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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Concanavalin A added to intact cells at 37 degrees caused rapid and reversible inactivation of a soluble enzyme, tyrosine aminotransferase, in two lines of rat
hepatoma
tissue culture cells grown in monolayer culture. This temperature-dependent process was independent of de novo protein and RNA synthesis and independent of increased uptake of Ca2+ and Mg2+ or glucose. The inactivation could be reversed by adding alpha-methyl-D-mannopyranoside a competing sugar for concanavalin A binding. Other lectins known to bind to different sugars did not bring about the inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase. Addition of concanavalin A did not result in the inactivation of another soluble enzyme,
lactic dehydrogenase
. The maintenance of tyrosine aminotransferase in an inactive form after the binding of concanavalin A to the cells required the continued presence of concanavalin A. This effect of concanavalin A could not be mimicked either by dibutyryl cyclic adenosine or guanosine monophosphoric acid. Incubation of cell extracts with concanavalin A did not result in inactivation nor did mixing of extracts from concanavalin A-treated cells with extracts from untreated cells. On the basis of these results we conclude that the following are the essential requirements for concanavalin A to bring about the inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase: (a) the binding of native concanavalin A to the cells; (b) integrity of certain structural elements of the cells.
...
PMID:Effect of concanavalin A on tyrosine aminotransferase in rat hepatoma tissue culture cells. Rapid reversible inactivation of soluble enzyme. 1 97
Selected biochemical properties, based on hepatocellular function, were assessed in the mouse
hepatoma
BW7756 and host and/or normal mouse liver. These biochemical properties included (a) alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) production, (b) lipid composition, (c) isozyme patterns and enzyme activities, and (d) cyclic AMP levels. The tumor evidenced an exponential growth phase and vigorous production of AFP in the first 3 weeks following transplant. The concentration of AFP in the sera of tumor-bearing mice increases roughly with the growth of the
hepatoma
. The percentage of total lipid in the
hepatoma
was greater than in either normal or host liver; however, the liver displayed more phospholipid than the tumor, while more triglyceride was demonstrable in the
hepatoma
. Of the 17 isozyme patterns analyzed, seven--acid phosphatase, malate dehydrogenase, aspartate amino-transferase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, esterase,
lactate dehydrogenase
, and xanthine dehydrogenase--were different in the liver and the tumor. The cyclic AMP levels decreased in the tumor and the host spleen from day 10 to day 21; however, slight increases were noted in the tumor and host spleen and liver at day 28. These studies suggested 2--3 weeks posttransplantation as the optimal time for investigational use of this
hepatoma
.
...
PMID:Characterization of murine hepatoma BW7756. I. Selected biochemical properties of liver and hepatoma. 8 49
The M4 isozyme of
lactate dehydrogenase
was purified to homogeneity from normal rat liver and from two Morris hepatomas (7777 and 7793). Amino-terminal analyses with fluorodinitrobenzene failed to detect the presence of free amino-terminal residues in each enzyme studied. Each enzyme contained between 3.7 and 4.1 moles of protein-bound acetyl groups per mole of enzyme. The amino-terminal peptide, characterized as N-acetylalanylalanine, was isolated from Pronase digests of each isozyme preparation, and quantitative recovery experiments indicated that all acetyl residues were bound at the amino termini. Carboxylterminal analyses demonstrated phenylalanine to be the carboxyl-terminal residue in each enzyme studied. These data indicate no differences in either amino- or carboxyl-terminal regions of the
hepatoma
M4 isozymes compared to normal liver M4 isozyme.
...
PMID:Amino- and carboxyl-terminal analyses of hepatoma lactate dehydrogenase isozymes. 16 83
The activities of glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.8), glycerol kinase (EC 2.7.1.30),
lactate dehydrogenase
(
EC 1.1.1.27
), "malic' enzyme (L-malate-NADP+ oxidoreductase; EC 1.1.1.40) and the beta-oxoacyl-(acyl-carrier protein) reductase component of the fatty acid synthetase complex were measured in nine
hepatoma
lines (8 in rats, 1 in mouse) and in the livers of host animals. With the single exception of Morris
hepatoma
16, which had unusually high glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity, the activities of glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and glycerol kinase were highly correlated in normal livers and hepatomas (r = 0.97; P less than 0.01). The activities of these two enzymes were not strongly correlated with the activities of any of the other three enzymes. The primary function of hepatic glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase appears to be in gluconeogenesis from glycerol.
...
PMID:Proportional activities of glycerol kinase and glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase in rat hepatomas. 17 86
1. Incubation of human and rat
hepatoma
cells with insulin (1 mU/10(6) cells) decreases their content of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate by more than half after 1 h and by about a quarter after 4 h. 2. The activities of the ATP-metabolising enzymes, adenylate kinase and Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase are significantly increased by insulin within 1 h and after 4 h. Activity of succinate dehydrogenase and
lactic dehydrogenase
showed no change at either time interval. 3. Insulin markedly stimulated glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity within 1 h but by 4 h the increase was less apparent. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity by contrast was not increased by 1 h but was elevated at 4 h.
...
PMID:The influence of insulin on various enzyme activities in human and rat hepatoma cells. 17 8
A Caucasian male developed florid dermatomyositis documented by serum enzyme elevation, electromyography, and histology of skin and muscle. Serum enzymes, including creatine phosphokinase (CPK), aldolase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT), and
lactic dehydrogenase
(
LDH
), decreased initially during high dose systemic corticosteroid therapy, although profound muscle weakness persisted. Subsequent elevation of serum
LDH
and SGOT levels during treatment provided a clue to underlying neoplasia. Primary
hepatoma
with widespread metastases was found at necropsy.
...
PMID:Aberrant serum enzyme patterns in dermatomyositis associated with hepatoma. 18 84
In cells of ascites Zajdela
hepatoma
in different terms after irradiation of the abdominal region in tumor-bearing rats (doses of 500, 700 and 1000 rad) there were found a reduction of highly active and an increase of insignificantly active normal isoenzymes of
lactate dehydrogenase
and also disorders in the content of acid phosphatase.
...
PMID:[Effect of radiation on the activity of lactate dehydrogenase and acid phosphatase isoenzymes of Zajdela hepatoma]. 20 7
The proportion of hexokinase (HK; EC 2.7.1.1) isozyme 1 (HK1) that is bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane is tissue specific and developmentally regulated. HK activity is known to be markedly elevated in many cancer cells and a significant fraction is mitochondrial bound. This study examined the role of the 15-amino acid N-terminal domain of HK1 in binding to liver and
hepatoma
mitochondria. A chimeric reporter construct, pCMVHKCAT, encoding this HK1 domain coupled to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene was electroporated into mouse Hepa 1-6
hepatoma
cells. After digitonin treatment, cell fractions were assayed for HK,
lactate dehydrogenase
, and CAT activities. Digitonin (75 micrograms/mg of protein) caused cytosolic leak but 70% of HK remained with the pellet. HKCAT, like HK, remained predominantly with the pellet; CAT form the control, pCMVCAT, remained mostly unbound. Binding of membrane-free cell extracts to rat liver mitochondria in vitro showed 91% of the HKCAT bound, whereas only 12% of CAT bound. Specificity of HKCAT binding to mitochondria was demonstrated by competition of HK1 for HKCAT binding sites on rat liver mitochondria as well as by blockage of HKCAT binding by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, which covalently binds to porin and blocks HK1 binding. Deletional mutant constructs of HKCAT showed reduced binding with increasing deletion size. In summary, these studies demonstrate that the 15-amino acid N-terminal domain of HK1 is necessary and sufficient to confer mitochondrial binding properties to CAT and that there is specificity for this binding to the mitochondria.
...
PMID:Targeting of hexokinase 1 to liver and hepatoma mitochondria. 130 5
Antineoplastic ether lipids have entered phase I clinical trial and, although their mechanism of action remains unclear, it is widely believed that the plasma membrane is the primary cellular drug target. In the present study the hypothesis was tested that metabolism of ether lipids acts as a detoxification process. [31P]-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to study the metabolism of the ether lipid SRI 62-834 (SRI) and the phosphate ester hexadecylphosphocholine (HPC) in the presence of both isolated phospholipases C and D and post-mitochondrial rat liver homogenate. Both SRI and HPC were slowly metabolised by phospholipase D to their alkyl phosphates and choline, and the alkyl phosphates were subsequently metabolised by phosphatase to yield the alcohols and inorganic phosphate. These studies failed to detect any metabolism of either SRI or HPC by phospholipase C, and the metabolism of platelet-activating factor (PAF) by this enzyme was not inhibited by the addition of either compound. The cytotoxicity of SRI, the related compound HPC and their metabolites was determined in vitro using three cell lines. Cytotoxicity was measured by analysis of cell growth kinetics, MTT assay and
lactate dehydrogenase
release. Closely similar results were obtained in the JB1 rat
hepatoma
cell line, in the non-transformed BL8 rat hepatocyte cell line, and in A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells. SRI was the most toxic of the compounds analysed, the concentration required to produce 50% toxicity or growth inhibition (IC50) being 6-9 microM. The putative metabolite of SRI, 2,2'-bis(hydroxymethyl)tetrahydrofuran, and the known metabolites [2'-(octadecyloxymethyl)tetrahydrofuran-2'-yl]methyl phosphate and 2-hydroxymethyl-2-octadecyloxymethyltetrahydrofuran exhibited IC50 values of > 200, > 100 and 40-70 microM, respectively, consistent with metabolic detoxification. HPC was more cytotoxic (IC50, 37 microM) than its phosphate metabolite (IC50, 140 microM), but its toxicity was similar to that of its metabolite hexadecanol (IC50, 28 microM), suggesting that only the former metabolic route leads to detoxification.
...
PMID:Is metabolism an important arbiter of anticancer activity of ether lipids? Metabolism of SRI 62-834 and hexadecylphosphocholine by [31P]-NMR spectroscopy and comparison of their cytotoxicities with those of their metabolites. 145 Dec 37
A substantial fraction of cells present within hard tumors experience extremely hypoxic and hypoglycemic conditions that can lead to phenotypic alterations such as increased metastatic potential and chemotherapeutic drug resistance. Little is known regarding the influence of anoxic aglycemia on tumor cell energy metabolism and viability, and no direct comparisons have been made between the effects of this form of metabolic stress on tumor cells and their tissue of origin. In this study, the effects of in vitro aglycemic incubation under N2 (with or without iodoacetate) on trypan blue exclusion,
lactate dehydrogenase
release, cell surface blebbing, ATP levels, and mitochondrial respiratory capacity of rat AS-30D ascites
hepatoma
cells and normal hepatocytes were measured. Under anoxic-aglycemic conditions, the period of incubation during which 50% viability was lost was 2 h for hepatocytes and 6-8 h for AS-30D cells. In contrast, the rate of anoxia-induced loss of ATP was comparable for the two cell types, and mitochondrial damage was actually accelerated in the tumor cells. These findings suggest that tumor cells are more resistant to anoxic cell death because of their greater ability to withstand deenergization and subcellular injury.
...
PMID:Differential sensitivity of AS-30D rat hepatoma cells and normal hepatocytes to anoxic cell damage. 161 5
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