Effects of cytochalasin D on the distribution of actin and ACTH-induced steroidogenesis in cultured embryonic adrenal gland cells from the Pekin duck (Anas platyrhynchos) |
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Authors: | B K Reese W N Holmes J Cronshaw |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences and the Marine Science Institute, University of California, 93106 Santa Barbara, CA, USA;(2) Marine Science Institute, University of California, 93106 Santa Barbara, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | Cultured steroidogenic cells derived from the adrenal glands of duck embryos were used to study changes in the distribution of actin associated with the corticotropic responsiveness. Actin-containing components were identified by rhodamine-phalloidin staining. The actin in most of the unstimulated cells occurred as stress fibers that either ran parallel throughout the cell or were present as domains of parallel fibers at angles to one another. When incubated in Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 1–24 ACTH, the cells released approximately equal amounts of corticosterone and aldosterone. Incubation of the cells in buffer containing cytochalasin D caused the cells to lose their stress fibers, and the actin became distributed at the periphery in what appeared to be fragments of stress fibers and clumps of fibrous material in the central cytoplasm. Although cytochalasin D did not affect the basal output of corticosterone and aldosterone, the 1–24 ACTH-induced rates of both hormones were suppressed significantly. After the cells had been washed in unadulterated buffer, the normal distribution of actin stress fibers was restored and the cells responded normally when incubated in buffer containing 1–24 ACTH. These results suggest that the actin components of the cytoskeleton are important determinants of corticotropin-induced steroidogenic responsiveness. |
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Keywords: | ACTH Cytochalasin Adrenal gland Actin microfilaments Tissue culture Fluorescence microscopy Primary culture Domestic mallard |
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