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Transcriptomic Response Dynamics of Human Primary and Immortalized Adrenocortical Cells to Steroidogenic Stimuli

Kimberly Wellman, Rui Fu, Amber Baldwin, Juilee Rege, Elisabeth Murphy, William E. Rainey, Neelanjan Mukherjee

2021Cells11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Adrenal steroid hormone production is a dynamic process stimulated by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and angiotensin II (AngII). These ligands initialize a rapid and robust gene expression response required for steroidogenesis. Here, we compare the predominant human immortalized cell line model, H295R cell, with primary cultures of adult adrenocortical cells derived from human kidney donors. We performed temporally resolved RNA-seq on primary cells stimulated with either ACTH or AngII at multiple time points. The magnitude of the expression dynamics elicited by ACTH was greater than AngII in primary cells. This is likely due to the larger population of adrenocortical cells that are responsive to ACTH. The dynamics of stimulus-induced expression in H295R cells are mostly recapitulated in primary cells. However, there are some expression responses in primary cells absent in H295R cells. These data are a resource for the endocrine community and will help researchers determine whether H295R is an appropriate model for the specific aspect of steroidogenesis that they are studying.

Topics & Concepts

Adrenocorticotropic hormoneEndocrinologyInternal medicineCell culturePopulationAngiotensin IIBiologyTranscriptomeEnteroendocrine cellSteroid hormonePrimary cellImmortalised cell lineAdrenal glandGene expressionHormoneCell biologyEndocrine systemMedicineGeneGeneticsBlood pressureEnvironmental healthHormonal Regulation and HypertensionEstrogen and related hormone effectsRenin-Angiotensin System Studies