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Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Most recent strategies for the development of hybrid artificial liver devices focus on the use of parenchymal liver cells (hepatocytes). For clinical application of these devices, a sufficient cell supply is mandatory. Because human liver tissue is rarely available, isolated porcine hepatocytes from laboratory animals have been suggested for use in bioartificial livers. The authors introduce a modified isolation protocol to yield large scale numbers of viable porcine hepatocytes from slaughterhouse organs. Perfusion and enzymatic digestion of the left medial liver lobe (n = 74) resulted in 1.0 +/- 0.3 x 10(7) viable hepatocytes per gram of tissue, and an overall yield of 1.92 +/- 0.5 x 10(9) viable cells per isolation (viability: 93 +/- 2%).
Collagen
gel immobilization maintained morphologic integrity and functional activity of hepatocyte cultures over long-term periods. Cell morphology, as assessed by light microscopic evaluation, was maintained for 2 weeks. Stable DNA content (51 +/- 5 micrograms) and low values of
alanine aminotransferase
release (8 microU/hr/micrograms DNA) indicated structural stability of cultures after a short period of post isolational adaptation. Albumin secretion (4.5 micrograms/hr/micrograms DNA) and persistent Cytochrome P450 IA1 dependent deethylation of 7-ethoxycoumarin (4.5 nmol/hr/micrograms DNA) indicated long-term metabolic activity of cultured hepatocytes. Hepatocytes from livers of slaughtered pigs represent an unlimited resource of viable material for cell culture, and their usefulness as functional units of bioartificial liver support devices should be tested.
...
PMID:Porcine hepatocytes from slaughterhouse organs. An unlimited resource for bioartificial liver devices. 764 Apr 25
Solubility of tail tendon collagen from normal, streptozotocin-induced diabetic Lewis rats, and diabetic animals treated with aminoguanidine and two novel advanced glycosylation end products (AGE)-formation inhibitors was investigated by limited pepsin digestion under acidic conditions. Assays were conducted using tail tendon collagen from Lewis rats obtained from two different vendors, Harlan and Charles River Laboratories.
Collagen
solubility was assessed by following the kinetics of pepsin digestion. The data revealed that the rate of digestion for diabetic animals is markedly slow relative to that of normals. More strikingly, the kinetics of the diabetic animals showed the feature of a lag in digestion regardless of the animal source. Experiments designed to optimize the difference in solubility between normal and diabetic animals demonstrated that Charles River animals exhibit a greater window of solubility than the Harlan animals. More importantly, a pronounced effect of aminoguanidine, an AGE-formation inhibitor, was observed in Charles River animals, but not in the Harlan animals, presumably because of the larger window of solubility between the normal and the diabetic animals in the former. These data indicated that the Charles River Lewis rats are an animal model that demonstrates greater efficacy in this assay. Analysis of in vivo screens designed to test efficacy of aminoguanidine and two novel AGE-formation inhibitors,
ALT
462 and
ALT
486, demonstrated that monitoring an in vivo dose response is highly dependent on the enzyme concentration as well as the time of digestion, and that 1.5 h of digestion and 10 microg/ml pepsin (5 pg pepsin/mg collagen) appeared optimal. Under these conditions, a 29% normalization of solubility was observed with aminoguanidine at 100 mg/kg body wt, whereas a similar normalization was observed at 10 mg/kg body wt for both
ALT
462 and
ALT
486. Thus, on a molar basis,
ALT
462 and
ALT
486 are at least 20 times more potent than aminoguanidine. This is the first demonstration of dose-dependent efficacy for AGE-formation inhibitors in animal models, and as such, this assay provides a method with which to assess the in vivo efficacy of other such inhibitors.
...
PMID:Chronic dosing with aminoguanidine and novel advanced glycosylation end product-formation inhibitors ameliorates cross-linking of tail tendon collagen in STZ-induced diabetic rats. 892 53
This study aimed to evaluate the effects of the nitric oxide donor molsidomine on the early stages of liver damage and biochemical changes in rats with bile duct ligation (BDL). Forty prepubertal male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 125-140 g were studied. Group 1 rats (sham-control, n = 10) were not subjected to any surgical manipulation. Group 2 rats (BDL/untreated, n = 10) were subjected to BDL but no drug was administered. Group 3 rats (BDL/L-NAME, n = 10) received a daily dose of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) intraperitoneally for 7 days after BDL. Group 4 rats (BDL/molsidomine, n = 10) received a daily dose of molsidomine by gastric tube for 7 days after BDL. After 1 week, biochemical and histological evaluations were performed and the liver hydroxyproline content was measured. Serum bilirubin and liver enzymes were significantly increased in the BDL/untreated, BDL/L-NAME and BDL/molsidomine groups in comparison with the sham-control group 1 week after BDL. However, the liver enzymes were significantly decreased in the BDL/molsidomine group in comparison with the BDL/untreated and BDL/L-NAME groups. In the BDL/L-NAME group, proliferation of portal and periportal biliary ductules with disorganization of the hepatocyte plates, dilated portal spaces and areas of polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration, fibrosis and hepatocyte necrosis were observed. In the BDL/molsidomine group, polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration, hepatocyte necrosis and fibrosis were rarely seen. The hydroxyproline content in the liver was increased 1 week after obstruction in the BDL/untreated and BDL/L-NAME groups when compared to BDL/molsidomine group.
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type-IV expression was not observed in the BDL/molsidomine group in contrast to the BDL/untreated and BDL/L-NAME groups. In conclusion, during 1 week of treatment, the nitric oxide donor molsidomine improved hepatic fibrosis in the hepatic parenchyma and did not affect serum bilirubin values, but positively affected the serum aspartate aminotransferase and
alanine aminotransferase
values.
...
PMID:Effects of the nitric oxide donor molsidomine on the early stages of liver damage in rats with bile duct ligation: a biochemical and immunohistochemical approach. 1214 54
Liver injury is characterized by hepatocyte apoptosis and collagen-producing activated hepatic stellate cells (HSC). Hepatocyte apoptosis promotes liver injury and fibrosis, whereas activated HSC apoptosis limits hepatic fibrosis. Pharmacological inhibition of liver cell apoptosis may potentially attenuate liver injury and fibrosis by blocking hepatocyte apoptosis or promote fibrosis by permitting accumulation of activated HSCs. To ascertain the net effect of inhibiting liver cell apoptosis on liver injury, inflammation, and hepatic fibrogenesis, we examined the effect of a pancaspase inhibition IDN-6556 on these parameters in the bile duct ligated (BDL) mouse. Hepatocyte apoptosis was assessed by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling assay and immunofluorescence for active caspases 3/7, and liver injury by histopathology and serum
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) determinations. Real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to measure mRNA transcripts for markers of hepatic inflammation, HSC activation, and fibrosis. Immunohistochemistry for alpha-smooth muscle actin was performed to identify HSC activation.
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deposition was quantitated by Sirius red staining and digital imaging techniques. Hepatocyte apoptosis and liver injury (bile infarcts and serum
ALT
values) were reduced in IDN-6556-treated versus saline-treated 3-day BDL mice. Markers for liver inflammation [chemokine (C-X-C) ligand 1 and macrophage inflammatory protein-2 chemokine expression] and hepatic fibrogenesis (transforming growth factor-beta and collagen I expression) were also attenuated. Consistent with these data, HSC activation as assessed by alpha-smooth muscle actin mRNA expression and immunohistochemistry was markedly reduced in both 3- and 10-day BDL animals. Collectively, these data suggest hepatocyte apoptosis initiates cascades culminating in liver injury and fibrosis. The pan-caspase inhibitor IDN-6556 is a promising agent for cholestatic liver injury.
...
PMID:The caspase inhibitor IDN-6556 attenuates hepatic injury and fibrosis in the bile duct ligated mouse. 1461 89
Oxidative stress, in particular lipid peroxidation, induces collagen synthesis. Thus, we administered various antioxidants to bile duct-ligated rats for 28 days and lipid peroxidation, glutathione content, fibrosis, necrosis and cholestasis were evaluated. Extrahepatic cholestasis was induced by double ligation and section of the common bile duct. The study included eight groups (n=6), four groups were bile duct-ligated and received either vitamin C (50 mg/kg/day, orally), vitamin E (400 IU/rat/day, orally), silymarin (50 mg/kg/12 hr, orally) or vehicles; four groups were sham-operated controls.
Collagen
content was determined by measuring hydroxyproline in liver samples; malondialdehyde was used to estimate lipid peroxidation levels; reduced and oxidized glutathione were determined fluorometrically;
alanine aminotransferase
and bilirubins colorimetrically. Bilirubins increased several times,
alanine aminotransferase
once, reduced/oxidized glutathione ratio decreased three times, lipid peroxidation and collagen increased about three-times by biliary obstruction (p<0.05). Silymarin, vitamin E or C failed to prevent these effects significantly. It is not possible to clarify the role of oxidative stress in the fibrotic process induced by chronic biliary obstruction with the present results. Therefore, it seems reasonable to propose that a wide mixture of antioxidants, administered by the parenteral route (because cholestasis decreased the absorption of lipophilic compounds), is needed to counteract the oxidant stress produced by cholestasis.
...
PMID:Effects of silymarin and vitamins E and C on liver damage induced by prolonged biliary obstruction in the rat. 1474 53
Advanced glycation end product (AGE) formation may contribute to the progression of atherosclerosis, particularly in diabetes. The present study explored atherosclerosis in streptozotocin-induced diabetic apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE-/-) mice that were randomized (n = 20) to receive for 20 weeks no treatment, the AGE cross-link breaker
ALT
-711, or the inhibitor of AGE formation aminoguanidine (AG). A sixfold increase in plaque area with diabetes was attenuated by 30% with
ALT
-711 and by 40% in AG-treated mice. Regional distribution of plaque demonstrated no reduction in plaque area or complexity within the aortic arch with treatment, in contrast to the thoracic and abdominal aortas, where significant attenuation was seen. Diabetes-associated accumulation of AGEs in aortas and plasma and decreases in skin collagen solubility were ameliorated by both treatments, in addition to reductions in the vascular receptor for AGE.
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-associated reductions in the AGEs carboxymethyllysine and carboxyethyllysine were identified with both treatments. Diabetes was also accompanied by aortic accumulation of total collagen, specifically collagens I, III, and IV, as well as increases in the profibrotic cytokines transforming growth factor-beta and connective tissue growth factor and in cellular alpha-smooth muscle actin. Attenuation of these changes was seen in both treated diabetic groups.
ALT
-711 and AG demonstrated the ability to reduce vascular AGE accumulation in addition to attenuating atherosclerosis in these diabetic mice.
...
PMID:Advanced glycation end product interventions reduce diabetes-accelerated atherosclerosis. 1522 Feb 6
Obesity and type 2 diabetes are associated with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), but an obese/diabetic animal model that mimics human NASH remains undefined. We examined the induction of steatohepatitis and liver fibrosis in obese and type 2 diabetic db/db mice in a nutritional model of NASH and determined the relationship of the expressions of osteopontin (OPN) and leptin receptors to the pathogenesis of NASH. db/db mice and the corresponding lean and nondiabetic db/m mice were fed a diet deficient in methionine and choline (MCD diet) or control diet for 4 wk. Leptin-deficient obese and diabetic ob/ob mice fed similar diets were used for comparison. MCD diet-fed db/db mice exhibited significantly greater histological inflammation and higher serum
alanine aminotransferase
levels than db/m and ob/ob mice. Trichrome staining showed marked pericellular fibrosis in MCD diet-fed db/db mice but no significant fibrosis in db/m or ob/ob mice.
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I mRNA expression was increased 10-fold in db/db mice, 4-fold in db/m mice, and was unchanged in ob/ob mice. mRNA expressions of OPN, TNF-alpha, TGF-beta, and short-form leptin receptors (Ob-Ra) were significantly increased in db/db mice compared with db/m or ob/ob mice. Parallel increases in OPN and Ob-Ra protein levels were observed in db/db mice. Cultured hepatocytes expressed only Ob-Ra, and leptin stimulated OPN mRNA and protein expression in these cells. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the development of an obese/diabetic experimental model for NASH in db/db mice and suggest an important role for Ob-Ra and OPN in the pathogenesis of NASH.
...
PMID:Obese and diabetic db/db mice develop marked liver fibrosis in a model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: role of short-form leptin receptors and osteopontin. 1525 62
Acetaminophen, a widely used analgesic and antipyretic, is known to cause hepatic and renal injury in humans and experimental animals when administered in high doses. It was reported that these toxic effects of acetaminophen are due to oxidative reactions that take place during its metabolism. In this study we aimed to investigate the possible beneficial effect of 2-mercaptoethane sulphonate (MESNA), an antioxidant agent, against acetaminophen toxicity in mice. Balb-c mice were injected i.p. with: vehicle (the control group); a single dose of 150 mg kg(-1) MESNA (MES group); a single dose of 900 mg kg(-1) i.p. acetaminophen (AA4h and AA24h groups); and MESNA, at a dose of 150 mg kg(-1) after acetaminophen injection (AA4h-MES and AA24h-MES groups). The MESNA injection was repeated once more 12 h after the first injection in the AA24h-MES group. Blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine,
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels in blood and glutathione (GSH) and malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity and collagen contents in liver and kidney tissues were measured. Tissues also were examined microscopically. Blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine, which were increased significantly (P < 0.001) following acetaminophen treatment were decreased significantly (P < 0.05-0.001) after treatment with MESNA. The
ALT
and AST levels were also increased significantly (P < 0.001) after acetaminophen treatment but were not reduced with MESNA. Acetaminophen treatment caused a significant (P < 0.05-0.001) decrease in GSH levels whereas MDA levels and MPO activity were increased in both tissues. These changes were reversed by MESNA treatment.
Collagen
contents of the liver and kidney tissues were increased by acetaminophen treatment (P < 0.001) and reversed back to the control levels with MESNA. Our results imply that acetaminophen causes oxidative damage in hepatic and renal tissues and that MESNA, via its antioxidant effects, protects these tissues. Therefore, its therapeutic role as a 'tissue injury-limiting agent' must be elucidated further in drug-induced oxidative damage.
...
PMID:Protective effects of MESNA (2-mercaptoethane sulphonate) against acetaminophen-induced hepatorenal oxidative damage in mice. 1566 31
Among many detrimental injuries, alcohol is implicated in hepatitis, fatty liver, hepatic fibrosis, and cirrhosis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the protective effect of bio-active ceramic water on alcohol-induced hepatic injury in pigs. Twelve male Landrace pigs were divided into 3 groups. Groups 1, 2, and 3 were fed with bio-active ceramic water + normal liquid diet, bio-active ceramic water + liquid diet containing 15% ethanol, and tap water + liquid diet containing 15% ethanol for 12 weeks, respectively. For serological, histopathological, and immunohistochemical analysis, all pigs were sacrificed at week 12. In group 3, serum
ALT
and AST levels increased, and mild fatty change and moderate necrosis were detected in the liver.
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fibers, myofibroblasts, and CYP2E1 were also increased or activated in group 3. In group 2, there were mild hepatic injuries compared to group 3. However, injuries and activations were not observed in the liver in group 1. We suggest that the bio-active ceramic water used in the present study had protective capability against ethanol-induced hepatic injury and that having no toxic effect on the pig liver. The bio-active ceramic water might be useful as a therapeutic drinking water in patients suffering from alcoholic liver diseases.
...
PMID:Protective effects of bio-active ceramic water on alcohol-induced hepatic injury in pigs. 1587 91
The aim of this study was to assess the antioxidant and antifibrotic effects of chronic administration of 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate (MESNA) on oxidative liver damage and fibrosis induced by biliary obstruction in rats. Liver fibrosis was induced in male Wistar albino rats by bile duct ligation and scission (BDL). MESNA (150mg/kg, i.p.) or saline was administered for 28 days. At the end of the experiment, rats were killed by decapitation. Serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) levels were determined to assess liver function. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and lactate dehidrogenase (LDH) were also assayed in serum samples. Liver tissues were taken for determination of the free radicals, hepatic malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, an end product of lipid peroxidation; glutathione (GSH) levels, a key antioxidant; myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, as an indirect index of neutrophil infiltration. Hepatic collagen content, as a fibrosis marker was also determined. Serum AST,
ALT
, LDH and TNF-alpha levels were elevated in the BDL group as compared to control group, while this increase was significantly decreased by MESNA treatment. BDL caused a significant (p<0.05-0.001) decrease in GSH levels while MDA levels and MPO activity were increased in the liver tissue. These changes were reversed by MESNA treatment.
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contents of the liver tissue was increased by BDL (p<0.001), and reversed back to the control levels with MESNA. Since MESNA administration alleviated the BDL-induced oxidative injury of the liver and improved the hepatic functions, it seems likely that MESNA with its antioxidant and antifibrotic properties, may be of potential therapeutic value in protecting the liver fibrosis and oxidative injury due to biliary obstruction.
...
PMID:2-Mercaptoethane sulfonate (MESNA) protects against biliary obstruction-induced oxidative damage in rats. 1658 14
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