Abstract

The role of glucocorticoids on adipose conversion has been studied using confluent Ob1771 mouse preadipose cells maintained in a serum-free culture medium able to support the emergence of early but not that of late markers of differentiation. Under these culture conditions, glucocorticoids play, at physiological concentrations, a permissive role for terminal differentiation, characterized by glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase expression and triacylglycerol accumulation within 12 days, whereas progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol are inactive. Glucocorticoids behave as mitogenic-adipogenic stimuli able to trigger growth-arrested, early marker-expressing cells to enter the terminal phase of the differentiation program and thus appear to mimic the mitogenic-adipogenic activity already described for arachidonic acid and cyclic AMP-elevating agents, especially prostacyclin. When compared to corticosterone alone, exposure of Ob1771 cells to both corticosterone and arachidonic acid leads to an additional increase in the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and number of differentiated cells; this potentiation is further enhanced when the culture medium is supplemented with the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. This suggests indirectly the involvement of prostacyclin as a metabolite of arachidonic acid able to induce cyclic AMP accumulation. In agreement with this hypothesis, it is found that a promoting effect is exerted by corticosterone on the metabolism of arachidonic acid, leading in turn to an increase in the production of prostacyclin. These findings allow a better understanding of the role of glucocorticoids on adipose cell differentiation and explain a posteriori the effectiveness of the combination of dexamethasone-isobutyl-methylxanthine used in innumerable studies.

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