Abstract

Storage of whole retinas from the embryonic chick for 24 h at 4 °C resulted in increased basal levels of glutamine synthetase (GS) during subsequent incubation at 37 °C in the absence of cortisol. GS levels in these retinas maintained initially at 4 °C (CS), in many cases, exceeded GS levels in cortisol-induced whole retinas incubated solely at 37 °C. The increase in basal GS activity is seen within 48 h of the transfer of the retinas from 4 to 37 °C. If cortisol (0.001 μg/ml = 2.8 n m or 0.01 μg/ml = 28 n m) is added during the last 24 h of culture to CS retinas subsequently transferred to 37 °C, levels of GS are attained that are higher than those in the corresponding retinas cultured continually at 37 °C. However, the activity ratios (GS specific activity in cortisol-treated retinas/GS specific activity in retinas not exposed to cortisol) are similar for CS retinas and those maintained at 37 °C throughout. Monolayers of retinal cells display similar basal and cortisol-induced levels of GS independent of treatment. Retinal monolayers maintained at 4 °C for 24 h and subsequently incubated at 37 °C do not exhibit increases in either basal or cortisol-induced levels of GS over those in monolayers maintained at 37 °C throughout. The CS-promoted increase in the basal and cortisol-induced GS activity of whole retinas is eliminated by enzymatic dispersion of the retina just prior to 37 °C culture of the cells as monolayers. Both basal and cortisol-induced GS levels in the latter monolayers resemble those in retinal cells kept as monolayers throughout.

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