The effect of a 24-h treatment with various doses (from 1.5-10-minus 8 to 3.0-10-minus 3 M) of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophospahte (cAMP) on morphometric parameters, [5--3H]uridine radioactivity concentration (URC), [methyl--3H]thymidine [Me--3H]-Tr) labelling index per hour (L.I./h) and per cent mitotic index (M.I.%) of young rat differentiated hepatocytes in primary tissue culture were investigated by morphometric and radioautographic methods. In such cells cAMP was found to induce: (1) a reduction of the apparent surface area (ASA) of total nucleoli, karyoplasm and cytoplasm; (2) significant increases in URC of all the subcellular compartments at all the dosages employed (only cAMP at 1.5-10-minus 8 M did not change karyoplasmic and cytoplasmic URC values); (3) marked increments in [Me--3H]Tdr L.I./h and M.I.% from the lowest dose up to 1.5-10-minus 4 M; at higher doses the L.I./h and M.I.% were less stimulated or approached control values. In cultured rat hepatocytes, adenosine-5'-phosphate (5'-AMP) (1.5-10-minus 4 M per 24 h) increased the karyoplasmic and total cell ASA, the lone total nucleolar URC and both the L.I./h and M.I.%. However, these metabolic effects were significantly less intense than those elicited by isomolar cAMP. Theophylline (Theo) (5.5-10-minus 5 M per 24 h) reduced the in vitro rat hepatocyte total nucleolar ASA but affected neither other morphometric nor any of the URC values. The same dose of Theo plus cAMP (1.5-10-minus M) had no morphometric effect but significantly increased the URC values of all primary rat hepatocyte compartments. Actinomycin D (DAct) (0.1 mug/ml per 24 h) plus cAMP (1.5-10-minus 4 M) decreased the cultured rat hepatocyte total nucleolar ASA but enlarged that of karyoplasm and cytoplasm and, further, markedly curtailed all the compartmental URC values. These data support the hypothesis that cAMP amplified the template activity of the liver chromatin and accelerates the flow of differentiated primary young rat hepatocytes into the various stages of the mitotic cell cycle.

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