Abstract: | The effect of sodium n-butyrate on prostaglandin synthesis in cultured cells was examined. Exposure of BC-90 cells, a clone of an epithelial rat liver cell line, to 1 mM sodium n-butyrate for 40 h induced prostacyclin production. Prostacyclin synthesis was proved by demonstrating: (1) production of labeled 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha by treating [14C]arachidonic acid pre-labeled cells with calcium ionophore A23187, (2) production of unstable substance that inhibited adenosine diphosphate-induced platelet aggregation, and (3) conversion of [14C]arachidonic acid to 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha in homogenates of n-butyrate-treated cells. Untreated control cells showed negligible prostaglandin synthesis. Untreated cell homogenates did not convert [14C]arachidonic acid to any prostaglandins, but they converted [14C]prostaglandin H2 to prostacyclin. Induction of prostacyclin production by n-butyrate was also demonstrated with cells that had been treated with acetylsalicylic acid before n-butyrate treatment in acetylsalicylic acid-free medium. Incorporation of [3H]acetylsalicylic acid by sodium n-butyrate-treated cells increased in accordance with treatment time, while that of untreated cells did not change during culture. There was no difference in the phospholipase A2 activities of n-butyrate-treated and -untreated cells. From these findings, the possibility that n-butyrate induced prostacyclin in BC-90 cells through induction of fatty acid cyclooxygenase activity is discussed. |