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JBC, Vol. 251, Issue 21, 6653-6661, Nov, 1976
B. Rapoport and R. J. Adams
Cultured dog thyroid cells were used to investigate the mechanism by which
previous exposure to thyrotropin (TSH) induces refractoriness to further
TSH stimulation of cellular adenosine 3'-5'-monophosphate (cAMP).
Refractoriness of the cAMP response to TSH could not be overcome by
exposure of the cells to supramaximal stimulatory concentrations of TSH.
Although an unknown factor present in human and fetal calf serum was found
to inhibit the thyroid cell cAMP response to TSH, this factor could not
account for refractoriness because refractoriness could be induced in the
absence of serum. Induction of thyroid refractoriness did not appear to be
related to cellular concentrations of cyclic AMP, because equal
refractoriness was produced by TSH alone or TSH plus the phosphodiesterase
inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methyl xanthine. In addition, preincubation of
thyroid cells in 10(-4) M cAMP did not result in subsequent refractoriness.
Recovery from the refractory process required almost 24 h. Short term (15
min) stimulation with TSH did not produce thyroid cell refractoriness, and
reversal of the stimulation was obtained by thorough washing of the cells.
Long term TSH stimulation (16 h), however, resulted in both supramaximal
cAMP response to TSH, and inclusion of TSH together with cycloheximide did
not produce refractoriness. Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in
thyroid cell homogenate was unaltered by TSH or dibutyryl cyclic AMP
pretreatment of the cells for up to 24 h, or cycloheximide for up to 4 h.
In contrast, TSH-stimulated, but not F--stimulated, adenylate cyclase
activity was reduced in thyroid cell homogenates after preincubation of the
cells in TSH. Refractoriness to TSH stimulation was not associated with an
alteration in the binding of 125I-TSH to cultured thyroid cells. These
studies suggest that the thyroid cAMP response to TSH is modulated by an
inhibitory mechanism dependent upon new protein synthesis. TSH stimulation
itself increases the degree of this inhibition through a mechanism not
involving cAMP.
Induction of refractoriness to thyrotropin stimulation in cultured thyroid cells. Dependence on new protein synthesis
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