Steroid-regulated growth of DDT1MF-2 cells is profoundly influenced by culture conditions. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • DDT1MF-2 cells provide an ideal model for studying tumor-growth-stimulation by steroids. These cells progress to a rapidly proliferating, androgen-independent state after prolonged culture without androgen. After brief culture in different lots of fetal bovine serum (FBS), some lots induced a permanent state of hormone-independence in cells that had been androgen-responsive. To test the hypothesis that factors influenced androgen-responsive growth even after removal of serum, hormone-responsive DDT1MF-2 cells (7000 cells/well) were plated in medium Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium/F-12 Nutrition Mixture (1:1)/1% ITS with (a) 0.1% FBS, (b) 0.1% NuSerum (c) 0.1% Hyclone, or (d) MCDB-110/0.1% ITS with 5 ng/ml bFGF. On Days 2-8, medium was replaced with D-MEM/F12/ITS with 10 nM testosterone (T), 10 nM triamcinolone acetonide (TA), or ethanol (control) and the cells counted. While testosterone induced a 1.4-fold increase in cell growth after exposure to FBS or NuSerum, maximal testosterone effect (3-6-fold increase) was observed after Hyclone. Hydroxyflutamide antagonized the fivefold increase in growth observed with testosterone, with a slight decrease of growth with cAMP for cells plated in Hyclone. Androgen-independent cells were unaffected by testosterone, hydroxyflutamide, or 8Br-cAMP [medium (a)]. Maximal inhibition by triamcinolone acetonide (0.25 of control) was observed with medium (d). The effect of testosterone and triamcinolone acetonide on secretion of mitogenic activity into conditioned medium was also evaluated. Although conditioned media from control and testosterone-treated cells were mitogenic in a dose-dependent manner, the media from cells treated with triamcinolone acetonide and testosterone+TA conditioned medium was not mitogenic--but, of note, it was not growth inhibitory.

publication date

  • December 1, 1995

Research

keywords

  • Cell Division
  • Colforsin
  • Testosterone
  • Triamcinolone Acetonide

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0029417347

PubMed ID

  • 8826092

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 31

issue

  • 11