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)

The relationships between the gross appearance, histologic types, and cytochemical characteristics of hepatocellular neoplasms were studied in B6C3F1 mice given the liver carcinogen diethylnitrosamine either alone or followed by the organochlorine pesticides, 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, chlordane, or heptachlor as promoting agents. Hepatocellular neoplasms were categorized according to their cytoplasmic staining properties with hematoxylin and eosin. Acidophilic neoplasms more often displayed increased activity of alkaline phosphatase than did basophilic neoplasms. The activities of glucose-6-phosphatase and adenosine triphosphatase were decreased in both acidophilic and basophilic neoplasms. There was no difference in the activities of these enzymes or gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase between adenomas and carcinomas, although most neoplasms did not display gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. Chlordane or heptachlor exposure increased the alkaline phosphatase activity in neoplastic cells, but not that of other enzymes. The majority of neoplasms displayed a deficiency of iron accumulation. The macroscopic appearance of neoplasms was closely related to their cytoplasmic staining properties and cytochemical characteristics.
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PMID:Morphologic and cytochemical properties of mouse liver neoplasms induced by diethylnitrosamine and promoted by 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, chlordane, or heptachlor. 242 23

The Solt-Farber protocol, in the absence of an initiating agent, was used to examine the precursor-product relationship between oval cells and hepatocytes in rat liver. The animals were administered 2-acetylaminofluorene (AAF) by gavage for 2 wk combined with partial hepatectomy 1 wk after administering AAF Two dose levels of AAF were used: 9- and 21-mg total dose for animals in Groups I and II, respectively. [3H]Thymidine was administered i.p. to one-half of the animals at Day 6 post-partial hepatectomy. Animals were sacrificed 7, 9, 11, and 13 days after surgery. Only oval cells became labeled on Day 7 in both groups. On Day 9 both labeled oval cells and labeled basophilic hepatocytes were present in Group I, whereas in Group II only oval cells remained labeled. On Days 11 and 13 both oval cells and basophilic hepatocytes were labeled in both groups. The total amount of radioactivity in Group II livers remained the same on Day 9 when only labeled oval cells were present and on Days 11 and 13 when both labeled oval cells and labeled basophilic hepatocytes were present. The calculated half-life for basophilic hepatocytes was about 50 h. The differentiation of oval cells into basophilic hepatocytes was delayed in Group II as compared to Group I, and the higher dose of AAF also induced the formation of both intestinal metaplasia and bile duct formation. In situ hybridization with an alpha-fetoprotein probe showed a strong expression in groups of typical oval cells and in cells arranged in duct-like structures. In addition a transient expression of AFP was also observed in the areas of basophilic hepatocytes 9 to 11 days after partial hepatectomy. Administration of AAF decreased the level of albumin mRNA in preexisting hepatocytes and caused a significant decrease of serum albumin. In contrast, oval cells showed a strong albumin expression, and basophilic hepatocytes formed islands of albumin-expressing cells. Oval cells and the foci of early basophilic hepatocytes lacked glucose-6-phosphatase activity. At Day 13 significant numbers of basophilic hepatocytes were positive for glucose-6-phosphatase. Oval cells were strongly gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase positive, whereas the foci of basophilic hepatocytes were negative for gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. Only occasionally were transiently gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase-positive hepatocytes observed in basophilic foci. In summary our data indicate that oval cells can differentiate to hepatocytes and may have an important physiological function as a source of major serum proteins when hepatocytes are unable to synthesize these proteins.
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PMID:In vivo differentiation of rat liver oval cells into hepatocytes. 246 57

The effect of feeding hypolipidemic peroxisome proliferators on the induction of altered hepatic foci (AHF) in Fischer rats was studied in order to determine whether such agents can induce or promote the development of AHF. In the first study, rats were fed ciprofibrate (10 mg/kg/day) for 1 yr. AHF, neoplastic nodules, and hepatocellular carcinomas were induced. The presence of putative gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) activity was numerically the most common marker, although it was absent in larger foci and nodules. A deficiency in canalicular ATPase and glucose-6-phosphatase provided the best markers for the larger foci and nodules. In the second study, rats were subjected to partial hepatectomy, and half of the animals were then intubated with diethylnitrosamine (10 mg/kg). One wk later, rats were fed Wy-14,643 at concentrations of 0, 0.05, and 0.1% in the diet for 6 mo. At 6 mo, the number and volume of foci were increased by the feeding of Wy-14,643 after partial hepatectomy alone and were greatly increased when Wy-14,643 was fed after partial hepatectomy/diethylnitrosamine administration. Canalicular adenosine triphosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase deficiencies were the most common markers of AHF, and AHF of these phenotypes occupied practically all of the focal volume. The larger AHF did not express GGT, and those foci exhibiting GGT were much less common and occupied very little volume. The absence of the GGT protein itself, as opposed to an inhibition of GGT activity, was verified by immunohistochemical staining using an antibody to GGT. These studies show that hypolipidemic peroxisome proliferators can stimulate an increase in AHF following a single dose of diethylnitrosamine and a mitotic stimulus, and they thus can act as promoters in two-stage liver carcinogenesis. GGT is a poor marker for identifying AHF induced by peroxisome proliferators during the early, premalignant phase of hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Induction of altered hepatic foci in rats by the administration of hypolipidemic peroxisome proliferators alone or following a single dose of diethylnitrosamine. 287 87

The exposure of rats to a dietary regimen containing 2-acetylaminofluorene induces a sequence of hepatocellular alterations leading to the development of preneoplastic nodules. Groups of 2-acetylaminofluorene-treated rats were given glutathione or N-acetylcysteine to evaluate the effects of these different thiols on the sequence of events that originate transformed cells. It is well known that intracellular thiols protect biological macromolecules from scavenging free radicals and electrophilic compounds produced by the metabolism of chemical agents. Male Wistar rats were maintained on a feeding regimen containing 0.05% 2-acetylaminofluorene. The diet of 2 groups of 2-acetylaminofluorene-treated animals was supplemented with either 0.1% glutathione or N-acetylcysteine. The effects in the liver of the exogenously supplied thiols during 2-acetylaminofluorene treatment were assessed evaluating DNA damage, glutathione levels, activity of marker enzymes glucose-6-phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, and glutathione-S-transferase, survival rates, and development of salivary gland tumors. Our results demonstrate that the mortality due to 2-acetylaminofluorene exposure was reduced or completely abolished by thiols and that the development of salivary gland tumors was inhibited. Exogenously supplied thiols significantly reduced DNA damage as assessed by alkaline elution. At the doses employed, glutathione and N-acetylcysteine induce early stimulation of glutathione-S-transferase, had little effect on the loss of glucose-6-phosphatase activity and scanty influence on the net increase in gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase activity.
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PMID:Effect of glutathione and N-acetylcysteine on hepatocellular modifications induced by 2-acetylaminofluorene. 288 Mar 83

A rapid increase in the fraction of small liver cells was observed in the liver of rats during the early stage of hepatocarcinogenesis by 3'-methyl-4-dimethylaminoazobenzene (3'-Me-DAB). The change in cell population was represented by the decrease in glucose-6-phosphatase activity and by the increase in number of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase-positive cells. When DNA synthesis of liver cells from rats fed 3'-Me-DAB was measured by autoradiography in primary culture, it began to increase 2 weeks after the start of the carcinogen feeding, reaching a plateau level after 3 weeks. Liver cells from rats fed 3'-Me-DAB for 2 weeks or over demonstrated a remarkable resistance to the cytotoxic effect of the carcinogen (0.24 mM) in primary culture. Furthermore, liver cells from rats fed 3'-Me-DAB for 3 weeks or over proliferated in the presence of the carcinogen in primary culture. When liver cells from 3'-Me-DAB-fed and control rats were transplanted into syngeneic rat spleens, the former cells proliferated more vigorously than did the latter. The growth potential of liver cells from 3'-Me-DAB-fed rats tended to be enhanced with time in the carcinogen feeding. Hepatocellular carcinomas developed in the host spleens implanted with liver cells from a rat fed 3'-Me-DAB for 8 weeks. As described above, liver cells from rats fed 3'-Me-DAB demonstrated much greater proliferative ability than normal control cells in vivo and in vitro.
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PMID:In vivo and in vitro test for growth potential of liver cells from rats during early stage of hepatocarcinogenesis by 3'-methyl-4-dimethylaminoazobenzene. 292 Dec 69

The relative potency of chemicals as promoting agents in multistage hepatocarcinogenesis has been previously defined as the Promotion Index through calculations of quantitative stereology. The Promotion Index is a function of the total cell population of altered hepatic foci in the liver at any given time and dose of promoting agent. When the Promotion Index was determined as a function of the dose of phenobarbital given in the diet for varying periods of time, a value of 394 was obtained for doses less than 0.01%; at doses between 0.01% and 0.1%, the Promotion Index was found to be 47. These values were obtained by the extrapolation of slopes of the Promotion Indices at various doses and durations of administration of phenobarbital. The volume percentages of the liver occupied by seven possible phenotypes using three different markers (gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, canalicular ATPase and glucose-6-phosphatase) were relatively constant in distribution for up to one year of phenobarbital administration except at the two highest doses employed, 0.5% and 0.1%, at which a maximal effect of the promoting agent has been obtained. Possible mechanisms for the biphasic relationship of the Promotion Index of phenobarbital with the dose and time of administration are discussed.
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PMID:The effects of dose and duration of administration on the promotion index of phenobarbital in multistage hepatocarcinogenesis in the rat. 317 34

Suspensions of freshly isolated hepatocytes were prepared by collagenase perfusion of livers of adult Fischer 344 female rats. The cells were injected into the dorsal fascia of 2/3 partially hepatectomized syngeneic hosts (10(6) cells per injection site) and were monitored from 3 days to 3 months after injection. Brown nodules developed at the transplantation site. Histologic examination of the nodules revealed that the hepatocytes were arranged in cords and clusters surrounded by fibrovascular connective tissue. Bile ductules were also seen. Hepatocytes were positive for glucose-6-phosphatase. Staining for gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase showed that the parenchymal hepatocytes were mostly (approximately 95%) negative, whereas bile ductules were positive. These histochemical findings were seen in hepatocytes up to 3 months after transplantation and did not vary with the age of the transplants. Electron-microscopic examination of the transplanted nodules demonstrated that the cells maintained the characteristics of hepatocellular cytoplasmic structure. The relationship between the bile canaliculi and the stromal vessels was found to be similar to the bile canaliculi and hepatic sinusoid polarity seen in the normal liver. Autoradiographic analysis showed that a fraction of the transplanted cells was active in DNA synthesis. This system may become a tool in the study of survival and neoplastic transformation of hepatocytes as a result of exposure to X-irradiation and chemical carcinogens.
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PMID:Morphologic and histochemical analysis of hepatocytes transplanted into syngeneic hosts. 610 19

This study was undertaken to answer the following question. Is the phenotypic diversity that is characteristic of hepatocellular carcinomas acquired early during carcinogenesis, or is it more likely to be a property added late in the process? This question was posed using a new model for the sequential analysis of hepatocarcinogenesis. This model utilizes a single initiating dose of a carcinogen, such as diethylnitrosamine, followed by the selective stimulation of the rare, initiated hepatocyte to proliferate under conditions in which the proliferation of the majority of uninitiated hepatocytes is inhibited. Under these conditions, discrete early foci of altered hepatocytes and hyperplastic foci and nodules are quite well synchronized for about 10 to 12 cell cycles, after which the synchrony is progressively lost. As phenotypic expressions, cell proliferation, judged by radioautography after the administration of [3H]thymidine and the activities of four enzyme markers, two positive ones, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and DT-diaphorase, and two negative ones, glucose-6-phosphatase and adenosine triphosphatase, all judged histochemically, were used. At the earliest time of observation, 7 days, and at subsequent time points thereafter, all histologically recognizable foci and nodules showed variable degrees of staining for each enzyme activity. Prior to selection, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase activity was much more consistent than was that of the others; however, during and after the selection, the four markers showed almost the same consistency among developing lesions. During the period of selection, between 80 and 90% of hepatocytes in the proliferating nodules were labeled with [3H]thymidine, while only an occasional labeled hepatocyte was seen in the foci prior to selection and in the nodules following selection. In the postselection period, the majority of nodules acquired the histochemical and architectural properties of normal liver, while a minority persisted as typical hyperplastic nodules. This study suggests that phenotypes of carcinogen-altered hepatocytes are variable, but whether the histochemical diversity among the lesions is merely due to environmental variation or is a reflection of a more basic genotypic variability remains a fundamental question.
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PMID:Phenotypic diversity as an early property of putative preneoplastic hepatocyte populations in liver carcinogenesis. 611 Apr 77

The change in the activity of several hepatic enzymes during hepatocarcinogenesis suggests a pattern of dedifferentiation. This category of enzymes includes glucose-6-phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). A detailed kinetic analysis of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase activity revealed that both the translocase and phosphohydrolase activities were markedly reduced in Morris 7777 hepatoma transplanted in male Buffalo rats. In addition, the activity of the translocase component increased 2.4-fold, while the phosphohydrolase activity decreased 1.6-fold in the liver of tumor-bearing animals. GGT activity in the host liver was not effected by the presence of the tumor. These results suggest differences in the effect of Morris 7777 hepatoma on: the phosphohydrolase and translocase activities of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and the sensitivity of glucose-6-phosphatase and GGT activities in the host liver.
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PMID:Effect of Morris 7777 hepatoma on microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase latent activity. 614 32

Putative preneoplastic hepatocytes were isolated from male Fischer 344 rats treated with a single dose of diethylnitrosamine, 2-acetylaminofluorene feeding, and partial hepatectomy (Solt-Farber model). The isolation procedure involved, after collagenase dispersion of the liver, separation of the hepatocytes into small- and large-cell fractions by centrifugal elutriation, and subsequent selection of cells deficient in asialoglycoprotein receptor(s) by plating onto asialofetuin (ASF)-coated plates. The number of cell surface binding sites for the asialoglycoprotein receptor was measured with both asialoorosomucoid and ASF as ligands. There was a 50% reduction of binding sites for both ligands in the original cell suspensions obtained from preneoplastic livers. The reduction in receptor binding sites was most pronounced in the large cell fraction (less than or equal to 30% of control value) after separating the original cell suspension by elutriation into small and large cell fractions. Immunohistochemical studies showed a lack of asialoglycoprotein receptor in preneoplastic (i.e., hyperplastic foci) areas. These areas were entirely super-imposable with glucose-6-phosphatase-deficient areas and partially overlapped the gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase-positive areas in serial liver sections. The attachment of preneoplastic hepatocytes to ASF-coated tissue culture dishes was greatly impaired, and the number of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase-positive cells on the ASF dishes was reduced to less than 7% as compared to 45 to 70% on the collagen-coated plates. Thus, the lack of asialoglycoprotein (asialofetuin) surface receptors and the increased size of the early preneoplastic hepatocytes are characteristics that can be used to separate the preneoplastic cell population from normal liver cells.
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PMID:Isolation of preneoplastic rat liver cells by centrifugal elutriation and binding to asialofetuin. 620


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