首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We examined the influence of glucocorticoid hormones on the proliferation of cultured adult bovine aortic smooth muscle cells (BASM) using both primary mass cultures and a cloned strain. Cloned BASM cells maintained on plastic culture dishes were inhibited by approximately 40% by dexamethasone treatment but showed no inhibition when grown of homologous extracellular matrix (ECM) coated dishes. Dexamethasone inhibited growth of primary cultures by 73% on plastic and by 45% on ECM. The inhibitory effect was specific for the glucocorticoids, dexamethasone, corticosterone, and cortisol and was not observed with progesterone, aldosterone, estradiol or 17-alpha OH progesterone. In cloned cells, the abolition of glucocorticoid inhibition by ECM was independent of seeding density and serum concentration. The inhibition on plastic was dependent on serum concentrations greater than 1% and resulted in both a slow rate of proliferation and a lower saturation density. A specific subset of peptides detected on two-dimensional gels was induced by glucocorticoids under growth inhibitory conditions but was not induced when the cells were grown on ECM. Primary cultures grown on ECM and exposed to Dulbecco's modified Eagle's Medium (DME) containing high density lipoprotein and transferrin grew at 40% of the rate observed for cultures exposed to DME with 10% serum. Both conditions showed growth inhibition of 70% in the presence of dexamethasone. The addition of epidermal and platelet-derived growth factors in DME containing high density lipoprotein and transferrin to cells grown on ECM resulted in growth rates comparable to that observed with cultures exposed to 10% serum and were inhibited 45% by dexamethasone. These results suggest that glucocorticoids inhibit smooth muscle proliferation by decreasing the sensitivity of the cells to mitogenic stimulation by high density lipoprotein when the cells are maintained on a homologous substrate.  相似文献   

2.
The growth of DBA/2 mouse embryo fibroblasts, as well as their prostaglandin (PG) production, was compared under 3 different culture conditions: RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 2% Ultroser SF (steroid-free) or with 2% Ultroser G (containing steroids). The effect of the absence or presence of glucocorticoids on both parameters was more precisely investigated. In FBS-supplemented cultures, dexamethasone had a stimulatory effect on cells characterized by a slow growth rate, whereas it markedly inhibited proliferation in rapidly growing fibroblasts. The experiments carried out with serum substitutes (Ultroser SF and G) strongly corroborated the role of the absence or presence of glucocorticoids on fibroblast proliferation. Manipulations of glucocorticoid concentrations in Ultroser SF by adding 5 x 10(-8) M dexamethasone or in Ultroser G by adding 10(-6) M RU 486 reversed the effect of the absence of glucocorticoid in the first case, or in the latter case the effect of the presence of glucocorticoid on both cell growth and PG production. Progesterone had no effect by itself. Our results emphasize the importance of performing complete kinetic studies to investigate the effect of a given factor on cell proliferation in vitro, since glucocorticoids may have opposite effects on fibroblast proliferation according to their cell growth pattern in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of physiological glucocorticoids such as cortisol and corticosterone, as well as dexamethasone, on proliferation and differentiation of rat fat cell precursors kept in primary culture were analyzed. In serum-containing medium (10%), glucocorticoids markedly decreased cell proliferation, either on subconfluent or on confluent cultures. This effect was independent of the presence of insulin. In contrast, acute amplification of adipose conversion was observed mainly when glucocorticoids and insulin were added simultaneously. Morphological quantification of lipid-containing cells confirmed acceleration of the maturation process, and an early and specific reorganization of the cytoskeleton was detected at the ultrastructural level. In the presence of insulin, glucocorticoids also enhanced the main marker enzymes, lipoprotein lipase, and glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. Glucocorticoid effects on precursor proliferation and differentiation were clearly dose-dependent, dexamethasone being 10 times more potent than cortisol and corticosterone. Similar results were obtained in serum-free medium, as well as in preadipocyte cultures derived from different fat deposits. This study demonstrates that in addition to an acute inhibition of precursor growth, glucocorticoids exert a clear stimulation of adipose conversion, which depends mainly on the presence of insulin and the glucocorticoid concentration.  相似文献   

4.
CON8 is a single-cell derived subclone of the 13762NF transplantable, hormone-responsive rat mammary tumor that proliferates rapidly in serum-free medium. Addition of either glucocorticoids or calf serum alone caused a slight stimulation of CON8 proliferation. However, glucocorticoids required the presence of specific serum proteins to strongly suppress CON8 cell growth. Furthermore, the anchorage-independent growth of CON8 cells was significantly reduced in the presence of glucocorticoids and serum. We have designated this serum activity GMGSF, for glucocorticoid modulating growth suppression factor. Inhibition of cell growth was limited to steroids with strong glucocorticoid biological activity, while exposure to the glucocorticoid antagonist RU38486 prevented this response. Half-maximal growth inhibition and half-maximal expression of a glucocorticoid-inducible gene product (2 nM) occurred slightly below the half-maximal receptor binding of [3H]dexamethasone (10nM). We have also selected a variant mammary epithelial tumor cell line, derived from CON8, denoted 8RUV7, whose proliferation and soft agar colony formation failed to be suppressed by glucocorticoids in the presence of serum. These glucocorticoid-resistant variant cells possess functional glucocorticoid receptors, competently produce the glucocorticoid-responsive gene product plasminogen activator inhibitor, and along with CON8 cells express milk fat globule protein antigens on their cell surface, indicative of their mammary epithelial cell character. We are using this variant line to genetically dissect the molecular mechanism of the glucocorticoid/GMGSF growth suppression pathway in mammary epithelial tumor cells.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The biological actions of insulinlike growth factor I (IGF-I) measured under serum-free assay conditions were found to be significantly influenced by prior subculture conditions for adult human fibroblasts. Glucocorticoids seemed to be the major medium variable affecting IGF-I action. IGF-I added to serum-free cultures had little or no effect on [14C]aminoisobutyric acid uptake or [3H]thymidine incorporation in human fibroblasts previously maintained in media containing serum with low glucocorticoid levels or in serum stripped of endogenous steroids. However, a 48-h preincubation with dexamethasone resulted in a marked synergistic increase in IGF-I stimulation of [14C]aminoisobutyric acid uptake and [3Hthymidine incorporation in these cultures. In contrast, IGF-I in serum-free medium seemed to be a potent mitogenic and metabolic stimulus for human fibroblasts which had been subcultured in media with a high glucocorticoid content, either endogenous, or supplemented. After these culture conditions, a 48-h preexposure to dexamethasone had no further enhancing effect on IGF-I action. Dexamethasone also potentiated IGF-I, insulin, and epidermal growth factor stimulation of fibroblast replication depending on the earlier subcultivation conditions. Thus, glucocorticoids are important modulators of IGF-I bioactivity in cultured human fibroblasts. Serum glucocorticoids can exert a profound influence on the biological phenomena measured in cell culture, even when the serum has been removed before the actual experiment, and must be carefully taken into account for accurate evaluation of the biological function of IGF-I and other growth factors. This work was supported in part by grants DK28229, DK36054, CA42106, RCDA01275, and DK24085 from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.  相似文献   

6.
Elevated levels of glucocorticoids caused by disease (Cushing's syndrome) or therapeutic treatment of asthma are known to cause osteoporosis. Space flight, an environmental condition, is known to cause a rise in endogenous cortisols accompanied by a significant loss of bone and calcium. Long-term space inhabitants have lost up to 18% of weight bearing bone during long-term flight. This study demonstrates that elevated concentrations of glucocorticoids lower the endogenous production of PGE2 and interfere with osteoblast proliferation. Osteoblasts grown with dexamethasone had significantly lower DNA synthesis and endogenous synthesis of PGE2. Addition of exogenous dmPGE2 to the dexamethasone growth-inhibited cells stimulated DNA synthesis over twofold. In synchronous control cultures, we found that endogenous prostaglandin synthesis increased in late G1, preceding S-phase DNA synthesis by several hours. The addition of exogenous dexamethasone to synchronous cultures resulted in a significant decrease in the prostaglandin synthesis followed by a significant decrease in DNA synthesis in parallel cultures. Further, dexamethasone caused the actin cytoskeleton to collapse and the cell morphology to become rounded and spindle shaped. Addition of exogenous PGE2 to the dexamethasone-treated osteoblasts caused recovery of the actin architecture and phenotype. These data support the hypothesis that the glucocorticoid-mediated decrease in prostaglandin synthesis may be a contributing factor in the reduced bone quality and trabecular bone formation seen in glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis.  相似文献   

7.
Glucocorticosteroids, when added two hours after cell plating to SV40-transformed, 3T3 mouse fibroblasts in low serum (0.3% v/v), biotin-supplemented medium, suppress cellular proliferation by 24 hours. While some cell death probably occurs, the growth inhibition is not primarily due to cytotoxicity and cytolysis. This conclusion is supported by the following: 1) both dead and viable cell numbers are suppressed, 2) little cell debris is evident in the medium, and 3) very high concentrations of glucocorticoids do not cause an increase in the dead cell count. Furthermore, this growth suppression, which is specific for glucocorticoids since several non-glucocorticoid steroids have no inhibitory effect, is not permanent nor irreversible. Removal of the glucocorticoid and replacement with 10% serum restore rapid proliferation. Although higher concentrations (1% and 10%) of serum afford some protection against glucocorticoid inhibition, this protection is not simply a consequence of faster growth rates. SV3T3 cells can be grown in serum-free medium supplemented with biotin, transferrin, insulin, and epidermal growth factor (EGF). Under these conditions growth rates are comparable to high serum media, yet glucocorticoids are still powerful inhibitors. However, the omission of insulin from serum-free, glucocorticoid cultures does result in observable cell death and lysis. Flow microfluorometry and autoradiographic studies have determined that glucocorticoid-inhibited cells are partially blocked in G1. The proportions of S phase and G2 + M cells are greatly reduced with an accompanying accumulation of G1 cells. These results suggest that glucocorticoids regulate a biochemical step(s) in G1 which is critical for DNA initiation.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously shown that glucocorticoids suppress the proliferation of Fu5 hepatoma cells and have selected subclones which are either hypersensitive (BDS1) or resistant (EDR3) to the antiproliferative effects of dexamethasone, a synthetic glucocorticoid. BDS1 cells externalize a glucocorticoid suppressible mitogenic activity (denoted GSM) which stimulated [3H]thymidine incorporation in quiescent, serum-starved Balb/c 3T3 cells. Glucocorticoid treatment of BDS1 cells reduced the secreted levels of GSM activity by approximately 20-fold in comparison to untreated cells. The GSM activity was constitutively secreted from a glucocorticoid receptor minus variant (EDR3) demonstrating that the suppression of this mitogenic activity is a new glucocorticoid hormone response which required a functional receptor. GSM activity was sensitive to sulfhydryl reducing agents or trypsin, stable to heat and acid treatments and fractionated in gel filtration columns with a native molecular weight of approximately Mr 30,000. The persistence of this size for mitogenic activity after electrophoretic fractionation in nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-poly-acrylamide gels suggested that the GSM activity is comprised of a single protein. Total secreted protein isolated from untreated BDS1, but not dexamethasone-treated BDS1, stimulated 3T3 cells to grow in transformed-appearing large colonies in soft agar and to display multiple layering and elongated spindle-like morphology on solid substratum. The addition of both insulin and EGF to conditioned medium protein isolated from glucocorticoid-treated BDS1 cells restored full induction of 3T3 cell anchorage-independent growth while insulin restored full and EGF partial mitogenic stimulation of these fibroblasts. These results suggest that the GSM activity acts in a pathway common to that of insulin or EGF in fibroblasts.  相似文献   

9.
Glucocorticoids are the main product of the adrenal cortex and participate in multiple cell functions as immunosupressors and modulators of neural function. Within the brain, glucocorticoid activity is mediated by high-affinity mineralocorticoid and low-affinity glucocorticoid receptors. Among brain cells, hippocampal cells are rich in glucocorticoid receptors where they regulate excitability and morphology. Also, elevated glucocorticoid levels suppress hippocampal neurogenesis in adults. The pineal neuroindole, melatonin, reduces the affinity of glucocorticoid receptors in rat brain and prevents glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis. Here, the ability of melatonin to prevent glucocorticoid-induced cell death in hippocampal HT22 cells was investigated in the presence of neurotoxins. Results showed that glucocorticoids reduce cellular growth and also enhance sensitivity to neurotoxins. We found a G(1) cell cycle arrest mediated by an increase of cyclin/cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAF1/CIP1) protein after dexamethasone treatment and incremental change in amyloid beta protein and glutamate toxicity. Melatonin prevents glucocorticoids inhibition of cell proliferation and reduces the toxicity caused by glucocorticoids when cells were treated with dexamethasone in combination with neurotoxins. Although, melatonin does not reduce glucocorticoid receptor mRNA or protein levels, it decreases receptor translocation to nuclei in these cells.  相似文献   

10.
Glucocorticoids stimulate the prostaglandin E2 production of confluent amnion cell cultures, but have no stimulatory effect on the PGE2 output of freshly isolated human amnion cells. Since protein phosphorylation may modify the responsiveness of target cells to steroids, and activators of protein kinase C (PKC), as well as corticosteroids, promote amnion cell PGE2 output by stimulating the synthesis of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase (PGHS), we investigated the possibility that PKC is involved in the glucocorticoid-induction of PGE2 synthesis in cultured amnion cells. The dexamethasone-induced PGE2 output of arachidonate-stimulated cells was blocked by the protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine, K-252a, H7, HA1004, and sphinganine, in a manner consistent with their effect on PKC. However, dexamethasone increased the PGE2 production of cultures treated with maximally effective concentrations of the PKC-activator compound TPA. Moreover, dexamethasone stimulated PGE2 synthesis in cultures which were desensitized to TPA-stimulation by prolonged phorbol ester treatment. Concentration-dependence studies showed that staurosporine completely (greater than 95%) blocked glucocorticoid-provoked PGE2 synthesis at concentrations which did not inhibit TPA-stimulated prostaglandin output, and that K-252a inhibited the effect of TPA by more than 95% at concentrations which decreased the effect of dexamethasone only moderately (approximately 40%). Dibutyryl cyclic AMP had no influence on the basal- or dexamethasone-stimulated PGE2 production, and on the staurosporine inhibition of the steroid effect. These results show that glucocorticoids and phorbol esters control amnion PGE2 production by separate regulatory mechanisms. It is suggested that the response of human amnion cells to glucocorticoids is modulated by protein kinase(s) other than phorbol ester-sensitive PKC and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The addition of the glucocorticoid analog dexamethasone (DX) to serum-free cultures of human fibroblasts caused a twofold enhancement of the mitogenic response to epidermal growth factor (EGF), although DX by itself was not mitogenic. A basis for this effect was suggested by studies showing that DX also increased the cellular binding of 125I-EGF. DX increased the ability of the cells to bind 125I-EGF only at low physiological concentrations of this polypeptide. Thus, data from 125I-EGF binding to cells incubated without DX produced a linear Scatchard plot, whereas the data from 125I-EGF binding to DX-treated cells led to an upwardly curvilinear Scatchard plot. Measurements of 125I-EGF association with the cell surface and cytoplasm indicated that this binding change involved an alteration of cell surface EGF receptors. The binding change appeared not to involve negatively cooperative interactions between EGF receptors, nor a change in the number of receptors. The binding alteration could be explained by a model in which DX converted 25–30% of the cell surface EGF receptors to a form having a fourfold increased affinity.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of glucocorticoids on collagen synthesis was examined in cultured bovine aortic smooth muscle (BASM) cells. BASM cells treated with 0.1 microM dexamethasone during their proliferative phase (11 d) were labeled with [3H]proline for 24 h, and the acid-precipitable material was incubated with bacterial collagenase. Dexamethasone produced an approximate twofold increase in the incorporation of proline into collagenase-digestible protein (CDP) and noncollagen protein (NCP) in the cell layer and medium. The stimulation was present in both primary mass cultures and cloned BASM. An increase in CDP and NCP was detected at 0.1 nM, while maximal stimulation occurred at 0.1 microM. Only cells exposed to dexamethasone during their log phase of growth (1-6 d after plating) showed the increase in CDP and NCP when labeled 11 d after plating. The stimulatory effect was observed in BASM cells treated with the natural bovine glucocorticoid, cortisol, dexamethasone, and testosterone, but was absent in cells treated with aldosterone, corticosterone, cholesterol, 17 beta-estradiol, and progesterone. The increase in CDP and NCP was absent in cells treated with the inactive glucocorticoid, epicortisol, and totally abolished by the antagonist, 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone, suggesting that the response was mediated by specific cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptors. Dexamethasone-treated BASM cells showed a 4.5-fold increase in the specific activity of intracellular proline, which was the result of a twofold increase in the uptake of proline and depletion of the total proline pool. After normalizing for specific activity, dexamethasone produced a 2.4- and 2.8-fold increase in the rate of collagen and NCP synthesis, respectively. Cells treated with dexamethasone secreted 1.7- fold more collagen protein in 24 h compared to control cultures. The BASM cells secreted 70% Type I and 30% Type III collagen into the media as assessed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The ratio of these two types was not altered by dexamethasone. The results of the present study demonstrate that glucocorticoids can act directly on vascular smooth muscle cells to increase the synthesis and secretion of collagen and NCP.  相似文献   

14.
We have studied the effects of adrenalectomy and glucocorticoid injections on insulin binding in membranes from rat testis and liver. Glucocorticoids were administered for 7 days to adrenalectomized rats at daily doses of 30 or 300 micrograms for dexamethasone and 100 or 1000 micrograms for prednisolone. Glucocorticoids, at the selected doses, were associated with 5- to 10-fold increases in basal insulin levels with no significant changes in glucose concentrations. As previously shown by other studies, down-regulation of insulin receptors was observed in liver membrane particularly at the higher dose of steroids. Such an effect was not found in the testis. By contrast, the number of high-affinity sites in the testis was slightly increased with the higher doses of dexamethasone and prednisolone. However, percent 125I-labelled insulin binding was not significantly changed after corticotherapy. These results are in accord with our previous studies and suggest that the testicular receptor for insulin is not affected by mild to moderate changes of insulin concentrations, but that it can be modulated by glucocorticoids through other mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
Fibroblast growth factor (FGF), a polypeptide that has been shown to stimulate division in 3T3 cells, was tested for mitogenic effects on diploid, early-passage cells from human and murine sources. The quantitative assay of [3H]thymidine incorporation into acid-insoluble material showed that FGF at low concentrations (10 minus 9 M) was more effective than additional serum for provoking the initiation of DNA synthesis in human foreskin fibroblasts or mouse fibroblasts maintained in 5 or 10% serum, respectively. The growth of the human fibroblasts was twice as fast in the presence of FGF plus 10% calf serum as it was in the presence of 10% calf serum or 20% fetal calf serum alone. The addition of FGF to primary cultures of mouse fibroblasts in 0.4% serum resulted in a twofold increase in cell number compared to controls. In contrast to results obtained with 3T3 cells, neither insulin nor a glucocorticoid potentiated the effects of FGF on either human or mouse cells.  相似文献   

16.
Glucocorticoids inhibit glucose utilization by fat cells. The possibility that this effect results from altered glucose transport was investigated using an oil-centrifugation technique which allows a rapid (within 45 s) estimation of glucose or 3-O-methylglucose uptake by isolated fat cells. At high concentration (greater than 25 muM), dexamethasone inhibited glucose uptake within 1 min of its addition to fat cells. Efflux of 3-O-methylglucose was also impaired by 0.1 mM dexamethasone. However, diminished glucose uptake was not a specific effect of glucocorticoids; high concentrations (0.1 mM) of 17beta-estradiol, progesterone, and deoxycorticosterone produced a similar response in adipocytes. At a more physiologic steroid concentration (0.1 muM), glucocorticoids inhibited glucose uptake in a time-dependent manner (maximum effect in 1 to 2 hours). This effect was specific for glucocorticoids since, under these conditions, glucose uptake was not changed by the non-glucocorticoid steroids. Lineweaver-Burk analysis showed that 0.1 muM dexamethasone treatment produced a decrease in Vmax for glucose uptake but did not change the Ku. Hexokinase activity and ATP levels were not altered by this treatment, suggesting that processes involved in glucose phosphorylation were not affected. Dexamethasone treatment also caused a reduction in uptake of 3-O-methylglucose when assayed using a low sugar concentration (0.1 mM). At a high concentration (10 mM), uptake of the methyl sugar was only slightly less than normal in treated cells. Stimulation by insulin markedly enhanced uptake of glucose and 3-O-methylglucose by both treated and untreated cells. At a low hexose concentration (0.1 mM) and in the presence of insulin, sugar uptake by dexamethasone-treated cells was slightly less than control cells. Stimulation by insulin did however completely overcome the alteration in hexose uptake when larger concentrations of sugars (greater than 5 mM) were used. There was no detectable change in total protein synthesis during incubation of fat cells with dexamethasone. However, actinomycin C blocked the inhibitory effect of dexamethasone on glucose uptake. Cycloheximide, which caused a small inhibition in glucose uptake, prevented the full expression of the inhibitory effect of dexamethasone on glucose transport. These results indicate that dexamethasone alters the facilitated transport of glucose and, secondly, suggest that synthesis of RNA and protein is needed for glucocorticoid action.  相似文献   

17.
Glucocorticoids will enhance the growth of cultured human skin fibroblasts in serum-containing medium. In serum-free cultures hydrocortisone (5 X 10(-6) M) will enhance insulin stimulation of sugar transport and DNA synthesis (as measured by thymidine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable material). The optimal concentration for the glucocorticoid effect on DNA synthesis was 5 X 10(-8) M for dexamethasone and 5 X 10(-7) M for hydrocortisone. In dexamethasone-treated cells, concentrations of insulin as low as 250 microU/ml (10 ng/ml) were effective in stimulating DNA synthesis. Further, hydrocortisone and dexamethasone (both at 5 X 10(-6) M) exhibited potentiating effects on insulin-stimulated sugar transport. These effects appeared to be mediated via inhibitory actions on the hexose transport system with the preservation of a functional insulin-receptor interaction resulting in insulin stimulation of deoxy-D-glucose transport at physiological insulin concentrations, 250 microU/ml (10 ng/ml). Hydrocortisone also enhanced specific [125I]insulin binding in these cells. The data indicate that the mechanism(s) of glucocorticoid enhancement of two actions of insulin may be different.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The effect of steroid hormones on the prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)-mediated cyclic AMP formation by murine neuroblastoma clone N1E-115 was studied. Dexamethasone at submicromolar concentrations and corticosterone at micromolar concentrations (steroids with glucocorticoid activity) were able to modify the PGE1-mediated response whereas testosterone, progesterone, and estradiol each at 10 microM had no effect. Glucocorticoids added to the culture medium of N1E-115 cells produced an increase in the maximal response to PGE1 only after long-term (greater than or equal to 4 h) incubation with the hormone. Inhibitors of protein and RNA synthesis blocked this effect of glucocorticoids. Basal activity of adenylate cyclase in treated cells was twofold higher than that in control cells, and this enzyme seemed to be the primary target for the hormone action, since the activity of 3':5'-cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and the binding of [3H]PGE1 to its receptors were not altered by glucocorticoid treatment. Our results indicate that glucocorticoids modulate receptor-mediated responses in cells of neural origin through a mechanism that involves induction of protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号