Insulin produces a biphasic response in Tetrahymena thermophila by stimulating cell survival and activating proliferation in two separate concentration intervals

Søren Tvorup Christensen, H Quie, K Kemp, L. Rasmussen

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cells of Tetrahymena may produce autocrine signal molecules with effects on survival and proliferation. Here we have tested the effects of human recombinant and bovine insulin, and the B22-B30 fragment of bovine insulin over a wide range of concentrations (10(-5)-10(-18) M) on cell survival and proliferation in a synthetic nutrient medium. The cells were grown in conical flasks at low initial cell densities (40 and 400 cells/ml). Insulin prevented rapid cell death and/or promoted cell proliferation over two separate concentration ranges: down to nanomolar levels and again in the low pico- and femtomolar range. At an initial population density of 400 cells/ml the cells multiplied at both concentration intervals. At 40 or fewer organisms/ml the cells multiplied in the high concentration interval, whereas in the low interval they survived for about four times longer than those in the control cultures. B22-B30 added to cultures of 40 initial cells/ml produced a stimulation of cell survival in the low pico- and high femtomolar range. In the presence of hemin (50 nM) cells at 400 initial organisms/ml multiplied at insulin concentrations down to about 3 nM and again from 300 am to 10 pM. In some cases, hemin plus insulin activated cell proliferation between the two concentration intervals as well. At 40 cells/ml the cells not only survived but proliferated in the femtomolar range. Cells in cultures supplemented with both hemin and B22-B30 multiplied at the low concentration interval (from about 100 fM to 10 pM).
Original languageEnglish
JournalCell Biology International
Volume20
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)437-44
Number of pages7
ISSN1065-6995
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1996
Externally publishedYes

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