? adrenergic receptor repopulation of C6 glioma cells after irreversible blockade and down regulation

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY(1984)

引用 30|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
C6 glioma cells possess beta adrenergic receptors coupled with adenylate cyclase which can be irreversibly blocked by bromoacetylaminomethylpindolol (Br-AAM-pindolol), a beta adrenergic antagonist. With 1 microM Br-AAM-pindolol, more than 80% of beta adrenergic receptors, labeled by (3H)-dihydroalprenolol [3H)-DHA), were blocked. After this blockade, new beta adrenergic receptors were synthesized only during cell division. However, at cell confluency when the cell number was constant, turnover of beta adrenergic receptors was barely detectable. Cycloheximide (1 microgram/ml) inhibited cell growth as well as reappearance of beta adrenergic receptors. A 90% loss of beta adrenergic receptors in C6 glioma cells was obtained after down-regulation for 15 h with 10 microM isoproterenol, a beta adrenergic agonist. After removal of the agonist, recovery of beta-adrenergic-sensitive adenylate cyclase was complete within 2 to 3 days, whereas beta adrenergic receptors reached 90% of control value within 6 days. The half-life of the receptor recovery was 2 to 3 days. Pretreatment of C6 glioma cells by Br-AAM-pindolol and subsequent cell exposure to isoproterenol indicated that down regulation and recovery of unblocked beta adrenergic receptors did occur; however isoproterenol did not accelerate the biosynthesis of beta adrenergic receptors. The recovery of both biological response and beta adrenergic receptor occupancy was restored both in the presence or absence of cycloheximide (1 microgram/ml), a concentration which blocked 90% of protein synthesis. Our results suggest that reappearance of beta adrenergic receptors in C6 glioma cells, following isoproterenol-induced down regulation, was not due to synthesis of new receptors but to recycling of the beta adrenergic receptors.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要