Abstract

Cells of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophilaproduce compounds that act as autocrine (paracrine) survival and/or growth factors. 8-Bromo cyclic GMP, sodium nitroprusside, hemin, protoporphyrin IX, human recombinant and bovine insulin were tested for their ability to substitute for the cell-produced factors and stimulate cell survival and proliferation. The cells were inoculated into conical flasks in a nutritionally complete, chemically defined medium at known cell densities from 5 to 5000 cells/ml. In unsupplemented medium cells at 5 to 500 cells/ml (‘low initial cell density cultures’) died within 8 h, whereas cells at 1000 and 5000 cells/ml (‘high initial cell density cultures’) proliferated with lag phases lasting for up to 4 h. In the presence of insulin compounds, hemin, protoporphyrin IX, or 8-bromo cyclic GMP, cells also proliferated at all low initial cell densities. Sodium nitroprusside was effective over two separate concentration ranges: at the nanomolar levels as well at low pico- to femtomolar levels. At initial population densities of up to 50 cells/ml the cells at both concentrations of sodium nitroprusside survived about 4-fold longer than the controls. At 500 initial cells/ml, cells at thehigh concentrations of sodium nitroprusside survived about 4-fold longer than those of the control cultures; they proliferated in the low concentrations of sodium nitroprusside. Concentrations of hemin, too low to have any effects on their own, had synergistic effects with sodium nitroprusside. N G-methyl-L-arginine inhibited proliferation at high initial cell densities. This inhibitory action was reduced by high concentrations of L-arginine, protoporphyrin IX, sodium nitroprusside, or 8-bromo cGMP, but not by insulin. Methylene blue inhibited cell proliferation at high initial cell densities. This inhibition was circumvented by addition of 8-bromo cGMP. The findings that insulin-related material may be released from Tetrahymenaand that insulin and sodium nitroprusside increase intracellular cGMP in these cells are discussed in relation to the presented results. Together these observations suggest that cGMP is responsible for supporting cell survival in Tetrahymenaand switching the cells into their proliferative mode, and that cell-produced signal molecules and insulin stimulate an NO-dependent guanylate cyclase into producing cGMP.

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