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Title: Cyclic AMP and growth of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. Lack of cyclic AMP elevation in nutritionally deprived cells and mechanism of retardation of growth by dibutryl cyclic AMP. Author: Kaminskas E, Field M, Henshaw EC. Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1976 Sep 24; 444(2):539-53. PubMed ID: 183828. Abstract: Cyclic AMP levels in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells changed little after deprivation of cells of essential nutrients, serum, glucose and amino acids, deprival of each of which leads to marked inhibition of growth and protein synthesis. Cyclic AMP levels also changed little after the addition of these nutrients to deprived cells. Thus cyclic AMP is not likely to be the intracellular mediator for growth regulation by these three nutrients. Elevation of cyclic AMP levels for short periods by exposure of cells to choleratoxin or theophylline produced only slight changes in parameters of protein synthesis (polyribosome pattern and rate of [3H]leucine incorporation). An exposure for 1 day to dibutyryl cyclic AMP did not inhibit cell growth. However, prolonged exposure to dibutyryl cyclic AMP inhibited the multiplication of Ehrlich ascites cells both in suspension and in stationary cultures. No morphological effects were evident in the former; in the latter, cells attached firmly to the substratum and formed elongated cytoplasmic processes. Inhibition of cell multiplication by dibutyryl cyclic AMP was related to cell density and to serum concentration. Cells in dibutyryl cyclic AMP-containing media plated at low cell densities multiplied as rapidly as control cells. The final densities cells reached were determined by the serum concentration; in dibutyryl cyclic AMP-containing media these densities were about one-half those of respective control cells. Limitation of cell multiplication by dibutyryl cyclic AMP was reversed by the addition of serum, by resuspending cells at lower densities, or by resuspending cells in media without dibutyryl cyclic AMP. These findings suggested that dibutyryl cyclic AMP may affect the utilization of serum factors by cells. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP did not inactivate serum factors and did not change the rate at which cells depleted the growth medium of serum factors. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP may limit cell multiplication by increasing the cellular requirement for serum factors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]