Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a novel quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay, we have determined the amount of specific mRNA for procollagen alpha(1) (III) (PIIIP) in the carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)) model of liver fibrosis in rats. After a single week of CCl(4) application, the amount of PIIIP mRNA was increased approximately 10 times over the untreated control group and continued to increase to approximately 30 times after 7 weeks of intoxication. In this model substantial fibrosis was demonstrated by computer-aided morphometry after 5 to 7 weeks of treatment. Using recombinant murine N-terminal procollagen alpha(1) (III) propeptide (PIIINP), a novel sensitive immunoassay for the measurement of circulating PIIINP in rodent sera was established. An increase in PIIINP serum levels was observed after 5 to 7 weeks of CCl(4) intoxication. Our results suggest PIIIP gene expression is an early marker of tissue fibrosis. Early PIIIP gene expression is correlated with the extent of the subsequent fibrosis. PIIIP mRNA levels increase much earlier than conventional histological examination or PIIINP levels. PIIINP measurements with our new serum assay, on the other hand, are a good noninvasive marker of manifest fibrosis but are a poor marker of fibrogenesis.
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PMID:Two assays for measuring fibrosis: reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction of collagen alpha(1) (III) mRNA is an early predictor of subsequent collagen deposition while a novel serum N-terminal procollagen (III) propeptide assay reflects manifest fibrosis in carbon tetrachloride-treated rats. 1055 96

The present study examined the roles of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR) in activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSC), a pivotal event in liver fibrogenesis. RNase protection assay detected mRNA for PPARgamma1 but not that for the adipocyte-specific gamma2 isoform in HSC isolated from sham-operated rats, whereas the transcripts for neither isoforms were detectable in HSC from cholestatic liver fibrosis induced by bile duct ligation (BDL). Semi-quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction confirmed a 70% reduction in PPARgamma mRNA level in HSC from BDL. Nuclear extracts from BDL cells showed an expected diminution of binding to PPAR-responsive element, whereas NF-kappaB and AP-1 binding were increased. Treatment of cultured-activated HSC with ligands for PPARgamma (10 microm 15-deoxy-Delta(12,14)-PGJ(2) (15dPGJ(2)); 0.1 approximately 10 microm BRL49653) inhibited DNA and collagen synthesis without affecting the cell viability. Suppression of HSC collagen by 15dPGJ(2) was abrogated 70% by the concomitant treatment with a PPARgamma antagonist (GW9662). HSC DNA and collagen synthesis were inhibited by WY14643 at the concentrations known to activate both PPARalpha and gamma (>100 microm) but not at those that only activate PPARalpha (<10 microm) or by a synthetic PPARalpha-selective agonist (GW9578). 15dPGJ(2) reduced alpha1(I) procollagen, smooth muscle alpha-actin, and monocyte chemotactic protein-1 mRNA levels while inducing matrix metalloproteinase-3 and CD36. 15dPGJ(2) and BRL49653 inhibited alpha1(I) procollagen promoter activity. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (10 ng/ml) reduced PPARgamma mRNA, and this effect was prevented by the treatment with 15dPGJ(2). These results demonstrate that HSC activation is associated with the reductions in PPARgamma expression and PPAR-responsive element binding in vivo and is reversed by the treatment with PPARgamma ligands in vitro. These findings implicate diminished PPARgamma signaling in molecular mechanisms underlying activation of HSC in liver fibrogenesis and the potential therapeutic value of PPARgamma ligands for liver fibrosis.
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PMID:Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors and hepatic stellate cell activation. 1096 82

Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) are responsible for type I collagen deposition in liver fibrosis that leads to cirrhosis. The purpose of this study was to examine potential molecular signals that lead to increased alpha(2)(I) collagen gene expression by acetaldehyde, the primary metabolite of alcohol and malondialdehyde (MDA), a lipid peroxidation product known to be associated with chronic liver injury. MDA and the combination of MDA and acetaldehyde were employed to determine the effect on alpha(2)(I) collagen gene expression as assessed by transient transfection analysis and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Immunoblot and subsequent immunoprecipitation analysis examined stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) activity. Cotransfection with a dominant negative mutant for c-jun nuclear kinase (dnJNK1) was also employed with the alpha(2)(I) collagen promoter. MDA increased alpha(2)(I) collagen gene expression nearly 2.5- to 3-fold, however there was no synergistic effect of the combination of acetaldehyde and MDA on alpha(2)(I) collagen gene activation and expression. Acetaldehyde, MDA, or both significantly increased JNK activity when compared to untreated stellate cells. The dnJNK1 expression vector abrogated alpha(2)(I) collagen transgene activity. In conclusion, JNK activation appears to be critical in the signaling cascade of oxidative metabolites of chronic alcohol-related liver injury and collagen gene activation.
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PMID:Aldehydes potentiate alpha(2)(I) collagen gene activity by JNK in hepatic stellate cells. 1129 27

The pathogenesis of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-associated liver injury involves many genes from multiple pathogenic pathways. cDNA array analysis, which examines the expression of many genes simultaneously, was used to achieve new insights into HCV liver injury. Membrane-based cDNA arrays of 874 genes compared HCV-associated cirrhosis with autoimmune hepatitis-associated cirrhosis as an inflammatory and cirrhotic control, and with nondiseased liver tissue. Array analysis identified many differentially expressed genes that are important in inflammation, fibrosis, proliferation, signaling, apoptosis, and oxidative stress. Genes up-regulated in HCV-associated cirrhosis were predominantly associated with a Th1 immune response, fibrosis, cellular proliferation, and apoptosis. Novel observations of differential gene expression included increased expression of secreted apoptosis-related protein 3, a Wnt pathway gene possibly involved in cellular apoptosis. EMMPRIN (CD147) and discoidin domain receptor 1 (CD167) were also shown to be increased and are likely to play a role in liver fibrosis. Real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction confirmed the increased expression of 15 genes. The comparison of HCV cirrhosis with autoimmune hepatitis cirrhosis showed a marked difference in the apoptosis-associated gene profile with HCV cirrhosis characterized by increased proapoptotic gene expression whereas autoimmune hepatitis was characterized by increased expression of both antiapoptotic and proapoptotic genes. Furthermore, expression of beta-catenin and the fibrosis-associated protein EMMPRIN were localized by immunohistochemistry to the plasma membranes of hepatocytes and biliary epithelium. In conclusion, HCV-associated cirrhosis was characterized by a proinflammatory, profibrotic, and proapoptotic gene expression profile.
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PMID:Insights into the pathobiology of hepatitis C virus-associated cirrhosis: analysis of intrahepatic differential gene expression. 1183 85

Heparanase (hep) degrades heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPGs), which are the main components of the extracellular matrix. This process has been considered as the first step of tumour invasion or metastasis. However, HSPGs play an important role in signal transduction. Thus, the degradation of HSPGs by hep may suppress tumour cell growth. In the present study, we investigated the clinicopathological importance of enhanced hep mRNA expression in 48 hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) and in 48 non-cancerous liver samples obtained from the same patients by quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Spontaneous apoptosis in the hepatocytes was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. The relative hep mRNA expression levels were described as hep/glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) ratios. The hep mRNA levels of HCCs were significantly lower than those of non-cancerous livers (P<0.001). Hep mRNA levels decreased with increasing liver fibrosis. A significant positive correlation between hep gene expression and spontaneous apoptosis was detected. Hep expression in the tumours did not correlate with tumour differentiation or with tumour stage. However, low hep gene expression was associated with a poor disease-free survival of the patients. Thus, hep gene expression may play an important role in programmed cell death and this gene expression may be lost during the malignant transformation of hepatocytes.
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PMID:Heparanase gene expression and its correlation with spontaneous apoptosis in hepatocytes of cirrhotic liver and carcinoma. 1250 63

The molecular mechanisms of acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, end-stage hepatitis (cirrhosis), and hepatocellular carcinoma have been extensively studied, but little is known of the changes in liver gene expression during the early stages of liver fibrosis associated with chronic HCV infection, that is, the transition from normal liver (NL) of uninfected patients to the first stage of liver fibrosis (F1-CH-C). To obtain insight into the molecular pathogenesis of F1-CH-C, we used real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to study the mRNA expression of 240 selected genes in liver tissue with F1-CH-C, in comparison with NL. The expression of 54 (22.5%) of the 240 genes was significantly different between F1-CH-C and NL; 46 genes were upregulated and 8 were downregulated in F1-CH-C. The most noteworthy changes in gene expression mainly affected the transcriptional network regulated by interferons (IFNs), including both IFN-alpha/beta-inducible genes (STAT1, STAT2, ISGF3G/IRF9, IFI27, G1P3, G1P2, OAS2, MX1) and IFN-gamma-inducible genes (CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11). Interesting, upregulation of IFN-alpha/beta-inducible genes (but not IFN-gamma-inducible genes) was independent of histological scores (grade and stage of fibrosis) and HCV characteristics (hepatic HCV mRNA levels and the HCV genotype), and was specific to HCV (as compared to hepatitis B virus (HBV)). Other genes dysregulated in F1-CH-C, albeit less markedly than IFN-alpha/beta- and IFN-gamma-inducible genes, were mainly involved in the activation of lymphocytes infiltrating the liver (IFNG, TNF, CXCL6, IL6, CCL8, CXCR3, CXCR4, CCR2), cell proliferation (p16/CDKN2A, MKI67, p14/ARF), extracellular matrix remodeling (MMP9, ITGA2), lymphangiogenesis (XLKD1/LYVE), oxidative stress (CYP2E1), and cytoskeleton microtubule organization (STMN2/SCG10). Thus, a limited number of signaling pathways, and particularly the transcriptional network regulated by interferons, are dysregulated in the first stage of HCV-induced liver fibrosis. Some of the genes identified here could form the basis for new approaches aimed at refining IFN-based therapies for chronic HCV infection.
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PMID:Molecular profiling of early stage liver fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection. 1566 Nov 46

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are the proteases responsible for tissue remodeling during liver fibrosis caused by various disorders including biliary atresia. However, information regarding the relative contribution of these proteases to liver fibrosis is still limited. We studied matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), -7, -9 and -13 mRNA expressions in the liver tissue of early-stage biliary atresia at the time of Kasai's procedure, late-stage biliary atresia at the time of liver transplantation with advanced fibrosis and nondiseased control without liver fibrosis. The results of real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR analysis revealed that only MMP-2 and -7 expressions were significantly different between groups. MMP-2 was significantly higher in Liver Transplantation group than both in Control (P=0.010) and in Kasai's Procedure (P=0.001) groups, whereas the difference of MMP-2 expression between Control and Kasai's Procedure was not significant. However, the relative expression level of MMP-7 was sequentially elevated when comparing Control, Kasai's Procedure and Liver Transplantation groups, and there was significant (P=0.019) difference when comparing Control and Liver Transplantation groups. Moreover, the fold difference in MMP-7 mRNA was much higher than that in MMP-2 mRNA between groups. The expressions of MMP-7 were further confirmed by agarose gel electrophoresis and Western blotting. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed a significant positive correlation of the scores of MMP-7 immunostaining with the stages of liver fibrosis. In situ hybridization demonstrated that the bile ductular epithelial cells, Kupffer cells and hepatocytes were the major producers of matrix metalloproteinase-7 in the liver. Our results imply that MMP-7 is a major MMP associated with the tissue remodeling during the progression of liver fibrosis in biliary atresia.
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PMID:Matrilysin (MMP-7) is a major matrix metalloproteinase upregulated in biliary atresia-associated liver fibrosis. 1569 17

Although leptin is a key adipokine promoting liver fibrosis, adiponectin may prevent liver injury. To determine the role of these adipokines in liver fibrosis and to understand their expression in vivo, fa/fa rats and their lean littermates were subjected to bile duct ligation (BDL). Histomorphometry for collagen and alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) revealed that lean rats, but not fa/fa littermates, had significant fibrosis with abundant hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation. The lean-BDL rats had significantly higher leptin concentrations in the hepatic vein than lean sham-operated, fa/fa BDL, or fa/fa sham-operated rats. Co-localization of leptin and alpha-SMA in activated HSCs was observed by immunohistochemistry. Real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and Western blot analysis confirmed the presence of leptin and alpha-SMA in activated, but not quiescent, HSCs, whereas only quiescent HSCs synthesized adiponectin mRNA and protein. Adiponectin overexpression in activated HSCs reduced proliferation, augmented apoptosis, and reduced expression of alpha-SMA and proliferating cell nuclear antigen. Adiponectin receptors (AdipoR1 and AdipoR2) were detected in both activated and quiescent HSCs, but only activated HSCs produced significant apoptosis after treatment with either globular or full-length adiponectin. Adiponectin may act to reverse HSC activation, maintain HSC quiescence, or significantly, may have important therapeutic implications in liver fibrosis.
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PMID:The roles of leptin and adiponectin: a novel paradigm in adipocytokine regulation of liver fibrosis and stellate cell biology. 1592 Jan 51

A triplex-forming oligonucleotide (TFO) specific for type alpha1(I) collagen promoter is a promising candidate for treating liver fibrosis. Earlier, we determined the pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of TFO after systemic administration into normal and fibrotic rats. In this study, we conjugated cholesterol to the 3' end of the TFO via a disulfide bond and determined its cellular and nuclear uptake and bioactivity using HSC-T6 cell lines in vitro, followed by biodistribution at whole-body, organ (liver), and subcellular levels. Conjugation with cholesterol had little effect on the triplex-forming ability of the TFO with target duplex DNA, and the cellular uptake of (33)P-TFO-cholesterol (Chol) increased by 2- to approximately 4-fold. Real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis after transfection of HSC-T6 cells with TFO-Chol or TFO indicated that TFO-Chol had higher inhibition on type alpha1(I) collagen primary transcript than naked TFO at low concentration (200 nM) but showed similar inhibition at higher concentration (500 and 1000 nM). There was increase in the inhibition on primary transcript with transfection time. The hepatic uptake of (33)P-TFO-Chol after systemic administration was 72.22% of the dose compared with 45.8% of (33)P-TFO. There was significant increase in the uptake of (33)P-TFO-Chol by hepatic stellate cells and hepatocytes. More importantly, the nuclear uptake of TFO-Chol was higher than TFO in cell culture system and in vivo studies. In conclusion, TFO-Chol is a potential antifibrotic agent.
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PMID:Enhanced hepatic uptake and bioactivity of type alpha1(I) collagen gene promoter-specific triplex-forming oligonucleotides after conjugation with cholesterol. 1645 92

The purpose of this study was to investigate the hepatoprotective effects of a fermented substance from Aspergillus phoenicis (FSAP) on chronic liver injuries induced by carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)) in rats. CCl(4) (20%; 0.2 ml/100 g body weight) was given twice a week for 9 weeks, and the rats received FSAP throughout the whole experimental period. Plasma ALT and AST, spleen weight, and hepatic levels of lipid peroxidation and hydroxyproline were significantly lower in the rats treated with FSAP as compared to CCl(4) only. Liver pathology in the FSAP-treated rats was also improved. Real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) analysis showed that FSAP treatment increased the expression of matrix metalloproteinase 13 and decreased the expression of methionine adenosyltransferase 2A, collagen (alpha1)(I), collagen (alpha1)(III), transforming growth factor-beta1, and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1. These results clearly indicate that FSAP partially reduced the liver fibrosis in rats induced by CCl(4).
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PMID:A fermented substance from Aspergillus phoenicis reduces liver fibrosis induced by carbon tetrachloride in rats. 1748 51


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