Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (glucose-6-phosphatase)
3,081 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Changes in the levels of serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase induced by dietary stimuli or starvation in hyperplastic nodules of rat liver during diethylnitrosamine or N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding were studied by immuno- and enzyme histochemical methods. The study was performed during carcinogenesis through a combined method of enzyme histochemistry and radioautography. Serine dehydratase was observed diffusely in the cytoplasm of the original hepatocytes in the periportal zone and was induced markedly during diethynitrosamine feeding but only slightly during N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding. The enzyme was deficient and not inducible in hyperplastic nodules during their developing phase. Later during the feeding period, however, there was an elevation of the level of serine dehydratase and its inducibility with time in the majority of the nodules. A good correlation was observed between serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase in their elevated levels and response to enviornmental stimuli. There was a minor group of hyperplastic nodules in which the deficiencies of these enzymes persisted and enzyme induction was not observed. A greater number of hyperplastic nodules with persistent enzyme deficiency was seen during diethylnitrosamine carcinogenesis. These results provide further information about the changing biological nature of hyperplastic nodules with respect to their metabolic adaptability and enzyme levels during hepatocarcinogenesis.
Cancer Res 1975 Apr
PMID:The regulation of serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase in hyperplastic nodules of rat liver during diethylnitrosamine and N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding. 16 97

Male Wistar rats were given 50 mug of aflatoxin B1 twice a week for 4 weeks, and thereafter 75 mug twice a week for 10 weeks. Their livers were investigated histologically and histochemically for glycogen, RNA, fat, alkaline and acid phosphatases, adenosine triphosphatase, 5'-nucleotidase, glucose-6-phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, succinic dehydrogenase, and alkaline and acid nucleases. No significant lesions occurred before 15 weeks. During this period, the liver was histochemically unchanged except for a periportal decrease of alkaline phosphatase and adenosine triphosphatase. Scattered hepatocytes with a strong glucose-6-phosphatase activity appeared. These changes represent toxic effects of aflatoxin B1 and are irrelevant to carcinogenesis. From 15 weeks onward, three types of liver cell hyperplastic foci and nodules developed. Histologically, and with respect to glycogen, fat, and RNA content, only two of these types were considered as potential precursors of hepatocarcinomas. However, all types exhibited a decrease or absence of the enzymes studied. Both histological and histochemical changes stressed the complex heterogeneity existing between and within hepatic foci and nodules. From 11 months on, hepatocarcinomas developed. The tumors disclosed similar histochemical changes. This similarity further supports the "precarcinomatous" nature of hyperplastic foci and nodules. It appears that focal changes in surface as well as in cytoplasmic and nuclear enzymes are intimately and very early linked to the carcinogenic process. Whether they are fundamental or only represent an epiphenomenon remains unclear.
Cancer Res 1975 Oct
PMID:Sequential histological and histochemical study of the rat liver during aflatoxin B1-induced carcinogenesis. 16 70

Plasma membranes from 6 spontaneously metastasizing and 4 non-metastasizing rat mammary carcinomata were isolated by discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation of microsomal pellets. The starting microsomal fraction contained 40-50% plasma membranes as determined by the levels of 5'-nucleotidase activity, with a negligible amount of nuclear (1%), mitochondrial (5%) and lysomal (7%) contamination. Five distinct fractions (F1-F5) were banded at densities 1 X 09, 1 X 13, 1 X 15, 1 X 17 and 1 X 21 at 25 degrees C, in addition to a pellet (F6) obtained by centrifuging at 76,000 g for 17 h. The fractions F1 through F5, all contained various concentrations of membranous structures, while the pellet (F6) contained only amorphous materials as evidenced by electron microscopy. The F3 fraction at the gradient 1 X 15 had the highest specific as well as total activity of the plasma membrane marker enzyme, with aggregates of the least contaminated plasma membranes in vesicular forms. This fraction also had the lowest specific activity for glucose-6-phosphatase (smooth ER marker) and for beta-D-glucuronidase (lysomal marker), and therefore was considered to be the "cleanest" plasma membrane fraction. When the activity of 4 additional plasma membrane marker enzymes, i.e., alkaline phosphatase, phosphodiesterase I, nucleotide pyrophosphatase and alkaline ribonuclease was determined in the same F3 fraction, their levels were significantly lower in every metastasizing tumour than in the non-metastasizing ones, with the enzyme activity decreasing in direct proportion to the metastasizing capacity. On the other hand, the marker enzymes were high in all non-metastasizing tumours, with the activity seemingly increasing with the immunogenicity of tumour cells. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups of mammary tumours in the levels of sialic acid, hexosamine, phospholipid or cholesterol in the plasma membranes. Thus, the level of plasma membrane marker enzymes is considered an accurate indicator for metastasizing capacity in the rat mammary tumour system.
Br J Cancer 1976 Jan
PMID:Plasma membrane associated enzymes of mammary tumours as the biochemical indicators of metastasizing capacity. Analyses of enriched plasma membrane preparations. 17 19

Six-week-old male Swiss mice were given 0.03% thioacetamide (TAA) in the diet 24, 72, and 168 hours after partial hepatectomy. TAA-treated mice from all three groups were killed when they were 4, 9, and 13 months old. Intact and partially hepatectomized animals on normal diets served as controls. None of the controls evidenced neoplasms at any age. All three experimental groups developed liver tumors earlier than did intact mice treated with the TAA diet. Progressive metabolic studies on the livers or tumor tissues of treated mice showed that the levels of glucose-6-phosphatase, fructose-1,6-diphosphatase, and glycogen decreased significantly in the 4-month-old treated group when there was no significant alteration in liver histology. These parameters were lowest in the tumor tissues of treated mice.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1976 Mar
PMID:Effect of partial hepatectomy on tumor incidence and metabolism of mice fed thioacetamide. 17 94

The histochemical method was used for determining glycogen, phosphorylase, glycogensynthetase, and glucose-6-phosphatase in order to evaluate the effect of progesterone on different morphological forms of cancer of the endometrium in man. On the basis of histochemical analysis of changes in the carbohydrate metabolism in 29 cases of cancer before and after treatment with progesterone a conclusion is drawn that sensitivity of tumours of the endometrium to hormonotherapy only partially depends upon the degree of their morphological differentiation.
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PMID:[A histochemical study of the effect of progesterone on the carbohydrate metabolism enzymes of different morphologic forms of endometrial cancer]. 17 78

For the biochemical characterization of a new transplantable hepatoma derived from the MC-29 virus-induced liver tumor, the macromolecular content and the inducibility of glucose-6-phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase were compared in chicken liver and in this hepatoma. The alteration of the nucleocytoplasmic ratio was deduced from measurements of DNA, RNA, protein, and phospholipid contents of the whole cell homogenate and cell fractions. The increased nuclear and decreased cytoplasmic content of macromolecules suggests a dominancy of the nuclei in the tumor cells. Glucose-6-phosphatase and aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activities were lower by 60 and 80%, respectively, in the highly proliferating hepatoma than in the liver. In contrast, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity increased in the hepatoma. However, enzyme inducers, such as methylcholanthrene, hydrocortisone, and insulin, were able to enhance the activity of these enzymes in the liver but had no stimulating effect on the hepatoma.
Cancer Res 1976 Jul
PMID:Biochemistry and enzyme induction in MC-29 virus-induced transplantable avian hepatoma. 17 98

Activities of a broad spectrum of enzymes were studied histochemically in renal adenocarcinomas induced in young male F344 rats by chronic dietary administration of the carcinogen N(4'-fluoro-4-biphenylyl)acetamide. Enzymes included were: dehydrogenases of glucose-6-phosphate, lactate, succinate, malate, and alpha-glycerophosphate; peroxidase (catalase); glucose-6-phosphatase; alkaline and acid phosphatase; Mg2+ ATPase; 5'-nucleotidase; and aminopeptidase. Levels of enzyme activity were estimated visually and scored from 0 (not detectable) to a maximum of 5 (intense). Comparison of estimated activity for each enzyme was made between small neoplastic nodules (stage III tumors) and large adenocarcinomas (stage IV tumors) and between tumors and portions of normal proximal tubules in parenchyma of kidneys from untreated control rats. The results, which revealed nearly identical levels of activity for most enzymes in both stages III and IV tumors, suggested similar metabolic and biologic behavior of these lesions. However, when data for tumors were compared with data for normal proximal tubules, striking differences were observed consistent with: 1) a marked shift of energy metabolism from oxidative to glycolytic production of ATP, with a corresponding reduction in mitochondrial respiration; and 2) simplification of plasma membrane specializations that were possibly associated with a reduction or loss of transport function. These findings were compared with other histochemical, biochemical, and ultrastructural studies of renal adenocarcinomas in rats and man.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1976 Oct
PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the kidney. II. Enzyme histochemistry of renal adenocarcinomas induced in rats by N-(4'-fluoro-4-biphenylyl)acetamide. 18 77

In this first paper of a series comparing the membranes of normal lymphocyte populations from male outbred Syrian hamsters with those of neoplastic transformants (GD 248) induced by simian virus 40, a method is described for the isolation of representative plasma membrane (PM) fragments from both cell types. Multiple criteria were used to monitor the purity and yield of PM material after cell disruption by nitrogen cavitation and after membrane fractionation by a combination of differential centrifugation and isopyknic ultracentrifugation in dextran density gradients. Lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination before cell disruption was used as an extrinsic surface marker; Na+,K+-activated ATPase, as well as alkaline phosphatase, was used as intrinsic functional PM markers. The distribution of nuclei, mitochondria, lysosomes, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) during fractionation was monitored by the measurement of DNA, succinate dehydrogenase and monoamine oxidase, beta-glucuronidase and glucose-6-phosphatase, and NADH:lipoamide oxidoreductase, respectively. According to the three PM markers employed, a 15- to 20-fold purification (over homogenate) and a PM yield of about 65% were obtained for both cell categories, with negligible contamination by DNA, mitochondria, lysosomes, and er. The procedure also allowed recovery of 60% of the mitochondria free of other cell elements.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1976 Nov
PMID:Membranes of normal hamster lymphocytes and lymphoid cells neoplastically transformed by simian virus 40. I. High-yield purification of plasma membrane fragments. 18 92

Six young adult male rhesus monkeys were given diethylnitrosamine ip for 3-5 years. Liver biospies were done monthly. After 6 months, biopsy specimens showed individual hepatocytes and small foci of hepatocytes that were intensely positive for glycogen. During the second and later years, larger foci of such cells developed. In sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin, the glycogen-containing hepatocytes generally appeared unusually clear. Some hepatocytes, however, had eosinophilic or basophilic cytoplasm. Nuclear enlargement and atypic developed, particularly outside the foci. The hepatocytes within most foci were uniform in their histochemical features: glycogen was elevated, glucose-6-phosphatase was decreased, and ATPase activity was present not only along the bile canalicular surface but also along the enire cell membrane. After 3-5 years, neoplastic nodules and hepatocarcinomas developed in 5 of 6 animals. Two nodules and particularly the heptocarcinomas differed from the foci in one of more histochemical parameters. The findings suggested that the glycogen-containing, histochemically altered cells of the foci in one or more histochemical parameters. The findings suggested that the glycogen-containing, histochemically altered cells of the foci may be the first step in the development of neoplasia; further steps toward malignancy appeared to be frequently associated with additional alterations, such as loss of sinusoidal ATPase and re-formation of glucose-6-phosphatase.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1976 Dec
PMID:Sequential hepatic histologic and histochemical changes produced by diethylnitrosamine in the rhesus monkey. 18 98

The standard lead precipitation method was used for ultracytochemical localization of glucose-6-phosphatase (G-6-Pase) in the in vivo and in vitro forms of the Chang rat hepatoma and in the normal adult rat liver. Reaction product was visualized as very fine particulate within the cisternae of the nuclear envelope and endoplasmic reticulum. Cytochemically, the amount of the G-6-Pase reaction product in both forms of the tumor cells was obviously less than that in the normal hepatocytes. Apparently, the enzyme was not completely deleted from the hepatoma cells. The results supported some biochemical data of certain other hepatomas. The successful ultracytochemical localization of G-6-Pase in cultured hepatoma cells has not been reported previously.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1977 May
PMID:Ultracytochemical localization of glucose-6-phosphatase in Chang rat hepatoma in vivo and in vitro. 19 99


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