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Title: Glucocorticoid induction of tyrosine aminotransferase in cultured cells. Author: Thompson EB. Journal: Monogr Endocrinol; 1979; 12():203-17. PubMed ID: 40114. Abstract: For over a decade, tyrosine aminotransferase induction in tissue culture cells has been a useful model system in which to study glucocorticosteroid action. In the 1960s, the establishment in culture of rat hepatomas expressing the inducible enzyme, already known to be induced in liver in vivo, provoked a wide-ranging series of experiments. The data from these experiments have provided considerable information regarding the mechanism of action of steroids. These include the fundamental facts that the steroids act directly on the induced cell in unmetablized form, that removal of steroid results in deinduction, that induction does not require DNA synthesis or massive changes in RNA synthesis, and that cytoplasmic receptor occupancy by active steroids correlates closely with the steroids' ability to affect inductions. Studies in tissue culture cells have led to the analysis of transcriptional and posttranscriptional models attempting to explain enzyme induction. The effects on enzyme induction of nonsteroid hormones and other factors have been studied through the use of tissue culture cells. Finally, cells and clones of cell variants are being used to study enzyme induction, through biochemical analysis and cell genetic approaches, including somatic cell hybridization.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]