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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Adrenal gland ; Cell culture ; ACTH ; Ageing ; Corticosteroid ; Cytoskeleton ; Domestic mallard, embryos
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The morphological and functional changes associated with ageing were studied in adrenal steroidogenic cells derived from duck embryos. Cells grown for not more than three days had structural characteristics similar to their counterparts in vivo; they contained numerous lipid droplets and mitochondria, an abundant smooth edoplasmic reticulum, an even network of microtubules, and microfilaments that formed extensive and elaborate systems of parallel stress fibers. After the 3rd day of growth in culture, many of the cells started to decrease in size and become elongated; the older cells showed less well-defined actin filaments and contained elongated mitochondria, fewer lipid droplets, less smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and swollen cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum. The proliferative capacity of the cells was the same when they were cultured in either the presence or the absence of 1–24 ACTH. After the first day of growth in culture, the steroidogenic capacity of the cells declined and the addition of 1–24 ACTH to the growth medium did not prevent changes in their structure and function. The decline in steroidogenic capacity occurred both in terms of the amount of hormone released into the culture medium and in the ability of the cells to respond when incubated in buffer containing 1–24 ACTH. Since the basal unstimulated rates of corticosteroid production also declined as the cells aged, it is probable that the steroidogenic deficiency occurs at a site distal to the corticotropin receptor; this is also consistent with the ultrastructural observations that suggest a relationship between the morphological changes and the decline in steroidogenic capacity as the cells age.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: ACTH ; Actin ; Adrenal gland ; Cell culture ; Corticosterone ; Cytoskeleton ; Steroidogenesis ; Tubulin ; Development, ontogenetic ; Domestic mallard
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cells derived from the adrenal glands of duck embryos immediately prior to hatching were grown in culture and used to study the morphological and cytoskeletal changes and steroidogenic responses induced by 1–24 ACTH. Changes in the cytoskeletal components were observed by rhodamine-phalloidin staining for actin and by staining the tubulin immunoreactive components with FITC. The cultures were comprised of a small population of chromaffin cells and a larger population of steroidogenic cells. The chromaffin cells were distinguished by their tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. The steroidogenic cells were characterized by the presence of sudanophilic lipid droplets, numerous mitochondria, abundant smooth endoplasmic reticulum, microtubules distributed as a fairly even network throughout the cytoplasm, and microfilaments that formed an extensive and elaborate system of stress fibers with many parallel arrays. The cells readily responded to stimulation with ACTH by releasing corticosterone, aldosterone and deoxycorticosterone. Stimulation with ACTH also induced changes in both the cell morphology and the cytoskeleton. Exposure of the cells to Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 1–24 ACTH caused them to form numerous fine filopodia, to lose their stress fibers, and to form a thick ring of actin at the periphery of the cell. In addition, many cells became extremely arborized with many long branched dendritic processes. The morphological changes appeared to be related to a redistribution of the actin components, and may be explained only in part by the rounding up or retraction of the cytoplasm. The results strongly suggest an involvement of the actin components of the cytoskeleton in the steroidogenic response to corticotropic stimulation.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: ACTH ; Adrenal gland ; Cell culture ; Corticosteroid ; Steroidogenesis ; Mallard duckling (Anas platyrhynchos)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Primary cell cultures were prepared from the adrenal glands of one-day-old mallard ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos). The cells attached equally well to uncoated plastic and glass surfaces and on surfaces that had been coated with collagen. The phase of logarithmic growth occurred between the second and the fourth day, and the cells became confluent between the fifth and the sixth day. Staining with Sudan black B and toluidine blue and viewing fixed preparations by transmission electron microscopy indicated that the cultures consisted mostly of steroidogenic cells. A smaller population of chromaffin cells was also present. Scanning electron microscopy showed that most of the cells had long filopodia, and some cells had numerous surface blebs that were interpreted as exocytotic vesicles. When incubated in Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 1–24 ACTH the cultured cells released three corticosteroids, namely, corticosterone, aldosterone and deoxycorticosterone. These responses occurred within 15 min of exposure to medium containing 1–24 ACTH and continued throughout a 60-min period of continuous stimulation. The minimally effective concentration of 1–24 ACTH was 0.078 ng per ml (0.0234 nM) and, as the concentration was increased up to 10 ng per ml (2.99 nM), the total output of each hormone during the 60-min incubation period increased significantly according to the following semi-logarithmic relationship: Y=a+b log X, where Y=the total output of hormone, X=the concentration of 1–24 ACTH in the medium, and a=the total output of hormone when the medium contained 1.0 ng of 1–24 ACTH per ml. The total outputs of each hormone in the presence of a maximally effective concentration of 1–24 ACTH, however, were low compared to the responses of similarly stimulated tissue slices taken from the neonatal duckling. It is concluded that most of the cells comprising the confluent cultures were derived from steroidogenic cells in the neonatal adrenal. These cells appeared to retain corticotropin receptors during the course of developing into confluent monolayers, but their diminished steroidogenic capacity to respond when stimulated maximally suggests that some generational changes may have occurred.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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