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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability of isoproterenol, glucagon, PGE1 and cholera toxin to stimulate the synthesis of cAMP and protein kinase activity in line of liver cells (BRL) and a line of rat hepatoma cells (H35) has been determined. The concentration of cAMP in BRL cells (approximately 10 pmoles/mg protein) is in the range reported for other cultured cell lines but H35 cells contain extraordinarily low amounts of this cyclic nucleotide (approximately 0.05 pmoles/mg protein). Isoproterenol and PGE1 caused an increase in cAMP content, and protein kinase activation in BRL cells, although glucagon was ineffective. H35 cells, in contrast, were completely insensitive to all hormonal agonists. Despite this fact, cholera toxin was able to produce a marked increase in cAMP content, adenylate cyclase activity and protein kinase activation in H35 cells. binding studies with [125 I]-iodohydroxybenzylpindolol, a specific beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist, revealed that each H35 cell possesses fewer than 10 beta-adrenergic receptors whereas BRL cells contain 2-5,000 receptors per cell. The low level of cAMP in H35 cells appears to result from a combination of totally unstimulated adenylate cyclase and apparently elevated phosphodiesterase activities.
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PMID:Studies of cAMP metabolism in cultured hepatoma cells: presence of functional adenylate cyclase despite low cAMP content and lack of hormonal responsiveness. 20 52

The addition of physiological concentrations of either cAMP or cGMP stimulated the release of RNA from isolated prelabeled rat liver nuclei to a fortified cytosol in a cell-free system. The released RNA was shown to be primarily mRNA by its binding to oligo(dT)-cellulose and its sedimentation profile. Treatment of rats with cAMP or cGMP 30 min prior to the preparation of cyclic nucleotides on the cell-free system. Cyclic nucleotides stimulation of RNA release occurred in systems prepared from resting rat liver, Novikoff hepatoma, and Morris hepatoma 5123D, but not the 18-h regenerating liver. The response of the cell-free system to added cyclic nucleotides reflected the in vivo concentration of these substances in the tissues from which the system was prepared. Those with high in vivo levels were not stimulated while those with lower levels did respond to added cyclic nucleotides. Neither cAMP nor cGMP had an appreciable effect on rRNA release.
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PMID:Effect of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate on RNA release from isolated nuclei. 21 35

Glycogen accumulation in growing cultures of ZHC cells (originally derived from the Zajdela ascitic hepatoma) is accompanied by an increase in glycogen synthetase (E.C. 2.4.1.11) and phosphorylase (E.C. 2.4.1.1) activities. Essentially the synthetase b and the phosphorylase a are involved in this process. The glycogen accumulation in ZHC cells us preceeded by a noticeable peak of cAMP, whereas cGMP rises early after replating and then decreases simultaneously with the growth rate. The present results suggest that these cultured hepatoma cells undergo throughout every passage an induction process involved in glycogen synthesis storage. Since the original ascites cells growing in vivo (which lack glycogen) and the cultured ZHC cells exhibit similar glycogen synthetase and phosphorylase activities, the resurgence of the glycogenic function (Staedel and Beck, 1978) in the in vitro cultureed cells does not seem related to a change in these two enzymes. By contrast, the high cyclic nucleotide levels in the cultured cells, as compared to those in the ascites cells, offer a possible explanation.
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PMID:Modifications of the activities of key enzymes and intracellular levels of cyclic nucleotides, in correlation with the glyogen deposition in a cultured hepatoma cell line. 22 82

In this article, we have provided two examples of pleiotropic regulation by specific effector molecules as assayed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. In one case, catabolite repression in the bacterium Escherichia coli was examined by measuring the response to cyclic cAMP. In the other, the effect of dexamethasone on the rate of synthesis of over a thousand cell proteins was analyzed in HTC cells. It was found that in E. coli, cAMP regulates the synthesis of about 10 percent of the cell's proteins; both inductions and repressions are observed, but inductions clearly predominate. In HTC cells, dexamethasone induces the synthesis of seven proteins, or about 0.7 percent of the total cellular proteins; repression was not consistently observed. In another rat hepatoma line (FAZA) a similar number but essentially different set of proteins was induced. These data are discussed in terms of the notion of domains of response originally proposed by TOMKINS [1].
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PMID:The glucocorticoid domain of response: measurement of pleiotropic cellular responses by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. 22 69

The antitumour agent 5-(3,3-dimethyl-1-triazeno)imidazole-4-carboxamide (DTIC) was found to inhibit competitively the low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in an ammonium-sulphate-precipitable fraction of the 2,000g supernatant of rat liver. With substrate concentration at 0.25 microM, I50 was 790 microM for DTIC and 350 microM for theophylline. DTIC at 2 mM more than doubled the cAMP response to glucagon in hepatocytes and to adrenaline in MH1C1 hepatoma cells, indicating that it also exerts its inhibitory effect on the phosphodiesterase in intact cells. The possible contribution of the phosphodiesterase inhibition to the growth-inhibitory and cytotoxic effects of DTIC is discussed.
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PMID:The antitumour agent 5-(3,3-dimethyl-1-triazeno) imidazole-4-carboxamide (DTIC) inhibits rat liver cAMP phosphodiesterase and amplifies hormone effects in hepatocytes and hepatoma cells. 22 92

A variety of 6- and 8-substituted analogs of cAMP (cyclic adenosine 3:5-monophosphate) have been tested for their ability to increase activity of tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5) in cultured Reuber H35 hepatoma cells. Some analogs, particularly the 8-thio-substituted ones, produced effects approximately equivalent to those generated by N-6, O2'-dibutyryl cAMP. In contrast, cAMP and its O-2-monobutyryl derivative were relatively ineffective even at very high concentrations, whereas three other analogs actually depressed the activity of the aminotransferase. Changes in enzyme activity generated by the various analogs were paralleled closely by changes in the relative rate of aminotransferase synthesis. An excellent correlation was found to exist between the ability of any given analog to influence the activity of tyrosine aminotransferase and that of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32). A similar correlation was found to exist between the ability of various analogs to evelate the activity of these enzymes and to inhibit reversibly the growth of H35 cells. Only one of five inhibitors of cAMP phosphodiesterase activity tested produce any increase in aminotransferase activity when added alone. All of the 6- and 8-substituted analogs tested, including noniducers, stimulated f1 histone phosphorylation in crude rat liver extracts with approximately equal potencies. On the other hand, dibutyryl cAMP was only a weak activator of protein kinase in vitro, even though it is a potent enzyme inducer. A possible resolution of this apparent discrepancy has been provided by preliminary analyses of site-specific f1 histone phosphorylation in whole cells. Only compounds active as aminotransferase inducers are capable of stimulating phosphorylation of the serine-37 residue of endogenous f1 histone (3- to 10-fold).
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PMID:Effects of 6- and 8-substituted analogs of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and tyrosine aminotransferase in hepatoma cell cultures. 23 87

Novikoff hepatoma nucleolar nonhistone proteins, C23 and B23, contain highly acidic phosphorylated regions (Mamrack, M. D., et al. (1977) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 76, 150--157). Tryptic peptides from protein C23 containing these regions were purified by DEAE-Sephadex columns and paper electrophoresis at pH 1.8. One of these, peptide C23-Ca, was sequenced by combined automated and conventional methods. The proposed amino acid sequence is shown in eq 1. This peptide was found in three 32P-labeled forms with phosphoryl groups at positions 8 and 25, and probably 28. The highly acidic sequences adjacent to the phosphorylation sites represent a unique class of phosphorylation sites different from those in histones or substrates for cytoplasmic cAMP-dependent kinases. Ala-Ala-Pro-Ala-A5la-Pro-Ala-Ser-Glu-A10sp-Glu-Asp-Glu-Glu-A15sp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Glu-A20sp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-S25er-Gln-Glu-Ser-Glu-G30lu-Glu-Asp-Glu-Glu-V35al-Met-Glu-Ile-Thr-P40ro-Ala-Lys (1).
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PMID:Amino acid sequence and sites of phosphorylation in a highly acidic region of nucleolar nonhistone protein C23. 46 78

Adenovirus infection of hepatoma cells inhibited transcription of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) (EC 4.1.1.32) (PEPCK) gene and virtually eliminated transcription of a chimeric gene which contained the PEPCK promoter linked to the structural gene for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT). This effect is due to the viral protein E1A, since adenovirus containing a deletion in the E1A gene did not repress transcription from the PEPCK promoter. Both the 243R and 283R products of the E1A gene were effective. The conserved region 1 (CR-1) domain of E1A was required for this effect. Treatment of hepatoma cells with 8-bromo-cAMP or transfection with plasmids coding for the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A, CAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha (C/EBP), or Jun, all potent inducers of PEPCK gene transcription, did not relieve the inhibition caused by E1A. This inhibition does not appear to be mediated by major enhancer elements and in the PEPCK gene since transcription from the PEPCK promoter containing block mutations in binding domains for C/EBP and cAMP regulatory element binding protein (CREB) was also inhibited by E1A. Transcription of chimeric genes containing two copies each of the major cAMP response domains (CRE-1 and P-3) linked to a neutral promoter and fused to the CAT structural gene was stimulated by the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A, but this effect was totally inhibited by E1A. The strong repressive effect of E1A on PEPCK gene transcription seems to involve an interruption of an obligatory interaction between factors which bind to the cAMP response element in the PEPCK promoter and the TATA box.
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PMID:Adenovirus E1A represses the cyclic AMP-induced transcription of the gene for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) in hepatoma cells. 131 Mar 18

The effects of hormones and cytokines on angiotensinogen production were studied in primary cultured rat hepatocytes. The basal secretion of angiotensinogen decreased during culture. The addition of dexamethasone and (Bu)2cAMP completely prevented this decrease. Angiotensinogen secretion by freshly plated hepatocytes was slightly increased in response to dexamethasone, but after 24 h in culture, hepatocytes no longer responded to dexamethasone alone. When hepatocytes were treated with (Bu)2cAMP, glucagon, or forskolin, angiotensinogen secretion increased in response to dexamethasone in a concentration-dependent manner. 17 beta-Estradiol and T3 failed to stimulate angiotensinogen secretion in either the presence or absence of (Bu)2cAMP. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) exhibited a stimulatory activity on angiotensinogen secretion, which was dependent on the presence of dexamethasone, whereas IL-1 and tumor necrosis factor had no effect in either the presence or absence of dexamethasone and/or (Bu)2cAMP. Unlike primary cultured hepatocytes, angiotensinogen secretion by rat hepatoma H4IIEC3 cells increased in response to dexamethasone alone. This increase was not enhanced by (Bu)2cAMP, but was enhanced by IL-6. Thus, in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes, neither glucocorticoid, cAMP, nor IL-6 alone stimulated angiotensinogen production, but a combination of glucocorticoid and cAMP or of glucocorticoid and IL-6 exhibited a stimulatory activity on angiotensinogen production. These results suggest that angiotensinogen production in the liver is synergistically regulated by these factors, whereas the hepatoma cell line H4IIEC3 lacks the regulatory mechanism of cAMP on glucocorticoid-induced angiotensinogen production.
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PMID:Stimulation of angiotensinogen production in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes by glucocorticoid, cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate, and interleukin-6. 131 Dec 38

Recently, it was shown that lipoprotein lipase (LPL) was produced in neonatal but not in adult rat liver. In an attempt to further define the mechanism involved in liver LPL expression, we identified a neonatal mouse hepatoma cell line, BWTG3, capable of producing LPL. The regulation of LPL expression by various extracellular stimuli was investigated in this cell line. Progesterone caused a rise in LPL production by BWTG3 cells. Other hormones tested, such as insulin, glucagon, adrenalin, testosterone, and thyroid hormone, had no effect on LPL production. The effects of progesterone on LPL production showed slow kinetics reaching a maximum 24 h after addition. Cotransfection of a progesterone receptor expression vector with a 5'-LPL-CAT reporter construct resulted in an induction of CAT activity, suggesting that the increase in LPL accumulation after progesterone was linked to transcriptional induction of the LPL gene. Stimuli causing an elevation of protein kinase A activity in the cells also increased LPL production. Three agents capable of elevating intracellular cAMP levels, i.e., forskolin, dBcAMP, and choleratoxin, caused an elevation of LPL production. The increase in LPL activity caused by forskolin and choleratoxin was paralleled by an elevation of LPL mRNA levels, while dBcAMP only induced a small elevation of LPL mRNA levels. The increase in LPL production was shown to be linked to the stimulation of the PKA signal transduction pathway and was apparently transmitted via the transcription factor CREB. No effect of the stimulation of protein kinase C or calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase on LPL production was detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lipoprotein lipase expression in undifferentiated hepatoma cells is regulated by progesterone and protein kinase A. 132 33


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