Abstract

The intracellular level of cGMP was independent of the rate of cell division in cells derived from virally infected brain tissue. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor R07-2956 (4-dimethoxybenzyl-2-imidazolidinone) increased the intracellular level of cGMP in virally infected brain cells, but it did not effect the level of cAMP. There was no correction between the increase in cGMP levels following addition of R07-2956 and changes in mitotic activity in the brain cell cultures. Experimental manipulations which increased the cAMP level were accompanied by a decreased mitotic rate indicating there was a correlation between mitotic activity and the level of cAMP in the same cells. Raising the intracellular level of cAMP by exogenous db-cAMP or cAMP or the use of other phosphodiesterase inhibitors routinely increased the level of cGMP as well. Conversely increasing the intracellular cGMP level by adding the exogenous cGMP increased the level of both cGMP and cAMP. A tissue culture system was used with the cell line derived from viral infected human brain tissue originally obtained from a patient with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE). The intracellular levels of cAMP and cGMP were monitored by radioimmunoassay following manipulation of the system by addition of exogenous cGMP (0.05 mM), addition of exogenous db-cAMP (0.5 mM), or cAMP (0.5 mM) and the use of phosphodiesterase inhibitors: theophylline (1.0 mM), papaverine (50 μg/ml), 4-3-butoxy-4-methoxy benzyl-2-imidozalidinone (R020-1724) and R07-2956. Cell division was monitored in treated and non-treated cultures at 24 h intervals by analyzing the cell number and mitotic index. High levels of cGMP were found in cells which were not actively dividing but high levels were just as apt to be present in dividing cells. There was an inverse relationship between cell division and the level of cAMP.

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