Indomethacin inhibits the insulin-induced increases in RNA and protein synthesis in L6 skeletal muscle myoblasts

1989 
Abstract Rates of accretion of RNA and protein and rates of protein synthesis were measured in sub-confluent cultures of L6 myoblasts. Insulin (100 μU/ml) stimulated protein synthesis by 15% within 30 min and by 40% at two and six hours. By six hours insulin also increased the accretion of RNA (+ 15%). The cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor indomethacin did not reduce the basal rate of RNA or protein accretion in L6 cells but reduced the rate of protein synthesis by 16%. When added together with insulin, indomethacin inhibited the hormonally-stimulated rate of protein synthesis and also significantly reduced the accretion of RNA. Indomethacin still reduced the effects of insulin on protein synthesis when added by the incorporation of [ 3 H]-uridine was also stimulated by insulin but was inhibited by indomethacin only when the drug was present throughout the incubation. Inhibition of protein synthesis by cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors may be the result of both a direct action on translational efficiency and an effect on RNA synthesis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    16
    References
    20
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []