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Temporal relationships between DNA metabolism and the growth-inhibitory response produced by dexamethasone in rat glioma cell cultures
Authors:Robert J Grasso  Thomas A Tedesco  Steven F Wodzinski  Charles E Johnson
Institution:(1) Department of Medical Microbiology, University of South Florida Medical Center, 12901 North 30th Street, Box 10, 33612 Tampa, Florida
Abstract:Summary The temporal relationships between aspects of DNA metabolism and the suppression of cell proliferation were investigated in rat glioma (strain C6) monolayer cultures exposed to 10μM dexamethasone. Cell densities (cell number per cm2), rates of DNA synthesis (dpm of 3H]thymidine incorporated per μg DNA per min), and cellular DNA (μg DNA per cm2) were measured daily in control and dexamethasone-treated cultures over a 3-day period. The percentage of cells in metaphase and the proportion of metaphases containing >2n(42) chromosomes also were determined in control and treated cultures. When log-phase C6 cultures were exposed to dexamethasone (day 0), cell densities were not significantly different from controls by day 1. Cell proliferation ceased thereafter in dexamethasone-treated cultures, whereas control cell populations continued to proliferate at log-phaserates. In contrast, cellular DNA increased exponentially in control and treated cultures over the 3-day period. On days 0 and 1, control and treated cells each contained 6 pg DNA. By day 3, the DNA content per treated cell increased to >20 pg; control cells each contained 10 pg DNA. The rates of DNA synthesis in the treated cultures did not differ significantly from controls on days 1 and 2. However, the rate in the treated cultures decreased significantly on day 3, one day after cell proliferation ceased. On day 2, the percentage of cells found in metaphase in the treated cultures was 0.32% compared to 0.64% in control cultures. By day 3, these percentages decreased to 0.20% and 0.22%, respectively. However, the proportion of metaphases containing >42 chromosomes increased 1.5-fold in the treated cultures relative to controls. These results indicate that nonproliferating dexamethasone-treated cells contain elevated amounts of DNA. Thus dexamethasone action appears to arrest the cell cycle at any point between the completion of DNA replication and mitosis. A preliminary report of this work was presented on June 8, 1977, at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Tissue Culture Association in New Orleans, Louisiana. This investigation was supported in part by grants from Merck Sharp & Dohme Research Laboratories, West Point, Pa., the American Cancer Society (IN-113), and NIH (AM 18719).
Keywords:rat glioma  glucocorticoids  dexamethasone  growth-inhibitory response  DNA metabolism  metaphase chromosomes
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