epithelial cell types. In this study, the biologic responses of keratinocytes to these paracrine growth factors were compared. Stimulation of mitogenesis, migration, plasminogen activator (PA) activity, and fibronectin production were examined using human foreskin keratinocytes cultured in serum-free MCDB 153 medium. Although the two factors stimulated a similar level of proliferation when cells were maintained for 5 d in 1.8 mM Ca(++), the peak effect of KGF, observed at 10 ng/ml, was approximately threefold higher than that of HGF/SF when cells were in medium containing 0.15 mM Ca(++). Both agents promoted the migration of cells in few-calcium medium (0.08 mM Ca(++)). However, the magnitude of the response was approximately twofold greater for HGF/SF at 10 ng/ml than KGF at the same concentration. None of the matrix proteins such as type I collagen, type IV collagen, laminin, or fibronectin either stimulated or suppressed HGF/SF- or KGF-stimulated keratinocyte migration. Both factors stimulated PA activity of the cell extracts, especially urokinase-type, with similar potencies. Promoted PA activity was maximal with the addition of 10 ng/ml of either factor. Neither factor increased the production of fibronectin under conditions in which transforming growth factor-beta 1 was active. These results indicate that HGF/SF and KGF, both recognized as paracrine growth factors, elicit distinctive patterns of response by keratinocytes, implying that they have different roles in epidermal physiology.