Abstract: | Reproducible induction of the enzyme tyrosine aminotransferase by dibutyryl cAMP (Bt2cAMP) in a line of HTC hepatoma cells in suspension culture requires that the cells be preinduced with dexamethasone, a synthetic glucocorticoid which itself induces tyrosine aminotransferase. Concentrations of dexamethasone that do not induce tyrosine aminotransferase fail to support Bt2cAMP induction, removal of the steroid from the medium leads to a loss of the Bt2cAMP effect, and an HTC cell line whose aminotransferase is not steroid-inducible does not respond to the cyclic nucleotide. We show that the further induction of tyrosine aminotransferase by Bt2cAMP in dexamethasone-treated cells is due to an increased rate of enzyme synthesis. The cyclic nucleotide has no effect on aminotransferase synthesis in cells grown in the absence of steroid. Several lines of evidence suggest that dexamethasone acts at a step beyond the activation of protein kinase by cAMP: (a) basal levels of cAMP are not altered by growth of HTC cells in dexamethasone; (b) accumulation of cAMP from the medium is not enhanced; (c) the glucocorticoid does not induce cAMP-dependent protein kinase in HTC cells; and (d) there is no augmentation of cAMP binding to the regulatory protein, nor is there any change in cAMP activation of protein kinase caused by growth in dexamethasone. These results help define a system that should be useful in studying the interaction of cyclic nucleotides and steroid hormones. |