Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transcriptional slippage was previously found in Escherichia coli during RNA elongation at runs of 10 or more As or Ts, resulting in the addition of untemplated A or U residues. To evaluate the incidence of transcriptional slippage in vivo, we employed a yeast functional assay, and analyzed the frequency and spectrum of mutations in mRNA of the tumor suppressor p53 in rat tissues. In this assay, yeast are transfected with p53 PCR products and a gapped p53 expression vector, which allow homologous recombination in vivo and yield a percentage of red colonies which reflects the proportion of mutant PCR products. Insertion mutations of single base of adenine (A) at stretches of 6 As were frequently detected in the liver samples of
LEC
rats which develop spontaneous
hepatitis
and hepatocellular carcinoma. For excluding the possibility of artifacts involvement, p53 cDNA was amplified by PCR from plasmids containing wild-type p53 and tested with the yeast functional assay, which resulted in no A insertion after sequencing 23 mutant clones. Furthermore, in vitro transcript of wild-type p53 was synthesized by SP6 RNA polymerase, and then, reverse-transcribed, PCR-amplified, and tested with the yeast functional assay. The overall rate of A insertion was much lower than that in the
LEC
rat liver. Since A insertions were found predominantly at nucleotides 293-298 in exon 4, an exon 4-specific yeast functional assay was developed. A insertion was detected in 4.8% of the PCR product of mRNA but 0-0.1% from genomic DNA, which suggested that such A insertion was caused by transcriptional slippage in vivo. The A insertion rate abruptly increased in acute hepatitis stage in the
LEC
rat liver, while the rate slowly increased by aging in control WKAH rat liver. It was suggested that cell damage and aging were primarily responsible for the increased rate of transcriptional slippage.
...
PMID:[Analysis of transcript mutations due to transcriptional slippage in rat p53 tumor suppressor gene with the use of yeast functional assay]. 1042 62
GDP-L-Fuc:N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminide alpha1-6-fucosyltransferase (alpha1-6FucT) catalyzes the transfer of fucose from GDP-Fuc to N-linked type complex glycoproteins. This enzyme was purified from a human fibroblast cell line, porcine brain, a human gastric cancer cell line and human blood platelets. cDNA cloning of porcine and human alpha1-6FucT was performed from a porcine brain and gastric cancer cell cDNA libraries, respectively. Their homology is 92.2% at the nucleotide level and 95.7% at the amino acid level. No putative N-glycosylation sites were found in the predicted amino acid sequence. No homology to other fucosyltransferases such as alpha1-2FucT, alpha1-3FucT and alpha1-4FucT was found except for a region consisting of nine amino acids. The alpha1-6FucT gene is located at chromosome 14q24.3, which is also a different location from other fucosyltransferases reported to date. The alpha1-6FucT gene is the oldest gene family in the phylogenic trees among the nine cloned fucosyltransferase genes. alpha1-6FucT is widely expressed in various rat tissues and the expression of alpha1-6FucT in the liver is enhanced during hepatocarcinogenesis of
LEC
rats which develop hereditary
hepatitis
and hepatomas. In cases of human liver diseases, alpha1-6FucT is expressed in both hepatoma tissues and their surrounding tissues with chronic liver disease, but not in the case of normal liver. Serum alpha1-6-fucosylated alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) has been employed for an early diagnosis of patients with hepatoma. The mechanisms by which alpha1-6 fucosylation of AFP occurs in the hepatoma is not due to the up-regulation of alpha1-6FucT alone. Interestingly, when the alpha1-6FucT gene is transfected into Hep3B, a human hepatoma cell line, tumor formation in the liver of nude mice after splenic injection is dramatically suppressed. In this review, we focus on alpha1-6FucT and summarize its properties, gene expression and biological significance.
...
PMID:The alpha1-6-fucosyltransferase gene and its biological significance. 1058 Jan 26
An inbred rat strain,
LEC
(long evans cinnamon) has been used as a model of human Wilson's disease. This animal suffers from a severe type of
hepatitis
, the clinical manifestations of which are similar to human fulminant
hepatitis
for 4-5 months which is caused by accumulation of copper in the liver. The surviving rats develop chronic hepatitis, followed by the development of spontaneous hepatoma. In contrast to studies with hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs), the studies have great advantages in that the animals have identical genetic background, can be raised under a fixed condition, and the development of HCC is reproducible. We took two HCC samples and analysed their genomic DNA using RLGS (restriction landmark genomic scanning), which involves two-dimensional electrophoresis of genomic DNA allowing the survey of some 1,000 NotI sites throughout the genome. Using this technique, we discovered landmark spots that were either decreased or increased in intensity in HCC and compared them with the RLGS profile obtained from the DNA of control normal
LEC
rat liver. Approximately 1,300 spots were compared, and the intensity of two spots was found to be decreased about half and one was increased 1.3-1.7 folds. Although the mechanism of these changes and the properties of the changed DNA are yet to be studied, recurrent genomic changes in the
LEC
rat HCC could prove to be a good model system for elucidating the essential genetic events in association with hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Genomic DNA analyses of spontaneous hepatocellular carcinomas in LEC rat liver using a new technique. 1067 78
A zinc (Zn)-binding protein that is present specifically in the livers of male adult rats was detected by HPLC with in-line detection by mass spectrometry (ICP MS). The Zn-binding protein was purified on Sephadex G-75 and G3000SW HPLC columns. and was identified as carbonic anhydrase III (CAIII) based on the amino acid sequence of a peptide obtained on lysyl endopeptidase digestion. CAIII is expressed as one of the major Zn-binding proteins in the livers of male rats in an age-dependent manner, a comparable amount of Zn to that of copper, Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD) being bound to CAIII at 8 weeks of age. Castration at 4 or 8 weeks of age was shown to reduce Zn bound to CAIII to 47.5% of the sham-operated control level, suggesting that the sex-dependent expression of CAIII is partly regulated by a sex hormone, androgen. The concentration of CAIII in the livers of Long-Evans rats with a cinnamon-like coat color (
LEC
rats), an animal model of Wilson disease, was also estimated as Zn bound to CAIII and shown to be lower than that in Wistar rats before the onset of
hepatitis
. The concentration of CAIII was decreased specifically by repeated injections of cupric ions without the Cu,Zn-SOD concentration being affected.
...
PMID:Identification of the zinc-binding protein specifically present in male rat liver as carbonic anhydrase III. 1068 38
The
LEC
rat is known to be a mutant strain that spontaneously develops heritable
hepatitis
due to copper accumulation, caused by mutation of the copper-transporting ATPase gene (Atp7b). Immunodeficiency and radiosensitivity have also been observed. Hayashi et al. extensively examined the radiosensitivity of the
LEC
rat and concluded that its hypersensitivity is controlled by a single autosomal gene. Furthermore, they suggested the possibility that it correlates to copper accumulation due to the Atp7b gene mutation, because ionizing radiation-induced hydroxyl radicals might act in concert with copper-induced hydroxyl radicals. In the present experiment, we analyzed linkage between radiosensitivity and the mutation responsible for
hepatitis
in F(1) animals of a cross with the F344 rat. Our results clearly demonstrated an absence of any significant association. In addition, partial dominance for radiosensitivity was observed, and radiosensitive (F(1) x
LEC
) backcross rats were twice as numerous as their radioresistant counterparts, suggesting the possibility of control by two or more recessive genes.
...
PMID:Absence of linkage between radiosensitivity and the predisposing atp7b gene mutation for heritable hepatitis in the LEC rat. 1085 72
The Long-Evans Cinnamon rat, an animal model of Wilson's disease, is an inbred mutant strain with spontaneous
hepatitis
isolated from Long-Evans rats. The copper concentration in the brains of Long-Evans Cinnamon rats at 4 weeks of age was lower than that of controls, but higher than that of controls at 20 weeks of age. We investigated the tyrosine hydroxylase and 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactive fiber densities in the brains of Long-Evans Cinnamon rats aged 4, 10, and 20 weeks by immunohistochemistry, comparing them with Long-Evans Agouti rats used as controls. Tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive fiber densities in the cingulate cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats were significantly lower than those of Long-Evans Agouti rats at 4 and 10 weeks of age. On the other hand, 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactive fiber densities in the cingulate cortex, caudate-putamen, hypothalamus, and hippocampus in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats were significantly higher than those of controls at 4, 10 and 20 weeks of age. In the cingulate cortex and caudate-putamen, 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactive fiber densities became gradually higher with age. The number of aberrant 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactive fibers in the cingulate cortex, caudate-putamen, hypothalamus and hippocampus in
LEC
rats was significantly higher than that of controls. The number of another type of aberrant 5-hydroxytryptamine immunoreactive fibers, which were detected only at 20 weeks of age in the caudate-putamen in
LEC
rats was significantly higher than that of controls. These results suggest that age-dependent changes in copper concentrations of Long-Evans Cinnamon rats were related to changes in monoaminergic neuron systems.
...
PMID:Histological changes in monoaminergic neurons of Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. 1157 17
In an animal model of Wilson disease, Long-Evans rats with cinnamon-colored coat (
LEC
rats), copper (Cu) accumulates in the liver with age up to the onset of acute hepatitis owing to a hereditary defective transporter for the efflux of Cu, ATP7B. The plasma Cu concentration is low in
LEC
rats because of the excretion of apo-ceruloplasmin (apo-Cp). However, toward and after the onset of chronic hepatitis, plasma Cu concentration increases in the form of holo-Cp, while the liver Cu concentration is maintained at a constant level without the occurrence of fulminant
hepatitis
. In the present study, the material balance of Cu was studied in
LEC
rats with chronic hepatitis in order to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the increase of holo-Cp in plasma and the maintenance of Cu at a constant level in the liver. The relationship between the Cu concentration and ferroxidase activity of Cp was analyzed in the plasma of
LEC
rats of different ages and of Wistar rats fed a Cu-deficient diet for different durations. Cu was suggested to be delivered to Cp in an all-or-nothing manner, resulting in the excretion of fully Cu-occupied holo-Cp (Cu(6)-Cp) or totally Cu-unoccupied Cu(0)-Cp (apo-Cp), but not partially Cu-occupied Cu(n)-Cp (where n = 1-5). The increase of holo-Cp in acute and chronic hepatitis in
LEC
rats was explained by the delivery of Cu, accumulating in the non-metallothionein-bound form, to Cp outside the Golgi apparatus of the liver. The plasma Cu concentration and ferroxidase activity were proposed to be specific indicators of the appearance of non-metallothionein-bound Cu in the liver of
LEC
rats.
...
PMID:Copper balance and ceruloplasmin in chronic hepatitis in a Wilson disease animal model, LEC rats. 1224 7
Wilson disease (WD) is an autosomal recessive disorder of copper transport, resulting in copper accumulation and toxicity to the liver and brain. There is no evidence that the WD patient's immune system attacks copper accumulated hepatocytes. Here we describe that the frequency and absolute number of Valpha24+Vbeta11+ natural killer T (NKT) cells were significantly increased in 3 cases of WD, whereas those of CD3+CD161+ NKT cells were within the normal range. Patients no. 1 and 2 had a presymptomatic form of WD. Their tissue specimens showed pathological changes of mild degeneration of hepatocytes with a few infiltrating mononuclear cells and a low degree of fatty change. Patient no. 3 displayed fulminant
hepatitis
with Coombs-negative haemolytic anaemia. The tissue specimens of patient no. 3 showed macronodular cirrhosis with thick fibrosis, inflammatory infiltrates and spotty necrosis. Human Valpha24+Vbeta11+ NKT cells are almost equal to CD1d-restricted NKT cells. Therefore we investigated CD1d-restricted NKT cells in the
LEC
rat as an animal model of WD. In
LEC
rats before
hepatitis
onset, the number and phenotype of liver NKT cells were normal. At about 4 months of age all
LEC
rats developed acute hepatitis accompanied by acute jaundice, and CD161high NKT cells developed in their livers. CD161highalphabetaTCRbright NKT cells developed in some of them. Their
hepatitis
was severe. CD161highalphabetaTCRbright NKT cells expressed an invariant rat Valpha14-Jalpha281 chain, which is CD1d-restricted. Furthermore, liver lymphocytes in the acute jaundiced
LEC
rats with CD161highalphabetaTCRbright NKT cells had significant and CD1d-specific cytotoxic activity.
...
PMID:Contribution of Va24Vb11 natural killer T cells in Wilsonian hepatitis. 1560 25
LEC
rats show spontaneous
hepatitis
and hepatocarcinoma development related to oxidative stress due to abnormal copper accumulation in the liver. We used DNA microarrays bearing 22,012 genes to investigate at the transcriptomic level the progression of the
hepatitis
in
LEC
rats in comparison to a control obtained from
LEC
rats treated with D-penicillamine, a copper chelating agent known to block
hepatitis
development. Multivariate statistical analyses as partial least square (PLS) regression between transcriptomic data and
hepatitis
markers in plasma led us to select 483 genes related to
hepatitis
development in these rats. After a complementary discriminant analysis (PLS-DA), 239 important genes for the separation between the different rat groups were selected. Gene ontology classification revealed an overrepresentation of genes involved in protein metabolism-related functions. More importantly, some genes implicated in proteasome pathway were upregulated. However, analysis of 20S proteasome activity showed that trypsin-like and peptidylglutamyl peptide hydrolase activities were diminished during
hepatitis
. Because oxidative stress is known to promote the inactivation of the proteasome complex, we propose the deregulation of the proteasome genes expression as a result of oxidative inactivation of proteasome activity during
hepatitis
in
LEC
rats. These results bring new insights in the
hepatitis
and the hepatocarcinogenesis development.
...
PMID:Proteasome activity deregulation in LEC rat hepatitis: following the insights of transcriptomic analysis. 1809 9
Oligosaccharides serve as markers of the cell surface and have been used as certain kinds of tumor markers. In the present study, we established a simple method for isolating hepatic progenitor cells using a lectin, which recognizes a characteristic oligosaccharide structure. Rat liver epithelial (RLE) cells, which have been established as a hepatic stem-like cell, were used to identify characteristic oligosaccharide structures on hepatic stem cells. As a result from lectin micro array, several types of lectin including E4-PHA were identified to bind RLE cells specifically. Furthermore, lectin blot and lectin flow cytometry analyses showed that binding to E(4)-PHA lectin was significantly increased in RLE cells, compared to hepatocytes, and hepatoma cells. The induction of differentiation into a hepatocyte lineage of RLE cells by treatment with Oncostatin M and dexamethasone resulted in a decrease in E(4)-PHA binding. Using an E(4)-PHA column, we succeeded in isolating hepatic stem cells from
LEC
(Long-Evans with cinnamon coat color) rat livers with fluminant
hepatitis
. The characteristics of the established cells were similar to RLE cells and had a potential of proliferating in rat liver. These results suggest that oligosaccharides can serve as a novel marker for the isolation of the hepatic progenitor cells.
...
PMID:High levels of E4-PHA-reactive oligosaccharides: potential as marker for cells with characteristics of hepatic progenitor cells. 1944 3
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>