Abstract

AbstractBoth the parathyroid hormone (PTH) and the calcium ion increase the cellular content of cyclic adenosine 3′,5′‐monophosphate (cyclic AMP), promote the initiation of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis and stimulate the proliferation of rat thymocytes maintained in vitro. The ability of cyclic AMP to serve as the mediator of the mitogenic actions of both PTH and calcium is established by the fact that cyclic AMP itself stimulates cell proliferation in the absence of PTH and extracellular calcium. Neither PTH nor calcium appear to raise the cellular cyclic AMP level by increasing the nucleotide's synthesis by adenylate cyclase (formerly adenyl cyclase); PTH concentrations as high as 50 μg per ml of medium do not increase the enzyme's activity (in the presence or absence of calcium) and mitogenic calcium concentrations inhibit it. PTH also does not directly affect isolated thymocyte phosphodiesterase, but mitogenic calcium levels inhibit the enzyme's activity. Additional experiments show that it is calcium which raises the cyclic AMP level in cells treated with PTH, and some possible calcium‐mediated mechanisms by which the hormone could elevate the cellular cyclic AMP levels are discussed. Thus, the mitogenic action of PTH is primarily mediated by calcium while cyclic AMP is the ultimate implementor of the hormonal action. However, calcium has a dual role and evidence is presented which indicates that besides raising the cellular cyclic AMP level, it also controls the operation of cyclic AMP's mitogenic end‐reaction.

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