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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human liver-specific gene products are expressed by hybrid cells resulting from the fusion of human amniocytes with mouse
hepatoma
cells. Amniocytes grown from human amniotic fluid have no detectable levels of secreted human albumin, transferrin, alpha-1 antitrypsin, or
ceruloplasmin
, while the mouse
hepatoma
line, HH--, secretes several mouse liver-specific gene products including transferrin and albumin. Fifty-five hybrids were isolated and analyzed for the expression of serum proteins by Ouchterlony double diffusion and Laurell immunoelectrophoresis. All hybrids continued to express mouse albumin and transferrin, and 29 hybrids from this series were found to express one or more human serum proteins. Activation of the human amniocyte genome provides a model for prenatal diagnosis of serum protein abnormalities.
...
PMID:Expression of human hepatic genes in mouse hepatoma--human amniocyte hybrids. 10 1
A study of the serum proteins pattern of 30 patients with primary
liver cell carcinoma
and 11 with amoebic liver abscess was carried out. When compared with controls significant differences were found for both conditions in the values of pre-albumin, transferrin, albumin, haptoglobin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, and alpha 2HS-glycoprotein. In the differential diagnosis of amoebic liver abscess and primary hepatic carcinoma, the estimation of albumin, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin
ceruloplasmin
, alpha 2H2-glycoprotein and transferrin was found helpful.
...
PMID:The serum protein pattern in primary hepatoma and amoebic liver abscess. 22 36
The Long-Evans Cinnamon rat is a mutant strain that contracts hereditary hepatitis and, eventually, spontaneous
hepatocellular carcinoma
. Because we found a corresponding gross copper accumulation in the liver of the rats, we examined whether the development of hepatitis in our rat system could be prevented by administration of D-penicillamine. D-Penicillamine is a copper-chelating agent and one of the drugs effective for human Wilson's disease, in which abnormal copper metabolism is also observed. The results show that D-penicillamine treatment inhibited the elevation of serum transaminases, suppressed abnormal histological changes in the liver and completely prevented the onset of hepatitis in the Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. We further found that the copper concentration in the liver and serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
levels were decreased, whereas the urinary copper level was increased in the D-penicillamine-treated Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. These findings demonstrate that the pathogenesis of hereditary hepatitis in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats is due to abnormal copper accumulation in the liver.
...
PMID:D-penicillamine prevents the development of hepatitis in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats with abnormal copper metabolism. 137 Jan 62
The Cu concentration was about 40 and 60 times higher in the liver in Long-Evans with a cinnamon-like coat color (LEC) rats aged 80 days (without hepatitis) and 130 days (with hepatitis), respectively than in the liver in Fischer rats. Most hepatic Cu was recovered in the cytosol fraction. Furthermore, about 96% and 84% of the cytosolic Cu was found in the metallothionein region on a Sephadex G-75 column in LEC rats aged 80 and 130 days, respectively. The hepatic metallothionein concentration was about 130 to 140 times higher in LEC rats than in Fischer rats when the concentration was expressed as metallothionein-bound Cu. Three forms of Cu-metallothionein were isolated by DEAE-cartridge. Although the concentration of hepatic Cu-metallothionein and its composition of polymorphic form were not changed greatly in hepatitis phase (in the 130-day-old LEC rats), activities of serum enzymes, aspartate aminotransferase (GOT) and alanine aminotransferase (GPT) were increased significantly. The LEC rat showed a significantly low concentration of biliary Cu and markedly low activity of
ceruloplasmin
(as ferroxidase). Serum Cu showed a low concentration in the 80-day-old LEC rats, but recovered to the control level in the 130-day-old LEC rats. The abnormal accumulation of Cu may be due to the inherent reduction of excretion of Cu into the bile and blood. Such deposition may be a trigger for the onset of the spontaneous hepatitis occurring at 90-120 days after birth and for the onset of
hepatoma
later.
...
PMID:Excessive accumulation of hepatic copper in LEC rats aged 80 days without hepatitis and 130 days with hepatitis. 144 42
Serum Mn-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD) was determined in patients with various liver diseases including 31 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), 46 with
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
), 17 with liver cirrhosis (LC), 23 with chronic hepatitis (CH) and 12 patients with obstructive jaundice with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a specific monoclonal antibody. The serum level in patients with PBC (407 +/- 35 ng/ml, mean +/- SEM; n = 31) was significantly increased (p less than 0.01) compared with those of other liver diseases. Mn-SOD level did not correlate with total bilirubin level, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity, alkaline phosphatase activity, alanine aminotransferase activity, IgM, or with
ceruloplasmin
level in the sera of the patients. When the patients with PBC were histologically subdivided into four groups according to Scheuer's classification (Scheuer PJ. Primary biliary cirrhosis. In: Scheuer PJ, ed. Liver biopsy interpretation. 3rd ed. London: Bailliere Tindall, 1980:47-56), a high level of serum Mn-SOD was noticed in the early stage as well as in the advanced stage of the disease. Immunoblot analysis confirmed the reactivity and specificity of the monoclonal antibody to the enzyme protein in the patients' sera. Immunostaining of a liver biopsy specimen from the patients with PBC revealed increased expression of the enzyme protein in damaged epithelial cells of interlobular bile ducts, bile ductules, and degenerated hepatocytes. These data suggested that free radicals including superoxide anion are possibly involved in the pathogenesis of the disease and Mn-SOD may play some role in a protection against the superoxide anion.
...
PMID:Elevated level of serum Mn-superoxide dismutase in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis: possible involvement of free radicals in the pathogenesis in primary biliary cirrhosis. 168 6
A new mutant developing spontaneous hepatitis and
hepatocellular carcinoma
has been discovered among Long Evans rats. Hepatitis appears suddenly in the mutant, Long Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats, three to four months after birth. Characteristic clinical signs of the hepatitis are jaundice, bilirubinuria, subcutaneous bleeding and loss of body weight. The affected rats showed a high mortality and histological changes with focal necrosis of hepatocytes and infiltration of a few inflammatory cells. Genetic studies indicate that a single autosomal recessive gene is responsible for the hepatitis. Long-surviving rats show chronic hepatitis, and subsequently develop
hepatocellular carcinoma
at one and a half years of age. We recently found an abnormal copper accumulation in the liver of LEC rats prior to development of the hepatitis. Copper concentration in the liver is over 40 times more than that of normal Long Evans Agouti (LEA) rats, whereas the serum
ceruloplasmin
and copper levels are lower. An excess of toxic-form copper, free copper, will cause DNA damage in the presence of free radicals and oxygen radicals. Such DNA damage by the radicals is considered to be responsible for hepatic necrosis and
hepatocellular carcinoma
in LEC rats.
...
PMID:Hepatocarcinogenesis in the LEC rat with hereditary hepatitis. 184 50
The LEC rat is a mutant inbred strain isolated from Long-Evans rats, which spontaneously develops hepatitis and
hepatoma
with high frequency. In this study, copper profiles of LEC rats, including copper concentration in the liver and concentrations of copper and
ceruloplasmin
in the serum, were investigated. It was found that copper accumulated in the liver of LEC rats immediately prior to the onset of hepatitis with a concentration of more than 50 times that of normal LEA rats, and serum concentrations of copper and
ceruloplasmin
decreased markedly, which resembled biochemically characteristic features of human Wilson's disease. Administration of d-penicillamine (100 mg/Kg/day p. o), a chelating agent, reduced the hepatic copper level and completely inhibited the development of hepatitis in LEC rats. Copper also accumulated in both cancerous and non-cancerous liver tissues of three 29-month old male LEC rats which had spontaneously developed hepatocellular carcinomas. These findings suggest that the hepatitis in LEC rats is caused by copper toxicity, and that the abnormal copper metabolism may be involved in hepatic carcinogenesis in the LEC rats. Therefore, it is considered that the LEC rat will provide a promising animal model for not only elucidating the pathogenesis of Wilson's disease and developing treatment strategies of the disease, but also for studying the role of copper in hepatic carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:[Abnormal hepatic copper accumulation and its significance in LEC rats developing spontaneous hepatitis and hepatoma]. 195 41
To investigate our earlier hypothesis that carbohydrates play a regulatory role in the intracellular transport of secretory glycoproteins, we used 1-deoxynojirimycin (DNJ), and inhibitor of glucosidase I and II of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), to modify the structure of N-linked glycan moieties of secretory glycoproteins of human
hepatoma
(Hep G2) cells in culture. Using a pulse-chase protocol, we found that treatment of Hep G2 cultures with 1.25 mM DNJ markedly reduced the rate of secretion of alpha 1-protease inhibitor,
ceruloplasmin
, and alpha 2-macroglobulin, but had no effect on the export of fibronectin, alpha-fetoprotein and transferrin, nor on albumin which lacks carbohydrate. For example, 50% of newly synthesized alpha 1-protease inhibitor, the glycoprotein most dramatically affected, was secreted by 27 min in control cultures versus 110 min in DNJ-treated cultures. Percoll gradient cell fractionation analyses revealed that DNJ inhibited transport of the affected secretory glycoproteins in the RER segment of the ER/Golgi pathway. For example, 50% of newly synthesized alpha 1-protease inhibitor was lost from the RER fraction by 10 min in untreated cells, but 70 min was required for the transport of a similar amount of protein in DNJ-treated cells. DNJ treatment also inhibited the rate at which the N-linked glycan moieties of the affected glycoproteins became resistant to endo H in the Golgi. Since the glycan moiety of secreted forms of the affected glycoproteins were fully processed to the complex structure, suggesting escape from DNJ inhibition, we concluded that removal of terminal glucose residues from the glycan chain of secretory glycoproteins is required for their transport from the RER to the Golgi. We suggest that the oligosaccharide moieties on alpha 1-protease inhibitor,
ceruloplasmin
and alpha 2-macroglobulin form part of the binding site for a receptor which regulates transport of these glycoproteins.
...
PMID:Differential effects of 1-deoxynojirimycin on the intracellular transport of secretory glycoproteins of human hepatoma cells in culture. 243 31
The acute-phase response to inflammatory stimuli, characterized by increased synthesis of acute-phase proteins (APP), is often accompanied by changes in the glycosylation patterns of some of these proteins. While expression of APP genes in hepatocytes is regulated by monokines, mechanisms governing changes in glycosylation are not known. Exposure of human
hepatoma
cell line Hep 3B to conditioned medium from LPS-activated human monocytes and to medium from the keratocarcinoma cell line COLO-16 led to increased synthesis of alpha 1 proteinase-inhibitor and
ceruloplasmin
and to alterations of their glycosylation patterns similar to those seen in human serum in various inflammatory states. IL-1, tumor necrosis factor, and hepatocyte stimulating factor I increased synthesis of
ceruloplasmin
without alterations in the pattern of its glycosylation. These findings demonstrate that altered glycosylation seen in plasma in some inflammatory states can be explained by the effects of monokines on glycosylation in hepatocytes and that gene expression and glycosylation of some APP during the acute-phase response may be regulated by different mechanisms.
...
PMID:Monokines regulate glycosylation of acute-phase proteins. 243 35
Because a number of different cytokines have been reported to regulate the synthesis of human, murine, and rat acute phase proteins (APP), we studied the effect of cytokines on production of several major human APP in a single system, the human
hepatoma
cell line Hep 3B. Conditioned medium (CM) prepared from human blood monocytes activated with LPS in the presence of dexamethasone led to substantial induction of serum amyloid A (SAA) and C-reactive protein (CRP) synthesis whereas the defined cytokines IL-1 beta, TNF alpha, and medium from a human keratinocyte cell line (COLO-16), containing hepatocyte-stimulating factor activity, failed to induce these two major APP. Induction of SAA and CRP was accompanied by an increase in concentration of their specific mRNA. Size fractionation of CM from activated monocytes by fast protein liquid chromatography indicated that SAA- and CRP-inducing activity eluted as a single peak with a Mr of approximately 18 kDa. alpha 1-Antitrypsin, which also failed to respond to IL-1 beta or TNF alpha, was induced by both CM and medium from COLO-16 cells. The induction of AT by CM was accompanied by an increase in specific mRNA. Induction of
ceruloplasmin
and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin and decrease in the synthesis of albumin was achieved by both CM and IL-1 beta. Ceruloplasmin and albumin responded in a comparable fashion to both TNF alpha and medium from COLO-16 cells; the response of ACT to these cytokines was not evaluated. These results indicate that human SAA and CRP are induced in Hep 3B cells by products of activated monocytes but not by IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, or some hepatocyte-stimulating factor preparations and that a group of heterogeneous mechanisms are involved in the induction of the various human APP.
...
PMID:Heterogeneous nature of the acute phase response. Differential regulation of human serum amyloid A, C-reactive protein, and other acute phase proteins by cytokines in Hep 3B cells. 245 96
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