Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2005) 10 P59

SFE2005 Poster Presentations Pituitary (11 abstracts)

Inhibitors of the ABCA1 transporter affect annexin 1 release in the TtT/GF folliculostellate cell line

JP Payne 1 , JF Morris 2 , E Solito 1 & JC Buckingham 1


1Division of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom , 2Department of Human Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.


Acknowledgements: This work was generously supported by the Wellcome Trust

Annexin 1 (ANXA1) plays an important role in mediating the negative feedback effects of glucocorticoids on the HPA axis. It is released from non-secretory folliculostellate (FS) cells by glucocorticoids and acts locally to suppress ACTH release from corticotrophs. Previous studies suggest that the steroid-induced translocation of ANXA1 across the FS cell membrane is effected via membrane ABCA1 transport protein following activation of a kinase cascade. However, some drugs which block ABCA1 (e.g. the sulphonylurea glyburide), and hence ANXA1 release from FS cells, also block SUR2B/Kir6.1 ATP-sensitive K+ channels (K+ATP channels). These channels are expressed in FS cells and our studies suggest that they also contribute to the mechanisms effecting ANXA1 release1. To explore further the roles of ABCA1 and K+ATP channels in the regulation of ANXA1 release we have used a murine FS cell line (TtT/GF) as a model and compared the effects a sulphonylurea (glipizide) on ANXA1 release with those of two drugs (geranylgeranylpyrophosphate, GGPP and bromosulphopthalein, BSP) which block ABCA1 but have no reported actions on K+ATP channels. Cells were incubated as described previously and cell surface ANXA1 was measured by flow cytometry and western blot analysis. Minoxidil, cromakalim (K+ATP channels openers, 1-100μM) and dexamethasone (10nM) each induced concentration-dependent increases in cell surface ANXA1. Their effects were abolished by glipizide (5-100μM). The effects of dexamethasone were also inhibited by BSP (10-50μM) but those of cromakalim were not. GGPP (10μM) on the other hand failed to affect the responses to dexamethasone or cromakalim. While these results do not exclude a role for ABCA1 in the dexamethasone-induced translocation of ANXA1 to the cell membrane, they suggest that the translocation induced by K+ATP channel openers is independent of this transport protein.

Volume 10

196th Meeting of the Society for Endocrinology and Society for Endocrinology joint Endocrinology and Diabetes Day

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