Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glucocorticoid hormones were found to regulate DNA demethylation within a key enhancer of the rat liver-specific tyrosine aminotransferase (Tat) gene. Genomic footprinting analysis shows that the glucocorticoid receptor uses local DNA demethylation as one of several steps to recruit transcription factors in hepatoma cells. Demethylation occurs within 2-3 days following rapid (< 1 h) chromatin remodeling and recruitment of a first transcription factor, HNF-3. Upon demethylation, two additional transcription factors are recruited when chromatin is remodeled. In contrast to chromatin remodeling, the demethylation is stable following hormone withdrawal. As a stronger subsequent glucocorticoid response is observed, demethylation appears to provide memory of the first stimulation. During development, this demethylation occurs before birth, at a stage where the Tat gene is not yet inducible, and it could thus prepare the enhancer for subsequent stimulation by hypoglycemia at birth. In vitro cultures of fetal hepatocytes recapitulate the regulation analyzed in hepatoma cells. There fore, demethylation appears to contribute to the fine-tuning of the enhancer and to the memorization of a regulatory event during development.
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PMID:Glucocorticoid-induced DNA demethylation and gene memory during development. 1129 30

Fluorine-18 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) accumulation in tumours has been well investigated, but much less is known regarding FDG accumulation in inflammatory lesions. In this study, we determined the effects of hypo- and hyperglycaemia on FDG uptake in inflammatory lesions of infectious and non-infectious origin and compared them with those in malignant tumours in rats, to provide a biological basis for differentiating malignant lesions from benign lesions by means of FDG-PET. Rats were inoculated with a suspension of allogenic hepatoma cells (KDH-8) or Staphylococcus aureus, or with turpentine oil into the left calf muscle. Two weeks after KDH-8 inoculation and 1 week after S. aureus and turpentine oil inoculations, the rats were divided into three subgroups: insulin-loaded (2 U/kg body weight, i.p.), glucose-loaded (1.2 g/kg body weight, p.o.) and control groups. Radioactivity in tissues was determined 1 h after i.v. injection of FDG. Intraperitoneal injection of insulin and oral administration of glucose induced hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia, respectively. In the control animals, tumours showed a level of FDG uptake which was 2.2 and 3.0 times higher than the levels in the inflammatory lesions induced by S. aureus and turpentine oil, respectively (P<0.0001). There was no significant difference in the level of FDG uptake between the two inflammatory lesions of infectious and non-infectious origin. Insulin loading significantly decreased the level of FDG uptake in tumours and in both types of inflammatory lesion to approximately one-half of the control values (P=0.001 in the tumour group and P<0.0001 in the two inflammatory lesion groups). In the glucose-loaded group, the level of FDG uptake in both types of inflammatory lesion decreased significantly to 50%-61% of the control value (P=0.0002 in the S. aureus group and P<0.0001 in the turpetine group), while the tumour uptake did not decrease significantly (86% of the control value) (P=NS). It is concluded that FDG uptake in both types of inflammatory lesion was significantly impaired in rats with hyperglycaemia induced by glucose loading, while tumour uptake of FDG was not significantly affected. These results indicate that glucose loading has greater effects on FDG uptake in inflammatory lesions than in tumours, providing a biological basis for differentiation of malignant lesions from benign lesions by FDG-PET in a clinical setting.
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PMID:Effects of insulin and glucose loading on FDG uptake in experimental malignant tumours and inflammatory lesions. 1144 33

Hypoxia and glucose deprivation, are important during many physiological and pathological processes. Cells respond to these stimuli by activating genes involved in the regulation of metabolism and angiogenesis. Platelet derived growth factor-B (PDGF-B) is involved in the regulation of angiogenesis and tumour progression and is induced by hypoxia. Most known hypoxia-induced genes are activated by the hypoxia inducible factor (HIF-1), via its binding to specific response elements. The mechanism of hypoxic induction and the effect of low glucose on PDGF-B expression have not been characterised. We show that PDGF-B exhibits a novel, biphasic regulation (induction, followed by repression below basal levels) in bladder carcinoma cells cultured under chronic hypoxia. We show that the repression observed after long-term hypoxia is due to glucose-depletion and that this can also abrogate short-term hypoxic induction. This is in contrast to the previous results showing that hypoxia/hypoglycaemia elicit the same response. We also show that a putative hypoxia response element in the PDGF-B promoter is not sufficient for hypoxic induction, although it does function as a hypoxia independent enhancer element in hepatocellular carcinoma cells.
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PMID:The sequential activation and repression of the human PDGF-B gene during chronic hypoxia reveals antagonistic roles for the depletion of oxygen and glucose. 1181 79

Hypoglycaemia in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma is not a particularly important clinical entity, as it usually occurs during the terminal stage of the illness. As many as 13% of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, however, develop hypoglycaemia early in the course of their illness. This latter group of patients show a distinct pattern in their clinical course and pathology.
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PMID:Hypoglycaemia in hepatocellular carcinoma: a review. 1184 75

A 36-year-old woman presented with right upper quadrant abdominal pain, weight loss and attacks of severe sweating. She was known to have a chronic hepatitis B infection. A large hepatocellular carcinoma was diagnosed complicated by recurrent episodes of hypoglycaemia. Serum insulin, insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) and growth hormone levels proved to be low, with increased serum levels of big-IGF-II. This is indicative of non-islet cell tumour hypoglycaemia. The patient received prednisone which resulted in an improvement in the blood glucose values but the morning hypoglycaemia remained, so that nightly intravenous glucose administration continued to be necessary. Therefore, growth hormone was added to the treatment which resulted in a complete disappearance of the hypoglycaemias. The patient died within 6 months of the diagnosis having been established.
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PMID:[Hepatocellular carcinoma complicated by non-islet cell tumor hypoglycemia]. 1203 25

Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a chronic progressive, autoimmune liver disease that increases the risk of hepatobiliary malignancies at a late stage. We report a 66-year-old woman with PBC combined with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) accompanied by hypoglycemia. Two large tumors were detected on admission and the patient died because of tumor rupture and subsequent liver failure. Histological analysis revealed well-differentiated HCC in both of the tumors. Sometimes the patient had suffered from hypoglycemic attacks of unknown origin, but serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI) was within the normal range. It was interesting that such large well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinomas were generated in PBC.
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PMID:A case of well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma arising in primary biliary cirrhosis. 1279 67

We report the case of a 24 years old, nineteen weeks pregnant that develops pictures of severe hypoglycemia as first manifestation of primary hepatocarcinoma by hepatitis B. The great increase of the alpha fetoprotein was diagnostic. We reviewed the Literature and comment the hypoglycemic effect as a paraneoplasic manifestation by the increase of the growth-factor similar to insulin II of tumor origin, with low insulin levels.
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PMID:[Severe hypoglycemia as first manifestation hepatocarcinoma in pregnancy: case report]. 1602 Dec 7

Disorientation, muscle fasciculations and weakness seen in a 12-year-old neutered female domestic shorthaired cat were attributed to hypoglycaemia associated with a large hepatoma. Glucagon tolerance tests on this cat and a healthy cat showed that their plasma glucose concentrations increased and decreased at about the same rate. Plasma insulin concentrations in the healthy cat increased and decreased in parallel with the plasma glucose concentration. In the affected cat, plasma insulin concentrations increased initially but decreased more rapidly. Reflecting these observations, the amended insulin to glucose ratios in the affected cat were much lower than those of the healthy cat, until the 4-hour sample. Serum somatostatin, somatomedin and gastrin concentrations were measured but no conclusions as to pathogenesis of the hypoglycaemia could be made. The alterations in insulin secretion in the affected cat suggested that altered hormonal control of glucose homeostasis may have occurred with this tumour.
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PMID:Observations on hypoglycaemia associated with a hepatoma in a cat. 1603 47

Citrin, encoded by SLC25A13, is a liver-type mitochondrial aspartate-glutamate carrier (AGC), of which deficiency, in autosomal recessive trait, causes neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis (NICCD) and adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2). NICCD patients have jaundice, hypoproteinemia, hypoglycemia, galactosemia, growth retardation, fatty liver and multiple aminoacidemia including citrulline, methionine, threonine and tyrosine. Some of the neonates who have experienced NICCD suffer from severe CTLN2 more than 10 years or several decades later. In CTLN2, neuropsychotic symptoms such as disorientation, aberrant behavior, coma and death are observed. Laboratory findings reveal hyperammonemia, citrullinemia, fatty liver and liver-specific decrease in a urea cycle enzyme, argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS). In some cases, hyperlipidemia, pancreatitis and hepatoma are accompanied with CTLN2. Citrin as a liver-type AGC plays a role in supplying aspartate to the cytosol for urea, protein and nucleotide synthesis by exchanging mitochondrial aspartate for cytosolic glutamate and proton, and transporting cytosolic NADH reducing equivalent to mitochondria as a member of malate aspartate shuttle essential for aerobic glycolysis. AGC is also important for gluconeogenesis from lactate. Although it is difficult to explain pathogenesis of the symptoms such as cholestasis in NICCD and liver-specific decrease of ASS protein in CTLN2 from the functions of the AGC, some are understandable by the loss of citrin functions. Many CTLN2 patients have been treated with a low protein and high carbohydrate diet and glycerol at the hyperammonemic coma. We argue that those treatments may result in fatty liver, hyperlipidemia, hyperammonemia and even death due to loss of the citrin functions. Loss of citrin first cause deficiency of aspartate in the cytosol, which results in an increase in cytosolic NADH/NAD(+) ratio and then activation of fatty acid synthesis pathway to compensate the aberrant ratio. This follows inhibition of fatty acid oxidation. The peculiar fondness for food of CTLN2 patients who like protein and dislike carbohydrate and sweets may be related to their metabolic requirements.
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PMID:Metabolic derangements in deficiency of citrin, a liver-type mitochondrial aspartate-glutamate carrier. 1619 99

233 SD rats weighing 100 approximately 120 g were divided randomly into 6 groups. The animals in group I and group II received 0.1 mg/kg selenium in the form of sodium selenite only and served as the negative control and positive control, respectively. Animals in groups III, IV and V were fed with selenium as Se-enriched malt supplemented diets (0.3, 1 and 3 mg/kg), and group VI with selenium by using sodium selenite supplemented diets (3 mg/kg). Animals of groups II approximately VI were induced hepatoma by diethylnitrosamine (100 mg/l) for 16 weeks, then drunk with sterilized water for 2 more weeks. Subsequently, the effects of Se-enriched malt and sodium selenite on hepatoma nodules, relative liver weight, the liver function indices including alanine aminotransferase (ALT), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), albumin (ALB), total bilirubin (TBIL), and the tumor markers, named as gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT), alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) were recorded. The calcium concentration, glucose content in plasma and values of the hormones regulating blood glucose, such as insulin, glucagons and thyroid hormones (3,5,3'-tetraiodothyronine, T(3); 3,5,3'5'-tetraiodothyronine, T(4)) were observed as well. At the same time, the correlations between the concentration of plasma glucose and related hormones were also analyzed. The results indicated that Se-enriched malt showed a better chemopreventive efficiency in decreasing the number of hepatoma nodules, relative liver weight and the contents of AFP, GGT, IGF-II, ALT, ALP and TBIL in the plasma, and delaying the descent of hormones in the serum, names as insulin, glucagons, T(3) and T(4) than those feeding with sodium selenite. Effect of Se-enriched malt excelled sodium selenite in the aspects of deadening the descent of glucose concentration in the plasma and the rise of calcium concentration in the serum of the rats with hepatoma induced by diethylnitrosamine. The values of glucose and calcium were significantly related to those items fore-named. In conclusion, the function of Se-enriched malt in deadening the lesion and delaying the development of hepatoma of rats induced by diethylnitrosamine was better than that of sodium selenite. Hypoglycemia and hypercalcemia were significantly correlated with the multifactors mentioned above.
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PMID:Effect of selenium-enriched malt on hepatocarcinogenesis, paraneoplastic syndrome and the hormones regulating blood glucose in rats treated by diethylnitrosamine. 1626 26


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