Abstract

The influence of adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) on radiolabeled ascorbic acid (AA) accumulation by adrenocortical cells was examined in primary cultures of collagenase dissociated glands from adult male rats. The cells were ACTH responsive by morphological and steroidogenic criteria. After 5 d in AA-free medium, cells pretreated with 100 mU/ml ACTH for 3 d took up two to three times more AA over a 2 h period than did untreated controls (4.0 to 10.0 nmol versus 1.7 to 3.4 nmol AA/micrograms DNA). In contrast, ACTH administered on Day 6 concurrently with AA inhibited AA accumulation compared to cultures exposed to AA alone. This acute inhibitory effect of ACTH was in the order of 30% in cultures pretreated with ACTH for 3 d but was not significant (7%) without ACTH pretreatment. The results show that ACTH has distinct long term stimulatory and acute inhibitory effects on AA accumulation by adrenocortical cells and suggest that both maximal AA accumulation and the responsiveness to acute inhibition of AA accumulation by ACTH may depend on the maintenance of the differentiated state of the adrenal cortex.

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