Abstract: | In resting Chinese hamster fibroblasts (CCL39) alpha-thrombin rapidly induces the breakdown of phosphoinositides. Accumulation of inositol phosphates (IP), measured in the presence of Li+, is detectable within 5s (seconds) of thrombin stimulation. Formation of inositol tris- and bisphosphates slightly precedes that of inositol monophosphate, indicating that thrombin activates primarily the phospholipase C-mediated generation of inositol trisphosphate from phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate. Initial rates of IP production increase with thrombin concentration, with no apparent saturability over the range 10(-4)-10 U/ml. Thrombin-induced phosphoinositide hydrolysis rapidly desensitizes (t1/2 less than 5 min), but a residual activity, corresponding to about 10% of the initial stimulation is sustained for at least 9 h, in contrast with the undetectable activity of G0-arrested cells. This apparent desensitization may be due to a feedback regulation by protein kinase C, since pretreatment with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) markedly inhibits (by up to 70%) subsequent thrombin-induced inositol phosphate formation. Conversely, growth factor deprivation of CCL39 cells results in a progressive increase of thrombin-induced phosphoinositide hydrolysis, from the very low level of exponentially growing cells to the maximal level of G0-arrested cells. This "up regulation" was found maximal in A51, a very well growth-arrested CCL39 derivative, and reduced or virtually abolished in two tumoral and growth factor-relaxed derivatives of CCL39. Although preliminary, this observation suggests that a persistent activation of phosphatidyl inositol breakdown might operate in variants selected for autonomous growth. |