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. 1981 Jan;36(1):136-42.
doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1981.tb02388.x.

Induction by hydrocortisone of glutamine synthetase in mouse primary astrocyte cultures

Induction by hydrocortisone of glutamine synthetase in mouse primary astrocyte cultures

B H Juurlink et al. J Neurochem. 1981 Jan.

Abstract

Glutamine synthetase activity was investigated in developing primary astroglial cultures established from newborn mouse cerebral hemispheres. Between the 2nd and 4th week of culture there was little change in activity under our standard culturing conditions; however, when hydrocortisone (10 microM) was added to the cultures for 48 h, the enzyme activity increased two- to fourfold, depending upon the age of the culture, with maximum response in 2-week-old cultures. The addition of dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dBcAMP) to the culture medium caused morphological differentiation of the astroglial cells but eliminated the response of the cells to hydrocortisone. Culturing in elevated serum levels, which delays morphological differentiation and inhibits astroglial cytodifferentiation after exposure to dBcAMP, shifted the time of maximal response to hydrocortisone from 2 to 3 weeks and prevented the abolishment of glutamine synthetase induction by dBcAMP. The induction of glutamine synthetase by hydrocortisone was prevented by actinomycin D (0.5 microgram/ml), indicating its dependence upon RNA and protein synthesis. The present work thus confirms reports in the literature that hydrocortisone induces glutamine synthetase in neural tissues, but differs from the findings of Moscona and co-workers in the chick retina that intact tissues are required for the induction to occur.

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