Abstract
Epidermal mucous metaplasia of cultured 13-day-old chick embryonic tarsometatarsal skin can be induced by culture in medium containing retinol (20 μM) for only 8–24 h and then in a chemically defined medium without vitamins or serum for 6 days. In the induction of mucous metaplasia, retinol primarily affects the dermal cells and a signal(s) induced in the dermis by excess retinol alters epidermal differentiation toward secretory epithelium. In this work we found that Bt2cAMP (2 mM) stimulated mucous metaplasia severalfold when added to retinol-pretreated skin but inhibited epidermal mucous metaplasia when added together with retinol. Forskolin (100 μM), an activator of adenylate cyclase, also stimulated mucous metaplasia when added to retinol-pretreated skin. On the other hand, transduction in the epidermal cells of a signal(s) induced in dermal cells by excess retinol was inhibited by herbimycin A (500 ng/ml), an inhibitor of protein-tyrosine kinases, and TPA (0.1 μM), an activator of protein kinase C. Hence these findings indicated that cAMP stimulated signal-induced mucous metaplasia, and that transduction of the signal(s) in the epidermal cells required protein-tyrosine kinase and was inhibited by protein kinase C.
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