Retinoic acid inhibits junctional communication between animal cells

1986 
: Retinoic acid inhibits junctional communication between a variety of vertebrate cell types in culture. It reduces the intercellular transfer of 3H-nucleotides between Syrian hamster kidney fibroblasts (BHK 21/13), Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (V79), rat liver epithelial cells (BRL), Swiss mouse embryo fibroblasts (3T3), rainbow trout gonadal fibroblasts (RTG2) and Xenopus embryo fibroblasts (Xen). It also reduces metabolic cooperation between hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase deficient mutant and wild-type BHK cells. The inhibition is rapid (intercellular transfer of iontophoretically injected Lucifer Yellow CH between BRL cells is completely blocked after the cells have been exposed to 10(-4) M retinoic acid for 5 min), and is fully reversed when the drug is removed. Based on these results and the observation that the amount of gap junctional protein isolated from cells grown in the presence of retinoic acid for 1 h is the same and after 24 h is increased (1.3- to 3.1-fold) compared with the amount isolated from untreated cells, we suggest that the inhibitory effect is mediated by the reversible closure of junctional channels.
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