Abstract

Agents that elevate intracellular cAMP levels are required for growth of many cell types in culture including normal rat mammary epithelial (RME) cells. To determine if the intracellular levels of cAMP that result from stimulation by agents such as cholera toxin (CT) or prostaglandin E-1 (PGE-1) are within the physiological range, cAMP levels were determined in RME cells growing in primary culture and compared to levels measured in freshly isolated mammary epithelium. The results indicate that the cAMP levels of mammary epithelial organoids obtained from 45-day-old virgin rats are 4 to 6 pmol/10 6 cells. Growth of RME cells in primary culture in the presence of CT results in cAMP levels of approximately 15 to 20 pmol/10 6 cells early in culture when cells are proliferating rapidly. As cells approach confluence, cAMP concentrations decrease to levels observed in fresh organoids. CT-stimulated cAMP levels appear to be within the range of those found in pregnant mammary epithelium in vivo. Growth of RME cells in medium supplemented with PGE-1 instead of CT results in cAMP levels equivalent to those found in fresh mammary epithelial organoids and under these conditions the growth rate is approximately half that found in CT-stimulated cells. These results indicate cAMP to be a positive regulator of cell growth in vivo at levels that are within the physiological range.

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