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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lectins, plant proteins that bind specific saccharide determinants, have been utilized to examine the effect of neuraminidase digestion on the structure and/or expression of oligosaccharide moieties present at the periphery of Novikoff ascites
hepatoma
cells. Five lectins were utilized: concanavalin A (Con A), specific for alpha-D-manno- or alpha-D-glucopyranosyl residues; wheat germ agglutinin, specific for 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-glucopyranosyl residues; Ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCAI), specific for D-glucopyranosyl residues; R. communis agglutinin II (RCAII), specific for D-galacto- or 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranosyl residues; and soybean agglutinin, specific for 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranosyl residues. Neuraminidase treatment of Novikoff cells did not alter their agglutination by Con A or wheat germ agglutinin. Similar treatment produced only a 2-fold increase in their agglutination by RCAI but a 12-fold increase in their agglutination by RCAII, indicating that 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranosyl residues become expressed upon neuraminidase treatment. This conclusion was confirmed by the observation that neuraminidase-treated Novikoff cells acquired agglutinability by soybean agglutinin. Binding studies using ferritin-conjugated RCAII indicated that neuraminidase treatment exposed cryptic cell surface receptors for RCAII. To ascertain the role of cell surface glycoproteins in lectin-induced agglutination of Novikoff cells, glycopeptides cleaved from the cell surface by
papain
were assayed for lectin receptor activity. The cell surface glycopeptides exhibited receptor activity for Con A, wheat germ agglutinin and RCAI but not for RCAII and soybean agglutinin. A cell surface macrosialoglycopeptide fraction, resolved by gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography, possessed a major portion of the Con A and RCAI receptor activity.
...
PMID:Effect of neuraminidase and papain treatment on lectin-induced agglutination of Novikoff tumor cells and assay of lectin receptor activity of the glycopeptides released from the cell surface by papain. 17 11
The ascites form of a chemically induced guinea pig
hepatoma
, line-10, was resistant to killing in vitro by xenogeneic antibody and guinea pig complement. Pretreatment of line-10 cells with certain proteolytic enzymes rendered tham susceptible to the killing action of antibody and guinea pig complement. The effects of enzyme pretreatment were dependent on enzyme concentration, temperature, and could be blocked by addition of competitive or non-competitive inhibitors. The effect of the enzyme treatment could reversed by incubating the treated cells at 37 degrees C (but not at 0 degrees C), in the absence of the enzyme. Effective enzymes included ficin, bromelain, pronase, elastase,
papain
, trypsin, collagenase, lipases type I and type VI, and the neuraminidase preparation isolated from Clostridium perfringens. The activity of the lipase preparations and the neuraminidase preparation isolated from Clostridium perfringens appeared to be caused by proteolytic enzyme contamination. Enzyme preparations that proved ineffecitve in rendering the line-10 cells sensitive to killing by antibody and guinea pig complement included DNase, RNase, beta-glucuronidase type 6A or type B10, hyaluronidase type V or type VI, and pectinesterase.
...
PMID:Lysis of tumor cells by antibody and complement. VI. Enhanced killing of enzyme-pretreated tumor cells. 17 70
The presence of glycopeptide lectin receptors in the ascitic fluid of rats bearing Novikoff or AS-30D
hepatoma
was investigated. Macrosialoglycopeptides, resistant to pronase digestion, were partially purified from the ascitic fluid of
hepatoma
-bearing rats by gel filtration on Sephadex G-50. A macrosialoglycopeptide fraction, isolated from the ascitic fluid of rats bearing the Novikoff
hepatoma
, possessed potent concanavalin A (Con A) receptor activity. This fraction possessed higher Con A receptor activity than did the comparable macrosialoglycopeptide fraction from the ascitic fluid of rats bearing the AS-30D
hepatoma
; this obeservation is in agreement with the Con A-induced agglutination properties of these 2
hepatoma
cell lines and with the Con A receptor activities of the glycopeptides released from the surface of the
hepatoma
cells by
papain
digestion. Rat blood serum contained a comparable macrosialoglycopeptide fraction, which possessed weak Con A receptor activity. The macrosialoglycopeptide fractions from the ascitic fluid of
hepatoma
-bearing rats possessed wheat germ agglutinin receptor activity. However, this activity was also present in normal rat serum. These results suggest that glycopeptides present on the surface of Novikoff
hepatoma
cells are shed into the ascitic fluid and may be distinguished from components in normal serum by their Con A receptor activity.
...
PMID:Concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin receptors in the ascitic fluid of rat hepatomas. 44 22
Dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) is a serine exopeptidase expressed at high levels in rat kidney, liver and lung. We established eight monoclonal antibodies against partially purified DPP IV from rat liver plasma membranes. By means of a competitive dot blot assay with purified DPP IV, these antibodies were shown to recognize four different epitopes of the glycoprotein, designated A - D. The epitopes are located on the extracellular domain of DPP IV, as shown by
papain
digestion of liver plasma membranes. Treatment of DPP IV with neuraminidase and glycopeptide N-glycosidase F, as well as incubation of hepatocytes with the alpha-mannosidase I inhibitor deoxymannojirimycin, revealed that epitope A may be formed by a mannose-rich sugar chain and epitope D might represent a complex carbohydrate structure in the mature glycoprotein, while the epitopes B and C are formed by the protein moiety. Concanavalin A reduced the binding of monoclonal antibody to epitope A by 78%. Binding to epitope D was blocked by 73% with wheat germ lectin, and by more than 99% with sialic acid; epitopes B and C were unaffected by any of the lectins or sugars tested. The immunological cross-reactivity with DPP IV from Morris
hepatoma
7777 was demonstrated with monoclonal antibodies against epitopes A-C. Epitope D was not recognized on
hepatoma
DPP IV. However, in addition to DPP IV, four
hepatoma
plasma membrane glycoproteins were precipitated by the monoclonal antibody against the epitope D, indicating that this epitope is not uniquely restricted to DPP IV.
...
PMID:Development of monoclonal antibodies against different protein and carbohydrate epitopes of dipeptidyl peptidase IV from rat liver plasma membranes. 170 62
In the present investigation we compared the glycoprotein DPP IV from rat liver and Morris
hepatoma
7777 by means of biochemical and immunological methods. For that purpose nine monoclonal anti-DPP IV-antibodies recognizing four different epitopes and a monospecific anti-DPP IV-antiserum were applied. In the homogenates of both tissues a plasma membrane-bound and a soluble form were detected. The immunological cross-reactivity of both forms was demonstrated with the antiserum and the monoclonal antibodies against the epitopes A, B and C while epitope D was restricted to liver plasma membrane. Differences of the distinct DPP IV forms were exhibited in the molecular weights, isoelectric points and peptide maps. In the
hepatoma
homogenate only 10% of DPP IV activity was found compared to normal liver but the ratio of soluble to membrane-bound form is higher in the
hepatoma
than in the liver. The fractionation of the homogenates into different cell components revealed for the liver a continuous increase of DPP IV activity from the endoplasmic reticulum fractions to the Golgi apparatus and finally to the plasma membranes. By contrast, in
hepatoma
the flow from the Golgi apparatus to plasma membrane was greatly reduced. The loss of DPP IV from the surface of cultured
hepatoma
cells was concomitant with a decrease of cell-substratum adhesion. DPP IV was found to be inserted into the liver plasma membrane by two different mechanisms, a phospholipase C-sensitive and a
papain
-sensitive one. In the
hepatoma
the phospholipase C-sensitive anchorage was not expressed. Besides liver and
hepatoma
the distribution of DPP IV was characterized in various rat organs by enzyme activity, histochemistry and immunohistochemistry with the anti-DPP IV-antibodies.
...
PMID:Biochemical properties of dipeptidyl peptidase IV in liver and hepatoma plasma membranes. 248 27
gamma-Glutamyltransferase was purified to apparent homogeneity from human adult liver, fetal liver and
hepatoma
by deoxycholate extraction, immunoaffinity chromatography,
papain
digestion, phenyl-Sepharose chromatography and preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified enzyme from all three sources had an apparent Mr of 82 000 by Sephadex G-150 gel filtration and on dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis two nonidentical subunits of Mr 57 000 and 23 000 were obtained. The pI of all three forms was 3.85 and after neuraminidase treatment they each gave at least five bands with pI values ranging over 5.9-6.6. Sialic acid content was 188 (adult liver), 182 (fetal liver) and 188 (
hepatoma
) nmol/mg protein. Total neutral sugar content was 702 (adult and fetal liver) and 700 (
hepatoma
) nmol/mg protein. The hexosamine content of the enzyme from all the three sources was the same (354 nmol/mg protein) and galactosamine was absent. Partially purified hydrophobic and hydrophilic forms of gamma-glutamyltransferase from all the three sources were precipitated by Concanavalin A, Ricinus communis agglutinin and wheat germ agglutinin. These results show that gamma-glutamyltransferase from human adult liver, fetal liver and
hepatoma
are structurally similar and that the elevated levels found in fetuses and
hepatoma
are only a quantitative increase and are not due to a new isoenzyme.
...
PMID:Comparative structural and lectin-binding studies on gamma-glutamyltransferase from human adult liver, fetal liver and primary hepatoma. 286 57
Monoclonal antibodies were used to define cell surface antigens which are present on rat hepatocytes but are absent from
hepatoma
cells. One monoclonal antibody, referred to as Be 9.2, recognizes a major component of purified rat liver plasma membranes with a Mr of 110 000. This antigen (gp110) was not found in the transplantable Morris
hepatoma
9121 and 7777 nor on two cultured
hepatoma
cell lines. Isoelectric focussing showed that gp110 is a very acidic membrane component with an isoelectric point of 3.6 to 3.8. Treatment with neuraminidase reduced the Mr to 95 000. Gp110 while bound to the membrane was resistant to trypsin, but sensitive to
papain
. The tissue distribution of gp110 was examined by indirect immunofluorescence in frozen sections. The antigen was found on the bile canalicular domain of hepatocytes, the microvillous zone of enterocytes of the small intestinal villi, the luminal plasma membrane of acinar cells in the submaxillary and extraorbital gland and of epithelial cells of the vesicular gland. Gp110 could not be detected in the stomach, pancreas, large intestine, kidney, thymus, spleen, heart, lung, muscle cells and fibers and in the brain. Identical results were obtained by the use of an antiserum raised against purified gp110. They confirm the transformation-sensitive character of this glycoprotein. A possible identity with dipeptidyl peptidase IV and aminopeptidase M, which have similar molecular weights and are also present in rat liver on the bile canalicular domains, could be excluded. The results suggest that the loss of gp110 might be regarded as a marker for transformation or dedifferentiation of hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Identification of a transformation-sensitive 110-kDa plasma membrane glycoprotein of rat hepatocytes. 300 50
Plasmodium berghei sporozoites were observed to react with human
hepatoma
(HepG2) target cells which had been fixed with methanol, formaldehyde, or glutaraldehyde. The reaction consisted of attachment of sporozoites to the fixed target cells and the release of circumsporozoite protein which bound to target cell areas adjacent to the attachment sites. Treatment of fixed target cells with 0.1 N H2SO4 at 80 C, neuraminidases, neuraminidase plus galactose oxidase or inclusion of transferrin, orosomucoid, their asialo forms, or various monosaccharides in the incubation medium had no significant effect on target cell reactivity with sporozoites. Fixed cells oxidized with periodate or cells extracted with methanol or chloroform-methanol were reactive but lost activity if allowed to air dry after treatment. Treatment with
papain
or chymotrypsin at levels producing heavy cell structure damage caused a major loss of activity.
...
PMID:Plasmodium berghei: reaction of sporozoites with chemically and enzymatically modified hepatoma cells. 301 69
A growth factor has been isolated from HTC-SR rat
hepatoma
tissue culture cells which specifically stimulates DNA synthesis and cell proliferation of the HTC cells that produce it. The factor can be isolated from HTC cell conditioned medium or from an HTC cell extract. This autocrine factor has been purified 640-fold from a postmicrosomal supernatant by successive steps, involving ethanol precipitation, heating at 80 degrees C for 10 min, chromatography on a DEAE Bio-Gel A column, and chromatography on a heparin-sepharose affinity column. The major peak of activity eluted from the heparin column migrates as a single band on SDS-PAGE with an apparent Mr of 60,000. The factor is resistant to acid, heat, and neuraminidase but sensitive to trypsin,
papain
, and protease. The autocrine nature of the factor is indicated by the finding that several other types of cells do not respond with increased DNA synthesis. Mouse L-cells, BHK cells, Novikoff
hepatoma
cells, hepatocytes in primary culture, and an epithelial-like rat liver-derived cell line (Clone 9) were tested, and none of the cells could be stimulated. Small amounts of the factor could be extracted from the Clone 9 cells, however. This material had the same physical and purification properties as the factor extracted from HTC cells, but it did not stimulate DNA synthesis in Clone 9 cells, only in HTC cells. Addition of the factor resulted in an almost immediate stimulation of DNA synthesis in a proliferating HTC cell population. When the factor was added together with [3H]thymidine for 2 h, a significant stimulation of DNA synthesis was observed, provided the addition was made between 18 and 48 h after the cells had been plated. Autoradiographic studies indicated that the factor both accelerates DNA synthesis in cells already making DNA and increases the number of cells entering the S period. The stimulation of DNA synthesis was completely inhibited by 10 mM hydroxyurea, whether the factor was present for 2, 24, or 48 h in the culture. A significant increase in cell number due to addition of the factor was also observed. This accelerated proliferation was detectable only after the cells had been in culture for at least 48 h with the factor present.
...
PMID:Isolation of an autocrine growth factor from hepatoma HTC-SR cells. 358 47
The antiproteinase activities against trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase,
papain
and rat leucocyte proteinases were determined in plasma from control and Morris
hepatoma
-bearing rats. Bovine trypsin and chymotrypsin were similarly inhibited by the two types of plasma whereas porcine pancreatic elastase,
papain
and rat leucocyte neutral proteinases were more efficiently inhibited by plasma from tumour-bearing rats. The increased plasma concentrations of some proteinase inhibitors, as determined by rocket immunoelectrophoresis, are suggested to be responsible for the observed differences in inhibition. The highest increases in plasma of tumour-bearing rats were observed for alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 1-acute-phase globulin. The synthesis and secretion of six proteinase inhibitors: antithrombin III, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor, alpha 1-macroglobulin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, alpha 1-acute-phase globulin and haptoglobin, as well as albumin, were measured in tissue slices from rat liver and Morris
hepatoma
after incubation with [14C]leucine. Local inflammation inflicted upon the tumour-bearing rats increased formation of acute-phase proteins in liver slices but not in
hepatoma
slices.
...
PMID:Plasma proteinase inhibitors in Morris hepatoma-bearing rats: changes in the blood level and synthesis in tissue slices. 407 27
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