A new procedure has been developed for dissociating anterior pituitary tissue and producing a viable suspension of single cells. The procedure involves incubation of small tissue blocks in 1 mg/ml trypsin (15 min), followed by incubation in 8µg/ml neuraminidase and 1 mM EDTA (15 min), followed by mechanical dispersion. Cell yields are -55%, based on recovered DNA. By electron microscopy five types of secretory cells (somatotrophs, mammotrophs, thyrotrophs, gonadotrophs, and corticotrophs) plus endothelial and follicular cells can be identified and are morphologically well preserved up to 20 h after dissociation. Throughout this period, the cells incorporate linearly [3H]leucine into protein for up to 4 h at a rate 90% greater than hemipituitaries, and they synthesize, transport intracellularly, and release the two major pituitary secretory products, growth hormone and prolactin. Immediately after dissociation the cells’ ability to respond to secretogogues (high K+ and dibutyryl cyclic AMP) is impaired, but after a 6-12-h culture period, the cells apparently recover and discharge 24% and 52%, respectively, of their content of prelabeled growth hormone over a 3-h period in response to these two secretogogues. This represents a stimulation of 109% and 470% over that released by cells incubated in control medium. The results demonstrate that function and morphologic integrity are preserved in this cell system. Therefore it is suitable for the study of various aspects of pituitary secretion and its control. © 1973, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Hopkins, C. R., & Farquhar, M. G. (1973). Hormone secretion by cells dissociated from rat anterior pituitaries. Journal of Cell Biology, 59(2), 276–303. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.59.2.276
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