Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The development of hepatitis, induced in 48 rats by the administration of galactosamine (GalN) in varying doses, was studied with the use of substrate and enzyme histochemical techniques. The so-called atypical glycogen, which is at first highly resistant to diastase, was shown to be digestible after deamination. The increasing accumulation of atypical glycogen during the course of GalN-hepatitis conceals the loss of normal glycogen when the PAS-reaction is used. Nevertheless glycogenolysis could also be demonstrated by the increasing activity of phosphorylase. The acid phosphatase activity was progressively diminished, which was interpreted as signifying early lysosomal damage. G6Pase activity remained nearly constant but SDH showed a decrease in activity after 12 h. These histochemical results are considered to provide deeper insight into the pathological mechanism of GalN-hepatitis.
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1979 May 31
PMID:Histochemical studies on carbohydrate metabolism in rat liver after galactosamine administration. 3 60

1. Mitochondria and microsomal fractions have been isolated from liver biopsies from patients with alcoholic cirrhosis, cryptogenic cirrhosis or chronic aggressive hepatitis. 2. Cirrhotic livers yieled fewer mitochondria than normal liver. 3. The most significant change was a decrease in mitochondrial respiratory control. Cirrhotic microsomal fractions had a 50% diminution in cytochrome b5 and cytochrome P-450 content. 4. The two patients with chronic aggressive hepatitis showed similar mitochondrial and microsomal changes.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Jun
PMID:Mitochondrial functions and content of microsomal and mitochondrial cytochromes in human cirrhosis. 88 31

The carbocyclic analog of 2'-deoxyguanosine (CdG) is active against herpes simplex virus (HSV), human cytomegalovirus, and human hepatitis-B virus. In order to understand the mechanism of action of this compound against HSV, we have evaluated (a) the incorporation of [3H]CdG into viral and host DNA in HEp-2 cells infected with HSV and (b) the interaction of the 5'-triphosphate of CdG (CdG-TP) with the HSV DNA polymerase and human DNA polymerases alpha, beta, and gamma (EC 2.7.7.7). Incubation of HSV-1-infected HEp-2 cells with [3H]CdG resulted in the incorporation of CdG into both the HSV and the host cell DNA. These results indicated that CdG-TP was used as a substrate for HSV DNA polymerase and for at least one of the cellular DNA polymerases. Degradation of both viral and host DNA with micrococcal nuclease and spleen phosphodiesterase indicated that CdG was incorporated primarily into internal positions in both DNAs. The viral DNA containing CdG sedimented in neutral and alkaline sucrose gradients in the same way as did viral DNA labeled with [3H]thymidine, indicating that the HSV DNA containing CdG was similar in size to untreated HSV DNA. CdG-TP was a competitive inhibitor of the incorporation of dGTP into DNA by the HSV DNA polymerase (Ki of 0.35 microM) and the human DNA polymerase alpha (Ki of 1 microM). CdG-TP was not a potent inhibitor of either DNA polymerase beta or gamma. Using DNA-sequencing technology, CdG-TP was found to be an efficient substrate for HSV DNA polymerase. Incorporation of CdG monophosphate (CdG-MP) into the DNA by HSV DNA polymerase did not interfere with subsequent chain extension. These results suggested that the antiviral activity of CdG was due to its incorporation into the DNA and subsequent disruption of viral functions. In contrast, CdG-TP was not as good as dGTP as a substrate for DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase alpha, and incorporation of CdG-MP by DNA polymerase alpha inhibited further DNA chain elongation.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Feb
PMID:Incorporation of the carbocyclic analog of 2'-deoxyguanosine into the DNA of herpes simplex virus and of HEp-2 cells infected with herpes simplex virus. 131 7

The concentration of copper in the livers of Long-Evans rats with cinnamon-like coat color (LEC), in which hepatitis and then hepatomas develop spontaneously, was recently found to be abnormally high. Therefore, we examined the copper concentrations in the livers of LEC F1 backcrosses (LEC F1 x LEC) to determine the linkage of copper accumulation with development of hepatitis. Consistent with a previously reported ratio of rats with hepatitis to rats without hepatitis of about 1:1, hepatitis developed in 14 of 30 F1 backcrosses. The copper concentrations in the livers of all LEC F1 backcrosses with hepatitis were abnormally high and comparable to those of LEC rats. In contrast, the concentrations in all backcrosses without hepatitis were similar to those in normal Long-Evans with agouti coat color or Brown-Norway rats. Copper accumulation was shown to be closely linked with the development of hepatitis in LEC rats and appeared to be a possible cause of hepatitis. The concentrations of copper in the livers of Fischer 344 rats after carbon tetrachloride treatment were in the range for normal liver, indicating that a high copper concentration in the liver is specific to LEC rats and not a specific characteristic of hepatitis. Furthermore, we found that the size and level of ceruloplasmin mRNA in the livers of LEC rats were the same as those in LEA rats and that the size and level of ceruloplasmin polypeptide in their livers and plasma were almost the same as those in LEA rats. Therefore, these results suggest that the copper accumulation is not due to alteration of expression or to gross alteration of the ceruloplasmin gene.
Mol Carcinog 1992
PMID:Genetic linkage between copper accumulation and hepatitis/hepatoma development in LEC rats. 131 58

Granulomatous inflammation is a specific type of chronic inflammation in which macrophages and T-cell-mediated immunity to the inciting agent play a pivotal role. In the present study, granulomatous hepatitis was induced in rats by the administration of a single intravenous dose of porcine intestinal alkaline phosphatase. The cellular composition of the hepatic granulomas was analyzed in-situ with a number of recently developed mouse anti-rat monoclonal antibodies to cells of the monocyte-macrophage lineage and lymphocyte subsets. Well-developed granulomas consisted of aggregates of macrophages with central modification into epithelioid cells, a peripheral rim of T- and B-lymphoid cells, including considerable numbers of immunoblasts and plasma cells. In addition, the periphery of the granulomas contained many fat storing cells, a sinusoidal cell type thought to play a central role in hepatic fibrosis. Moreover, intense immunostaining for the extracellular matrix proteins fibronectin and collagen type III was observed at the periphery of the lesions. The granulomas persisted for long periods without eliciting liver cirrhosis. Alkaline phosphatase induced hepatic granulomas in the rat may help to elucidate the contribution of cells of the B-lineage to chronic granulomatous inflammation.
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1992
PMID:Immunopathology of alkaline phosphatase-induced granulomatous hepatitis in rats. 135 74

Transfection of a plasmid encoding the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) nuclear antigen 2 (EBNA2) gene confers resistance to the antiproliferative effect of alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) in EBV-negative U968 cells (P. Aman and A. von Gabain, EMBO J. 9:147-152, 1990). We studied the expression of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) in two pairs of Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines, differing in the expression of the putative immortalizing gene of EBV, EBNA2. In EBNA2-expressing cells, the induction of four ISGs by IFN-alpha was strongly reduced or, in some cases, abolished. Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene constructs containing different IFN-stimulated response elements were transfected into EBNA2-negative and EBNA2-positive cells. Induction of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity by IFN was impaired in EBNA2-positive cells. Also, a reporter gene construct driven by an IFN-gamma-sensitive promoter element was affected. However, as revealed by gel shift assays, EBNA2-positive and EBNA2-negative cells exhibited a nearly identical pattern of IFN-stimulated response element-binding proteins. Most important, activation of the factor ISGF-3, which previously has been shown to be required and sufficient for transcriptional activation of IFN-induced genes, was not inhibited in IFN-resistant cells expressing EBNA2. The mechanism of the EBNA2-related IFN resistance seems to be distinct both from the resistance mediated by hepatitis virus and adenovirus gene products and from the IFN resistance in Daudi cell variants. In these three cases, the transcriptional block of IFN-induced genes is due to inhibition of ISGF-3 activation and binding. Our data suggest that the EBNA2-related IFN resistance in Burkitt's lymphoma cells acts downstream of the activation of ISGF-3.
Mol Cell Biol 1992 Nov
PMID:The EBNA2-related resistance towards alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) in Burkitt's lymphoma cells effects induction of IFN-induced genes but not the activation of transcription factor ISGF-3. 140 70

We report the occurrence of autoimmune hepatitis after treatment with interferon-alpha in a patient with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia. Cytogenetic and molecular genetic studies of the T lymphocytes in this patient demonstrated that the T lymphocytes were not part of the leukemic clone. The role of interferon in the production of autoimmune abnormalities is reviewed.
Mol Biother 1992 Sep
PMID:Interferon-alpha induced autoimmune hepatitis in a patient with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia with cytogenetically normal T lymphocytes. 144 68

Anti-liver microsomes (anti-LM) autoantibodies in patients with dihydralazine-induced hepatitis were found to react specifically with cytochrome P4501A2 (P4501A2) but not with P4501A1 expressed in yeast and bacteria. These results were confirmed by immunoinhibition of methoxyresorufin-O-demethylase activity (supported by the P4501A subfamily); anti-LM antibodies more strongly inhibited this activity in yeast expressing P4501A2 than in yeast expressing P4501A1. Anti-LM were shown to be specific to the disease; in three cases, these autoantibodies were present at high titers during disease, whereas the titers decreased upon recovery and became undetectable a few months after recovery. Thus, there exists a time-dependent relationship between the disease and the autoantibodies, which does not prove that the autoantibodies are causative of the hepatitis; they might only be a marker. The inductive capacity of dihydralazine toward P450 was also studied. In rats treated in vivo and in human hepatocytes treated in vitro with dihydralazine, a 2-fold increase in P4501A2- and P4501A-supported monooxygenase activities was found. The levels of the other P450 isoforms tested were unchanged during treatment, both in vivo in rats and in vitro in cultures of human hepatocytes. In human hepatocytes, dihydralazine produced a dose-dependent increase in the level of P4501A up to 0.1 mM; induction of P4501A was less strong at 0.2 mM and disappeared at 0.5 mM. The same treatment did not change the level of P4503A4, taken as control. The strong heterogeneity in the expression of P4501A enzymes in human liver and the capacity of these enzymes for induction by dihydralazine and by other compounds might be predisposing factors in this autoimmune disease.
Mol Pharmacol 1992 Aug
PMID:Anti-liver microsomes autoantibodies and dihydralazine-induced hepatitis: specificity of autoantibodies and inductive capacity of the drug. 151 26

LEC (Long-Evans with a cinnamon-like coat color) rats develop hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) spontaneously. We examined mutations of codons 12, 13, and 61 of the Ha-ras, Ki-ras, and N-ras genes in four HCCs by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-single-stranded DNA direct sequencing method. No ras gene mutations were observed, suggesting that ras activation is not involved in spontaneous hepatocarcinogenesis in LEC rats. The expression of mRNAs for c-myc, Ha-ras, c-raf, and the protein phosphatase 2A alpha gene (PP-2A alpha) was also examined in the four HCCs by northern blot analysis. Three of the four HCCs had c-myc expression levels approximately 30-fold higher than that in the liver of control Long-Evans rats with an agouti coat color (LEA), a sibling line of LEC rats, while the remaining HCC had an expression level sevenfold higher than that of control. In contrast, the expression levels of the Ha-ras, c-raf, and PP-2A alpha genes were the same as those in the livers of control rats. Studies of c-myc expression and mitotic index in five other HCCs, two hyperplastic nodules, and two nontumorous portions of livers of HCC-bearing LEC rats that had chronic-phase hepatitis suggested that the high level of c-myc gene expression was not due only to increased cell proliferation but might possibly be more integrally involved in hepatocarcinogenesis.
Mol Carcinog 1991
PMID:Possible involvement of c-myc but not ras genes in hepatocellular carcinomas developing after spontaneous hepatitis in LEC rats. 171 40

Human hepatitis delta virus (HDV) RNA has been shown to contain a self-catalyzed cleavage activity. The sequence requirement for its catalytic activity appears to be different from that of other known ribozymes. In this paper, we define the minimum contiguous sequence and secondary structure of the HDV genomic RNA required for the catalytic activity. By using nested-set deletion mutants, we have determined that the essential sequence for the catalytic activity is contained within no more than 85 nucleotides of HDV RNA. These results are in close agreement with the previous determinations and confirmed the relative insignificance of the sequence at the 5' side of the cleavage site. The smallest catalytic RNA, representing HDV genomic RNA nucleotide positions 683 to 770, was used as the basis for studying the secondary structure requirements for catalytic activity. Analysis of the RNA structure, using RNase V1, nuclease S1 and diethylpyrocarbonate treatments showed that this RNA contains at least two stem-and-loop structures. Other larger HDV RNA subfragments containing the catalytic activity also have a very similar secondary structure. By performing site-specific mutagenesis studies, it was shown that one of the stem-and-loop structures could be deleted to half of its original size without affecting the catalytic activity. In addition, the other stem-and-loop contained a six base-pair helix, and the structure, rather than the sequence, of this helix was required for the catalytic activity. However, the structure of a portion of the stem-and-loop remains uncertain. We also report that this RNA can be divided into two separate molecules, which alone did not have cleavage activity but, when mixed, one of the RNAs could be cleaved in trans. This study thus reveals some features of the secondary structure of the HDV genomic RNA involved in self-catalyzed cleavage. A model of this RNA structure is presented.
J Mol Biol 1992 Jan 05
PMID:Sequence and structure of the catalytic RNA of hepatitis delta virus genomic RNA. 173 Oct 72


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>