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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
Although human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common types of tumors in the world, the molecular mechanisms underlying
hepatitis
-C-related human hepatocarcinogenesis are still not clear. HCC is accompanied by virus infections in most cases, and it is suggested that hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus (HCV) significantly influence the oncogenic process. The persistence of inflammation following HCV infection is reportedly related to carcinogenesis, and the mechanism of chronic inflammation has been approached by taking viral, immunologic, cytokine and apoptotic responses into consideration. With the progress made in molecular biology, the functional abnormality of oncogenes/tumor suppressor genes has been identified and, apart from the
p53
gene, involvement of the IGF-II gene has also been described recently. Furthermore, it has been suggested that uncontrolled proliferation of cancer cells might be based on abnormal regulation of intracellular signal transduction pathways. Here we review the cutting edge of molecular hepatitis C virology in terms of virus-cell interactions, which may contribute to the development of human HCCs. We also discuss the recent progress made in the molecular and cell biology of human hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus and hepatocarcinogenesis. 1051 76
Chronic hepatitis B progresses across a spectrum of asymptomatic carriers, active
hepatitis
, and liver cirrhosis. With more advanced disease stage, the risk for developing hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) becomes higher. Recent studies suggest that this progressive risk may reflect an accumulation of multistage genetic mutations in the chromosomes of affected hepatocytes. Mutations of the known candidate genes such as
p53
and beta-catenin have been found. Recent genome-wide analysis of HCC chromosomes by comparative genomic hybridization or loss of heterozygosity have identified more new loci implicated in hepatocarcinogenesis. Persistent hepatitis B is essential for inducing these mutations through immune-mediated injuries of the hepatocytes and the resulting hyperplasia. Prevention of hepatitis B by active immunization effectively interrupts persistent viral infections in children and subsequently reduces the risk of childhood HCC. Treatment for chronic hepatitis B by interferon or antiviral analogues can control hepatitis B activity, but its effect on controlling HCC remains to be seen. Insights for the hepatocarcinogenesis process should come from a multidisciplinary collaboration to explore important viral and host genes so that new approaches to diagnosis and treatment can be developed.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus infection and hepatocellular carcinoma: molecular genetics and clinical perspectives. 1051 5
The HBx protein of hepatitis B virus is a multifunctional protein that is implicated in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma by regulating gene transcription, causing cell proliferation and, as shown recently, inducing cell death. However, analysis of the effects of HBx in stable cultured cell clones has been hampered because only cell lines that adapted to the effects of HBx were selected during the establishment of cell clones. Here, we describe a system in which transcription of the X gene of hepatitis B virus is switched on by the use of the site-specific Cre recombinase. Two human liver cell lines, HLF and HepG2, were used, the former with a mutant p53 allele and the latter with wild-type
p53
. The stable cell clones isolated, which carried the X gene in a transcriptionally silent state, were infected with recombinant adenovirus carrying Cre recombinase. Ninety-six hours after adenovirus infection, cell clones that expressed HBx had undergone TUNEL-positive cell death with characteristics of apoptosis. Apoptosis was induced despite concomitant inactivation of the
p53 protein
as a result of its cytoplasmic translocation by HBx. In contrast, neither the X gene-carrying cells infected with wild-type adenovirus nor various control cells infected with Cre-expressing adenovirus exhibited apoptosis. These results indicate that the expression of HBx protein leads to liver cell apoptosis independently of the
p53
pathway. The significance of HBx-induced apoptosis in natural infection is unclear, but it may contribute to the development of
hepatitis
and serve to spread progeny virus to neighbouring cells while evading the host immune responses.
...
PMID:Induction of apoptosis after switch-on of the hepatitis B virus X gene mediated by the Cre/loxP recombination system. 1056 59
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers in Asia and Africa, where
hepatitis
virus infection and exposure to specific liver carcinogens are prevalent. Although inactivation of some tumor suppressor genes such as
p53
and p16INK4Ahas been identified, no known oncogene is commonly activated in hepatocellular carcinomas. Here we have isolated genes overexpressed in hepatocellular carcinomas by cDNA subtractive hybridization, and identified an oncoprotein consisting of six ankyrin repeats (gankyrin). The expression of gankyrin was increased in all 34 hepatocellular carcinomas studied. Gankyrin induced anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenicity in NIH/3T3 cells. Gankyrin bound to the product of the retinoblastoma gene (RB1), increasing its phosphorylation and releasing the activity of the transcription factor E2F-1. Gankyrin accelerated the degradation of RB1 in vitro and in vivo, and was identical to or interacted with a subunit of the 26S proteasome. These results demonstrate the importance of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the regulation of cell growth and oncogenic transformation, and indicate that gankyrin overexpression contributes to hepatocarcinogenesis by destabilizing RB1.
...
PMID:Reduced stability of retinoblastoma protein by gankyrin, an oncogenic ankyrin-repeat protein overexpressed in hepatomas. 1061 32
Programmed cell death (apoptosis), a form of cell death, described by Kerr and Wyllie some 20 years ago, has generated considerable interest in recent years. The mechanisms by which this mode of cell death (seen both in animal and plant cells), takes place have been examined in detail. Extracellular signals and intracellular events have been elaborated. Of interest to the clinician, is the concentrated effort to study pharmacological modulation of programmed cell death. The attempt to influence the natural phenomenon of programmed cell death stems from the fact that it is reduced (like in cancer) or increased (like in neurodegenerative diseases) in several clinical situations. Thus, chemicals that can modify programmed cell death are likely to be potentially useful drugs. From foxglove, which gave digitalis to the Pacific Yew from which came taxol, plants have been a source of research material for useful drugs. Recently, a variety of plant extracts have been investigated for their ability to influence the apoptotic process. This article discusses some of the interesting data. The ability of plants to influence programmed cell death in cancerous cells in an attempt to arrest their proliferation has been the topic of much research. Various cell-lines like HL60, human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (KIM-1), a cholangiocarcinoma cell-line (KMC-1), B-cell hybridomas, U937 a monocytic cell-line, HeLa cells, human lymphoid leukemia (MOLT-4B) cells and K562 cells have been studied. The agents found to induce programmed cell death (measured either morphologically or flow cytometrically) included extracts of plants like mistletoe and Semicarpus anacardium. Isolated compounds like bryonolic acid (from Trichosanthes kirilowii var. Japonica, crocin (from saffron) and allicin (from Allium sativum) have also been found to induce programmed cell death and therefore arrest proliferation. Even Chinese herbal medicine "Sho-saiko-to" induces programmed cell death in selected cancerous cell lines. Of considerable interest is the finding that Panax ginseng prevents irradiation-induced programmed cell death in hair follicles, suggesting important therapeutic implications. Nutraceuticals (dietary plants) like soya bean, garlic, ginger, green tea, etc. which have been suggested, in epidemiological studies, to reduce the incidence of cancer may do so by inducing programmed cell death. Soy bean extracts have been shown to prevent development of diseases like polycystic kidneys, while Artemisia asiatica attenuates cerulein-induced pancreatitis in rats. Interestingly enough, a number of food items as well as herbal medicines have been reported to produce toxic effects by inducing programmed cell death. For example, programmed cell death in isolated rat hepatocytes has been implicated in the
hepatitis
induced by a herbal medicine containing diterpinoids from germander. Other studies suggest that rapid progression of the betel- and tobacco-related oral squamous cell carcinomas may be associated with a simultaneous involvement of
p53
and c-myc leading to inhibition of programmed cell death. Several mechanisms have been identified to underlie the modulation of programmed cell death by plants including endonuclease activation, induction of
p53
, activation of caspase 3 protease via a Bcl-2-insensitive pathway, potentiate free-radical formation and accumulation of sphinganine. Programmed cell death is a highly conserved mechanism of self-defense, also found to occur in plants. Hence, it is natural to assume that chemicals must exist in them to regulate programmed cell death in them. Thus, plants are likely to prove to be important sources of agents that will modulate programmed cell death.
...
PMID:Modulation of programmed cell death by medicinal plants. 1072 85
The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat is a mutant strain characterized by abnormal copper metabolism and a high incidence of
hepatitis
and hepatoma. Using a yeast-based assay which scores mutants in
p53
gene transcripts as red colonies, we detected frequent mutations in the liver of LEC rats. The majority (50-60%) of these were frameshift mutations caused by the insertion of an extra adenine (A) in the regions containing six consecutive adenines. The rate of A insertion was calculated to be 6.9-9.0% of the total
p53
cDNA. Insertions of an extra adenine were found almost exclusively in the mRNA (cDNA), especially in the (A)(6) tract located at the most 5'-side (exon 4) among the three (A)(6) tracts (exons 4, 7, and 8), but rarely in the corresponding sites of genomic DNA. Wild-type
p53
cDNA was transcribed in vitro into mRNA with the use of SP6 RNA polymerase and tested by the yeast functional assay. Subsequent sequencing detected A insertions at an overall rate of 1.6% in exons 7 and 8 but none in exon 4. This indicates that the A insertion in the exon 4 (A)(6) tract was an in vivo phenomenon rather than an artifact in reverse transcription or polymerase chain reaction. The percentage of red colonies increased sharply to about 20% of the liver samples in the acute hepatitis stage, and returned to control level of those in the chronic hepatitis stage, and increased again slightly to those in the neoplastic stage. The percentage of red colonies correlated with the serum GOT level (r=0.96, p<0.001) but not with the contents of copper and 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine in the liver of LEC rats. Ethanol treatment of hepatic cell lines also increased the rate of transcriptional slippage at the (A)(6) tract. These findings indicate that cellular damage is responsible for the increase in the rate of mutation at the transcriptional level, and suggest that cellular damage degrades transcriptional fidelity, thereby further impairing cellular functions.
...
PMID:Transcriptional slippage of p53 gene enhanced by cellular damage in rat liver: monitoring the slippage by a yeast functional assay. 1075 4
p53
mutations and binding of
p53
to hepatitis B virus (HBV) x protein (HBx) have been suggested as alternative mechanisms of development of hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in man, both processes resulting in intracellular accumulation of the protein which is detectable by immunohistochemical approaches. We have examined
p53
expression in 149 explanted human livers, including 39 cases infected with HBV and 35 bearing HCC.
p53
was demonstrated immunohistochemically in 51% of HCC samples (18/35), localized mainly in fast growing poorly differentiated areas. Accumulation of mutant p53 was verified by immunoprecipitation in most of the positive HCC samples (14/15), implying occurrence of
p53
mutations. No cells positive for
p53
were found in 354 preneoplastic hepatocellular lesions examined. This indicates that
p53
mutation is associated with progression, rather than early development, of HCC in the low-aflatoxin B(1)-exposed region. The intracellular distribution patterns of
p53
and HBx were different, with the former within nuclei and the latter confined to cytoplasmic compartment. HBx did not coimmunoprecipitate with
p53
. These data indicate that
p53
-HBx binding is infrequent, if it really occurs, in HBV-infected human liver, and that it cannot be a common mechanism of HBV-associated hepatocarcinogenesis. In addition,
p53
accumulation was also observed in some parenchymal and ductular (oval) cells in cirrhotic livers and, more frequently, in fulminant
hepatitis
, being independent of HBx expression, and seemingly associated with the damage and/or regeneration of liver parenchyma, perhaps merely reflecting a cellular stress response.
...
PMID:Overexpression of p53 protein is not directly related to hepatitis B x protein expression and is associated with neoplastic progression in hepatocellular carcinomas rather than hepatic preneoplasia. 1076 46
The intronless N-myc2 gene was originally identified as the major target of
hepatitis
virus insertion in woodchuck liver tumors. Here we report that transgenic mice carrying the N-myc2 gene controlled by woodchuck
hepatitis
virus (WHV) regulatory sequences are highly predisposed to liver cancer. In a WHV/N-myc2 transgenic line, hepatocellular carcinomas or adenomas arose in over 70% of mice, despite barely detectable expression of the methylated transgene in liver cells. Furthermore, a transgenic founder carrying unmethylated transgene sequences succumbed to a large liver tumor by the age of two months, demonstrating the high oncogenicity of the woodchuck N-myc2 retroposon. Stabilizing mutations or deletions of beta-catenin were found in 25% of liver tumors and correlated with reduced tumor latency (P<0.05), confirming the important role of beta-catenin activation in Myc-induced tumorigenesis. The ability of the tumor suppressor gene
p53
to cooperate with N-myc2 in liver cell transformation was tested by introducing a
p53
-null allele into WHV/N-myc2 transgenic mice. The loss of one
p53
allele in transgenic animals markedly accelerated the onset of liver cancer (P=0.0001), and most tumors of WHV/N-myc2 p53+/Delta mice harbored either a deletion of the wt
p53
allele or a beta-catenin mutation. These findings provide direct evidence that activation of N-myc2 and reduction of
p53
levels act synergistically during multistage carcinogenesis in vivo and suggest that different genetic pathways may underlie liver carcinogenesis initiated by a myc transgene. Oncogene (2000).
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in WHV/N-myc2 transgenic mice: oncogenic mutations of beta-catenin and synergistic effect of p53 null alleles. 1085 Oct 67
To investigate the relationship between the expression of p21(WAF1/CIP1) protein and
p53
status and the possible role of the two proteins in hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs), we examined the expression of p21(WAF1/CIP1) and
p53
immunohistochemically in 81 tumours from 65 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. p21(WAF1/CIP1) protein was absent from 59 of 81 tumours (72.8%), and altered
p53
expression was found in 43 (53.1%). p21(WAF1/CIP1) expression was significantly associated with
p53
status (P = 0.0008); 38 of 59 tumours lacking p21(WAF1/CIP1) protein were accompanied by altered
p53
expression. Further analyses showed that p21(WAF1/CIP1) expression was inversely correlated with
p53
expression in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related HCCs, but not in HBV-related hepatocellular carcinomas and hepatocellular carcinomas without viral infection. All 11 tumours with intrahepatic metastasis showed altered p21(WAF1/CIP1) or
p53
expression. In contrast, no intrahepatic metastasis was found in any of the 17 tumours without abnormal expression of either of the two proteins. These results suggest that: (1) different modes of p21(WAF1/CIP1) regulation are involved in HCCs differing in their
hepatitis
viral infection status, and p21(WAF1/CIP1) expression appears to be predominantly related to altered
p53
in HCV-related HCCs; (2) disruption of the
p53
-p21(WAF1/CIP1) cell-cycle-regulating pathway may contribute to malignant progression of HCC.
...
PMID:Reduced p21(WAF1/CIP1) protein expression is predominantly related to altered p53 in hepatocellular carcinomas. 1088 67
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