Abstract

Over long periods of growth in culture, bovine adrenocortical cells lose the ability to express the steroid hydroxylase genes. For 17 alpha-hydroxylase, cells show a stochastic pattern of phenotypic switching from a state in which they express this gene in response to cyclic AMP to a state in which the gene is no longer inducible. Introducing SV40 T antigen into bovine adrenocortical cells greatly increases their replicative potential; steroid hydroxylase expression in these clones resembles that of the precursor cells before transfection. The other steroid hydroxylases (21-hydroxylase and 11 beta-hydroxylase) appear to undergo phenotypic switching like 17 alpha-hydroxylase. The loss of expression of these genes appears to be more rapid, but there are differences in the requirements of 21-hydroxylase and 11 beta-hydroxylase versus 17 alpha-hydroxylase for induction by cyclic AMP; additionally, growth of cells in extracellular matrix Matrigel was required for expression of 21-hydroxylase and 11 beta-hydroxylase in long-term cultures of either normal or SV40 T antigen-transfected cells. Understanding the molecular basis for the phenotypic switching of steroid hydroxylases that occurs in bovine adrenocortical cells may elucidate mechanisms for cellular senescence and for maintenance of tissue-specific functions during long-term growth in culture.

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