Intracellular cAMP determines the extent of degradation and not the synthesis of collagen by rat hepatocytes

1992 
Intracellular collagen degradation in normal rat hepatocytes was exponetially stimulated by db-cAMP (10–100 µM). The effect was manifested as a decrease (p < 0.01) in net collagen production. The extent of degradation directly co-related with the intracellular cAMP levels, only upto a threshold concentration (16.2 ± 1.3 p moles/106 cells) elicited by 100 µM of db-cAMP. Higher concentrations induced no further increment. Forskolin adenylate cyclase activator (10–50 µM), produced similar effects demonstrating cAMP dependence of the phenomenon. Both db-cAMP as well as Forskolin stimulated collagen degradation (p < 0.05) in hepatocytes from rats administered CCL4. However, the extent of stimulation was significantly (p < 0.01) less compared to that observed in normal hepatocytes. Our data demonstrates that elevated cAMP levels regulate net collagen content by signalling intracellular collagen degradation and not synthesis.
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