In vitro response of goldfish (Carassius auratus L.) dermal melanophores to cyclic 3',5'-nucleotides, nucleoside 5'-phosphates and methylxanthines |
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Authors: | J Abramowitz W Chavin |
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Abstract: | cAMP, dbcAMP, cCMP, cGMP, theophylline and caffeine caused reversible melanosome dispersion within 5 minutes at 10 mM in the dermal melanophores of the black goldfish, Carassius auratus L. cTMP, cUMP, 5′-AMP, 5′-CMP, 5′-GMP, 5′-TMP, and 5′-UMP did not produce melanosome dispersion or aggregation in this melanophore system. cAMP was the most effective nucleotide in the induction of melanosome dispersion; at 10 mM, cGMP and at 5 mM, dbcAMP were the least effective of those nucleotides inducing melanosome dispersion. At the 10 mM level dbcAMP required 30 minutes to evoke the same degree of melanosome dispersion as 5 minutes cAMP treatment. Theophylline was more effective than caffeine in eliciting melanosome dispersion. At 1 mM, theophylline and caffeine first induced melanosome dispersion which was followed by aggregation in the course of the 30 minute test period. These reactions suggest both a high melanophore phosphodiesterase activity and competitive inhibition of phosphodiesterase by theophylline and caffeine. Induction of melanosome dispersion by several cyclic 3′,5′-nucleotides suggest multi-nucleotide control of melanosome dispersion. These findings also support a proposed mechanism of prostaglandin induced melanosome dispersion as well as the “second messenger” hypothesis. |
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