Abstract

The effects of a physiological dose of IGF I (40 ng/ml approximately 5 x 10(-9) M) on steroidogenesis were studied in bovine adrenal fasciculata cells cultured in serum-free McCoy's medium. They were compared with those of a single dose of ACTH (0.25 ng/ml approximately 10(-10) M) at approximately the concentration inducing half-maximal stimulation. With IGF I, steroidogenesis commenced after 48 h culture and progressively increased throughout the 96-h test period. Expressed as stimulated level/control level ratios, glucocorticoid (cortisol + corticosterone) responses to IGF I after 4 days' culture (2.41 +/- 0.20 (SEM) n = 9) were similar to those obtained with ACTH (2.59 +/- 0.18, n = 9). A combination of the two peptides had a synergistic effect (5.95 +/- 0.79, n = 5). The cortisol/corticosterone ratio increased in the presence of IGF I from 1 +/- 0.19 to 1.76 +/- 0.45 (n = 7, P less than 0.02), although less so than in the presence of ACTH (5.50 +/- 0.98). Moreover, cortisol production was accompanied by androstenedione production (2.36 ng/10(6) cells, n = 3) similar to that induced by ACTH (2.10 ng/10(6) cells, n = 3). These findings together suggest stimulation of 17 alpha-hydroxylase activity. Cell multiplication was unaffected by IGF I. [3H]Thymidine incorporation into DNA reached only 193% +/- 17 (SEM) (n = 4) of control levels, whereas with ACTH it dropped to 60% +/- 5. Our findings show that IGF I alone has no mitogenic effect on adrenocortical cells in vitro, but that it is capable of inducing differentiated steroidogenesis.

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