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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this case report, the patient had been delivered by Caesarean section and weighed only 4 pounds at birth. The mother was O negative, the father A positive, and the infant A positive. Initial red cell count was 2.85 million/cu mm; white cell count, 19,200/cu mm; and hemoglobin 70% of normal. At 3 months of age hemoglobin was 10% of normal. Bone marrow examination revealed marked erythroid hyperplasia. A diagnosis of
Blackfan-Diamond syndrome
was made. He received blood transfusions every 2 or 3 weeks for the first 4 years of his life. During his lifetime he received 433 units of packed cells for the treatment of congenital hypoplastic anemia. Vitamin-B12, folic acid, and iron were given without benefit. At 8 years of age a spelectomy was done. 20 months after surgery he recovered from pneumonococcal meningitis without sequelae. Progressive signs of hemochromatosis developed and finally progressive signs of heart failure with edema. At 24 years of age severe epigastric pain developed. An open liver biopsy disclosed multiple liver nodules which proved to be
hepatoma
. Severe ascites followed the surgery. Pulmonary metastases of the liver tumor developed and heart failure. He died at age 25. This patient had received no androgen. He was consistently hepatitis antigen negative. He was prepubertal at the age of 25 and had almost no endogenous androgens. Alpha-fetoglobin was present. This test may be useful as a screening test for
hepatoma
.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma, transfusion-induced hemochromatosis and congenital hypoplastic anemia (Blackfan-Diamond syndrome). 18 Aug 2
Incorporation of 3H-TdR into EL4 leukemic cells in vitro was inhibited by peritoneal exudate cells (PEC) harvested from syngeneic C57BL/6J mice given an intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of 1x10(7) viable Mycobacterium smegmatis ATCC 607 (Smeg) 4 days before. This phenomenon was also observed in the following five systems of PEC from animals and syngeneic tumor cells: C57BL/6J mice and B16 melanoma;
DBA
/2 mice and P815 mastocytoma; SWM/Ms mice and K5 fibrosarcoma; BALB/c, nu/nu mice and KKN-1 fibrosarcoma; and strain 2 guinea pigs and line-10
hepatoma
. The in vitro cytotoxicity of the PEC activated by viable Smeg was much higher than those activated by dead-Smeg, viable BCG or proteose peptone. The activity of the adherent fraction of the PEC was stronger than that of the nonadherent one, and not influenced by either anti-theta or anti-mouse lymphocyte rabbit sera. The PEC induced with Smeg 4 days before contained a large population of mononuclear cells (88.9%) and a significant level of polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) (3.2%), and showed a much higher cytotoxicity than the PEC induced with Smeg 3 hr before, which contained a much larger population of PMN (71.9%), suggesting that PMN were not the effector cells in this system. In vitro and in vivo treatment with macrophage-inhibitors such as carrageenan, trypan blue and cytochalacin B, reduced the activity of the PEC. All of these facts suggested macrophages as the effector. Viable macrophages were required for the growth inhibition of EL4 in vitro: gamma-ray irradiated or freeze-thawed macrophages were ineffective. Kinetic studies revealed that inhibition of 3H-TdR incorporation into EL4 cells started within 3 hr of incubation together with the activated macrophages at an effector to target (E/T) ratio of 5, and the incorporation decreased gradually with the lapse of incubation time. On the other hand, 51Cr release from labelled EL4 was undetected when the E/T ratio was 5 but detected at on E/T of 10 or more. Even at the higher E/T ratio, at least 10 hr were needed until the release of 51Cr, suggesting that the activated macrophages produced growth inhibition of tumor cells followed by cell destruction.
...
PMID:In vitro cytotoxicity of peritoneal macrophages activated with Mycobacterium smegmatis. 66 26
Incidence of spontaneous tumors in C57BL/6 NCrj (CR), C5BL/6 CrSlc (SL) and B 6 Crj x
DBA
/2 NCrj F1 (BD) mice, which were reared under a barrier system and died natural death, were examined. Cohorts of mice in 200 to 300 each were purchased at 4 weeks of age and raised under SPF conditions. A large portion of the mice were used for various experiments between 3 and 30 months old while not a small number died before use and were autopsied. Median survival periods of the female and male were estimated at 697 and 680 days for CR, 764 and 806 days for SL and 866 and 929 days for BD, respectively. Incidence of spontaneous neoplastic lesions in the autopsied animals were 77.4% and 79.2% of 535 female and 590 male CR, 69.7% and 55.1% of 502 female and 463 male SL, and 75.8% and 78.0% of 298 female and 346 male BD, respectively. In CR, histiocytic sarcoma was the most predominant tumor, accounting for 72.1% of all tumors. In SL, malignant lymphoma was the most prevailing, forming 62.3%, and, in male BD,
hepatocellular carcinoma
was the most frequent, accounting for 41.8% of all tumors.
...
PMID:[Age-related incidence of spontaneous tumors in SPF C57BL/6 and BDF1 mice]. 132 82
We have previously demonstrated that
BDS
.1 cells are a minimal deviation rat
hepatoma
cell line that is hypersensitive to the anti-proliferative effects of glucocorticoids in vitro. When transplanted into athymic mice, exposure to dexamethasone reduced the initial growth rate and increased the latency time before detection of palpable
BDS
.1-derived tumors but did not affect the maximal growth rate, size and histology of the tumor. After collagenase dissociation, the in vitro growth of
BDS
.1-derived tumor cells was fully suppressed by dexamethasone. Exposure to insulin prevented the glucocorticoid inhibition of anchorage-independent growth of
BDS
.1 cell colonies in vitro and may therefore be one of the systemic factors that masks the long term in vivo growth response of glucocorticoids.
...
PMID:In vivo effects of dexamethasone on the tumor growth of glucocorticoid-sensitive Fu5-derived rat hepatoma cells. 164 93
We have previously shown that
BDS
.1 rat
hepatoma
cells are hypersensitive to the antiproliferative effects of glucocorticoids, and secrete a glucocorticoid suppressible mitogenic activity (denoted GSM). Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that GSM purified to near homogeneity migrated as a 28-kDa protein under nonreducing conditions and as a single 15-kDa polypeptide in the presence of sulfhydryl reducing agents suggesting a homodimeric structure. Anti-platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) A-chain specific antibodies selectively immunodepleted the mitogenic activity which can be extracted from nonreducing gels in the 26-30-kDa fraction and, in Western blots, recognized the 15-kDa reduced form of GSM. Western blot analysis further showed that dexamethasone suppressed the level of secreted PDGF A-chain protein in
BDS
.1 cells but not in glucocorticoid receptor-deficient
hepatoma
cells. Northern blots revealed that dexamethasone reduced expression of the PDGF A-chain 2.3- and 1.7-kilobase transcripts in proportion to the level of detectable PDGF-AA protein. Similarly to PDGF-AA, the
hepatoma
cell-derived GSM has a potent angiogenic activity. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the predominant glucocorticoid suppressible mitogen secreted from rat
hepatoma
cells is a PDGF A-chain homodimer and suggest that in vivo glucocorticoids may potentially regulate
hepatoma
growth by modulating PDGF-stimulated tumor vascularization.
...
PMID:Identification of the glucocorticoid suppressible mitogen from rat hepatoma cells as an angiogenic platelet-derived growth factor A-chain homodimer. 191 57
DBA
/2 mice were fed for 16 weeks with Torula yeast-based synthetic diet containing various concentrations of selenium (Se). At 13th week, the mice were immunized with syngenetic L5178 Y lymphoma cells and their specific and non-specific tumor immune responses were examined 3 weeks after immunization. The results indicated that in mice fed with a diet containing 0.007 ppm Se, the serum Se level was extremely low (0.02 micrograms/ml). These Se-deficient mice were unable to elicit normal tumor-specific immune responses. Both the specific proliferation of T cells in MLTC and tumoricidal activity of CTL were very much depressed. In addition, these mice also showed impaired NK and LAK cell activity. The effects of Se supplementation varied depending on the amount of Se given. When 0.170 ppm Se was added to the low Se diet, all the immune parameters examined were restored to the normal level. When 0.567 ppm Se was added, however, the tumor immune responses remained as low as those in Se-deficient mice. This study implies that the prevalence of primary
hepatocellular carcinoma
in areas where Se is deficient has a profound immunological basis. Se supplementation is obviously indicated for cancer prevention in these areas but the amount of Se supplied is crucial.
...
PMID:[Effects of selenium deficiency and supplementation on tumor immune response in mice]. 227 20
Numerous reports have illustrated the versatility of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and related halogenated aromatics as inducers of drug-metabolizing enzymes and the activity of individual compounds are remarkably dependent on structure. The most active PCB congeners, 3,4,4',5-tetra-, 3,3',4,4'-tetra-, 3,3',4,4',5-penta- and 3,3',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl, are substituted at both para and at two or more meta positions. The four coplanar PCBs resembled 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC) and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (2,3,7,8-TCDD) in their mode of induction of the hepatic drug-metabolizing enzymes. These compounds induced rat hepatic microsomal benzo(a)pyrene hydroxylase (aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, AHH) and cytochromes P-450a, P-450c and P-450d. 3,4,4',5-Tetrachlorobiphenyl, the least active coplanar PCB, also induced dimethylaminoantipyrine N-demethylase and cytochromes P-450b+e and resembled Aroclor 1254 as an inducer of the mixed-function oxidase system. Like Aroclor 1254, all the mono-ortho- and at least eight di-ortho-chloro analogs of the coplanar PCBs exhibited a "mixed-type" induction pattern and induced microsomal AHH, dimethylaminoantipyrine NM-demethylase and cytochromes P-450a-P-450e. Quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSARs) within this series of PCBs were determined by comparing their AHH induction potencies (EC50) in rat
hepatoma
H-4-II-E cells and their binding affinities (ED50) for the 2,3,7,8-TCDD cytosolic receptor protein. The results showed that there was an excellent correlation between AHH induction potencies and receptor binding avidities of these compounds and the order of activity was coplanar PCBs (3,3',4,4' -tetra-, 3,3',4,4',5-penta- and 3,3',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyls) greater than 3,4,4',5-tetrachlorobiphenyl approximately mono-ortho coplanar PCBs greater than di-ortho coplanar PCBs. It was also apparent that the relative toxicities of this group of PCBs paralleled their biological potencies. The coplanar and mono-ortho coplanar PCBs also exhibit differential effects in the inbred C57BL/6J and
DBA
/2J mice. These compounds induce AHH and cause thymic atrophy in the former "responsive" mice whereas at comparable or higher doses none of these effects are observed in the nonresponsive DBD/2J mice. Since the responsiveness of these two mice strains is due to the presence of the Ah receptor protein in the C57BL/6J mice and its relatively low concentration in the
DBA
/2J mice, the results for the PCB cogeners support the proposed receptor-mediated mechanism of action.
...
PMID:PCBs: structure-function relationships and mechanism of action. 299 27
Transplanted Morris hepatomas in Buffalo-strain rats were found to be resistant to the changes in ribonucleotide levels in rat liver caused by a high-orotate diet or an arginine-deficient diet. The increase in UTP levels and decrease in ATP levels seen in the livers of rats on a 1%-orotate diet were less marked in the livers of BUB- and
DBA
-strain mice on this diet. Although the changes were less than in rat liver, there was a 2-3-fold increase in UTP concentration in the livers of mice on the high-orotate diet. However, there was a similar response in nucleotide levels in the two species when the animals were maintained on an arginine-deficient diet, and there was a greater than 10-fold increase in the UTP level in the livers of both rats and mice. These diets had much less effect on the levels of deoxyribonucleotides than of ribonucleotides. In contrast to the insensitivity of hepatomas to dietary modulation of nucleotide levels, treatment of
hepatoma
-bearing rats with carbamoylating agents (sodium cyanate and 2-chloroethyl isocyanate) caused decreases in the levels of nucleotides in the tumors which were generally greater than in host livers. For example, 2-chloroethyl isocyanate depressed ATP levels in the Morris hepatomas 5123C and 20 under conditions in which there was no significant effect on host liver ATP. The data revealed selective modulation of nucleotide levels in normal and neoplastic liver which may be achieved by either dietary modification or drug treatment.
...
PMID:Selective modulation of nucleotide levels in rat liver and hepatomas by high-orotate or arginine-deficient diets and by carbamoylating agents. 334 53
Groups of 15 mice of three different laboratory strains (BALB/c, C3H/He,
DBA
/2) were fed on a low iron diet (5 mg iron/kg diet), and three similar groups of 15 mice were maintained on a normal iron diet (312 mg iron/kg diet). When the low iron diet group became iron deficient, tumor cells (5 x 10(5) cells/mouse) of CA07-A (colon adenocarcinoma), HE129 (
hepatoma
), and M119 (mammary adenocarcinoma) were inoculated s.c. in BALB/c, C3H/He, and
DBA
/2 mice, respectively. All mice developed tumors, tumors grew more slowly, and the mean tumor sizes were smaller in the low iron diet group at nearly all weekly observations in all three strains of mice. No apparent differences in the behavior, activity (e.g., movement, climbing, running, grooming, etc.), and appearance were observed between low iron diet and normal iron diet mice. The mean body weight of mice at transplantation was less in the low iron than in the normal iron groups for the BALB/c strain but higher in the low iron groups of C3H/He and
DBA
/2 mice, indicating that food intake of mice on a low iron diet was not impaired. These results suggest that iron nutrition of the host affects tumor growth; tumor cells grow better in an iron-rich environment. This knowledge should be considered when designing treatment for patients with cancer. Iron oversupply in cancer patients might enhance tumor growth and adversely affect cancer therapy.
...
PMID:Iron nutrition and tumor growth: decreased tumor growth in iron-deficient mice. 339 Aug 10
Anticarcinogenic enzyme inducers are of two types: (a) bifunctional inducers [2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, polycyclic aromatics, azo dyes, beta-naphthoflavone] that elevate both Phase II enzymes [e.g., glutathione S-transferases, UDP-glucuronosyltransferases, and NAD(P)H:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase] and certain Phase I enzymes [e.g., aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH)]; and (b) monofunctional inducers [e.g., diphenols, thiocarbamates, 1,2-dithiol-3-thiones, isothiocyanates] that elevate primarily Phase II enzymes without significantly affecting AHH. Since Phase I enzymes such as AHH may activate precarcinogens to ultimate carcinogens whereas Phase II enzyme induction suffices to achieve chemoprotection, an understanding of the molecular mechanisms that regulate these enzymes is critical for devising methods for chemoprotection. We report a systematic analysis of the inductions of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH) and NAD(P)H:quinone reductase (QR) by seven monofunctional and eight bifunctional inducers, singly or in combination, in a murine
hepatoma
cell line (Hepa 1c1c7) and two mutants defective in either Ah (Aryl hydrocarbon) receptor function (BPrc1) or in AHH expression (c1). We have also examined such inductions in genetically defined mouse strains with high affinity (C57BL/6J) and low affinity (
DBA
/2J) Ah receptors. The combination of our earlier model for the induction of Phase I and Phase II enzymes (H. J. Prochaska, M. J. De Long, and P. Talalay, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82: 8232, 1985) with mechanism(s) for autoregulation of AHH (O. Hankinson, R. D. Anderson, B. W. Birren, F. Sander, M. Negishi, and D. W. Nebert, J. Biol. Chem., 260: 1790, 1985) is compatible with our results. Thus, induction of QR by monofunctional inducers does not depend on a competent Ah receptor or AHH activity and appears to involve an electrophilic chemical signal. In contrast, bifunctional inducers require competent Ah receptors to induce both AHH and QR, although the latter process appears to be regulated by more than one mechanism. It is our view that bifunctional inducers bind to the Ah receptor thereby enhancing transcription of genes encoding both AHH and QR. Metabolizable bifunctional inducers are then converted by the induced AHH to products that resemble monofunctional inducers and are capable of generating the aforementioned chemical signal. The existence of mechanism(s) for AHH autoregulation that also affect Phase II enzyme expression would account for the high basal activities of QR in the AHH-defective mutant (c1).
...
PMID:Regulatory mechanisms of monofunctional and bifunctional anticarcinogenic enzyme inducers in murine liver. 340 19
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