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Differences in growth response to hydrocortisone and ascorbic acid by human diploid fibroblasts
Authors:David W. Rowe  Barbra J. Starman  Wilfred Y. Fujimoto  Robert H. Williams
Affiliation:(1) Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Gerontology, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, Washington
Abstract:Summary The effects of hydrocortisone and ascorbic acid on growth parameters were measured in human diploid skin fibroblasts from fetal and adult donors. In the presence of culture medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum, 0.3 μM hydrocortisone produced a 20% increase in the population growth rate and a 50 to 70% increase in the confluent density of fibroblasts from adult donors. Daily addition of 28 μM ascorbic acid also stimulated the population growth rate and cell density at confluency. The effects of hydrocortisone and ascorbic acid on the final cell density were additive. The action of hydrocortisone was restricted to cells in log-phase growth, whereas ascorbic acid affected cells in both the log and the postconfluent phases of the growth cycle. In fibroblasts from fetal donors, ascorbic acid was stimulative but hydrocortisone was not. The data suggest that whereas both compounds stimulate cell growth in an additive manner, they do so by different cellular mechanisms. This investigation was supported in part by USPHS Grants AM 02456, AM 05020 and AM 15312, and by the Kroc Foundation, No. UW 63-2986. Dr. Rowe is a fellow of the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation. Dr. Fujimoto is a recipient of a Research Career Development Award, AM 47142, from NIAMDD.
Keywords:human fibroblast  growth response  hydrocortisone  ascorbate
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