Abstract

Cultured porcine thyroid cells did not reassociate into functional follicles in the presence of TSH unless the initial seeding density was adequate. At 0.2 X 10(6) cells/35 mm diameter culture dish the cells rapidly formed a monolayer even in the presence of TSH (128 microunits./ml), and radioiodide uptake was not significantly increased compared with that in control cells. Seeding densities of 1-3 X 10(6) cells/dish resulted in cultures which responded to TSH with follicular development and increased radioiodide uptake. A cell-free membrane fraction of thyroid homogenate restored the ability of cultures seeded at low densities to respond to TSH with development of follicular morphology and increased radioiodide uptake. Delaying the addition of TSH by 48 h markedly reduced the stimulation of follicular development and radioiodide uptake of cultures. Addition of membrane fractions, or an alkali-soluble fraction of membranes, at zero time improved the responses to TSH added after a 48-h delay. It was concluded that maintenance of differentiation and of TSH-responsiveness in cultured thyroid cells was influenced by cell-cell contact.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call