Publication | Open Access
Stimulation of Glucose Transport in Cultures of Density-Inhibited Chick Embryo Cells
176
Citations
10
References
1971
Year
Cell CultureCell GrowthCellular PhysiologyInsulin SignalingEmbryologyEmbryo CultureGlucose TransportDna SynthesisPublic HealthCell PhysiologyAnimal PhysiologyFresh Chicken SerumEmbryonic DevelopmentCell ManipulationEndocrinologyCell BiologyEnergy MetabolismDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyTissue CultureMetabolismMedicinePoultry Science
The rate of glucose transport in sparse, rapidly growing chick-embryo fibroblasts is much greater than that in density-inhibited cells. The addition of fresh chicken serum or trypsin to the medium of density-inhibited cells causes a large increase in the rate of glucose transport that is detectable 15 min after addition. The increase in glucose transport precedes the increase in DNA synthesis by 5-6 hr. Only small changes in rates of transport are seen with nucleosides or a nonmetabolizable amino acid. The increase in glucose transport requires protein synthesis but not RNA or DNA synthesis.
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