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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During inflammatory states, hepatocytes are induced to synthesize and secrete a group of proteins called acute-phase proteins. It has recently been shown that besides interleukin-6 (IL-6), related cytokines such as leukemia inhibitory factor, oncostation M and interleukin-11 are also mediators of the hepatic acute-phase response. All these mediators belong to the hematopoietic family of alpha-helical cytokines. Here we show that an additional member of this
cytokine
family, ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), induces the hepatic acute-phase protein genes haptoglobin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, alpha 2-macroglobulin and beta-fibrinogen in human
hepatoma
cells (HepG2) and in primary rat hepatocytes with a time course and dose-response comparable with that of IL-6. Our next aim was to define the receptor components used by CNTF on hepatic cells. Using a cell-free binding assay we exclude that CNTF binds to the 80 kDa IL-6 receptor, a protein with significant homology to the CNTF receptor which has recently been cloned from neuroblastoma cells. In human
hepatoma
cells (Hep3B) which lack the leukemia inhibitory factor receptor, CNTF was not able to induce acute-phase protein synthesis, indicating that this receptor protein may be part of the functional CNTF receptor on hepatic cells.
...
PMID:Ciliary neurotrophic factor induces acute-phase protein expression in hepatocytes. 128 89
In vitro studies of the mouse erythroleukemia cell system have identified at least 300 agents capable of inducing differentiation by mechanisms that remain to be elucidated. We have recently begun to examine recombinant cytokines as possible agents in inducing differentiation of tumor cells, specifically, malignant cells resistant to cytotoxic drugs. One such
cytokine
, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-B1), is a multifunctional peptide that exists in at least five different isoforms in vertebrate species. Recently, there has been a great deal of interest in the role of TGF-B1 as an important multifunctional growth regulator that induces cells of mesenchymal origin to divide while inhibiting the growth of nontransformed epithelial cells. In this study, we combined the effects of the differentiation agent hexamethylene bisacetamide and the inhibiting effects of TGF-B1 on a multidrug-resistant human liver
hepatocellular carcinoma
and demonstrated the synergistic interaction of these two agents; this synergy resulted in a cell death rate of 80%. These data support the concept of programmed cell death and suggest that drug-resistant tumor cells may be susceptible to the combination of cytokines and differentiating agents.
...
PMID:Cytoreductive therapy of multidrug-resistant hepatocellular carcinoma: negative regulation of growth using combination differentiation therapy. 131 33
This paper reports on cDNA coding for the 80-kDa murine IL6 receptor (mIL6R) that was cloned from a mouse liver cDNA library. Human
hepatoma
Hep3B cells transfected transiently or stably with an expression vector carrying the entire coding region for mIL6R become responsive to mouse IL6 (mIL6). We monitored response to the
cytokine
through the transcriptional activation of a co-transfected IL6-inducible human C-reactive protein (CRP) promoter; response to mIL6 is lost upon treatment of the cells with increasing amounts of a monoclonal antibody to mIL6R. mIL6R mutants have been generated in the carboxy-terminal portion of the molecule. Their functional analysis in
hepatoma
cells shows that the intracytoplasmic domain of the receptor is not absolutely essential to IL6 signal transduction (i.e. CRP promoter activation), but that the last 40 amino acids contribute to maximal IL6 response in these cells.
...
PMID:Expression of the murine interleukin 6 receptor in hepatoma cells: the intracytoplasmic domain is not required for interleukin 6 signal transduction. 131 74
The structure-function relationships of the biological activities of mutant varieties of the pleiotropic
cytokine
interleukin-6 (human) were measured by three assays: induction of immunoglobulin M (IgM) secretion from an Epstein-Barr virus-transformed human B cell line and induction of fibrinogen secretion from either a human
hepatoma
cell line or a rat
hepatoma
cell line. The biological effects of the
cytokine
were characterized by three parameters as determined by a novel analysis: effectiveness (the maximal response attainable), efficiency (the concentration yielding a half-maximal response), and complexity (a measure of heterogeneity and feedback control). Substitution of serine for cysteine was associated with a reduction in the effectiveness of interleukin-6 in both fibrinogen secretion assays. In the assay with human
hepatoma
cells, there was also a profound reduction in efficiency. Serine substitution in the human IgM synthesis assay appears mainly to reduce the efficiency. Deletion of amino acids 4 to 23 increased the efficiency in the rat
hepatoma
assay. The complexity parameter suggests the presence of multiple receptor classes or negative feedback in all three assays. Use of the proposed sequential approach to the analysis of dose-response relations in bioassays provides a more useful quantitative assessment of activities as well as more insight into the complexity of the reactions.
...
PMID:Analysis of the heterogeneity of the biological responses to native and mutant human interleukin-6. 132 43
The effect of conditioned medium on the biosynthesis and glycosylation profile of acute phase proteins secreted by the human
hepatoma
cell line Hep G2 was studied. Conditioned medium was prepared from nonactivated [CM-LPS(-)] and ex vivo lipopolysaccharide activated [CM-LPS(+)] monocytes from eight patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA), five patients with active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and seven healthy subjects. The biosynthesis of albumin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin and alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor and the profile of glycosylation of proteinase inhibitor were analysed. CM-LPS(-) from patients with SLE had a similar effect to CM-LPS(-) from healthy subjects. In contrast, CM-LPS(-) from patients with RA had the same effect as CM-LPS(+) from healthy donors. A similar effect to that of CM-LPS(+) of healthy subjects was seen with CM-LPS(+) from patients with SLE and with CM-LPS(+) from patients with RA. The treatment of CM-LPS(+) with antibodies against interleukin 6 neutralised most of its ability to induce changes in the biosynthesis and glycosylation of acute phase proteins. Antibodies to interleukin 1 and tumour necrosis factor alpha had only a limited effect on the ability of CM-LPS(+) to induce changes of albumin and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin syntheses, whereas they had no effect on the biosynthesis and glycosylation of proteinase inhibitor. These results indicate that: (a) monocytes isolated from patients with active SLE and active RA have different capabilities of inducing alterations of acute phase proteins in vitro; (b) ex vivo activation of monocytes from patients with SLE leads to the full induction of its capabilities to change acute phase proteins, whereas the activation of monocytes from patients with RA has no additive effects; and (c) interleukin 6 seems to be a major
cytokine
involved in the regulation of the glycosylation pattern of acute phase proteins.
...
PMID:Different capabilities of monocytes from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis to induce glycosylation alterations of acute phase proteins in vitro. 137 63
Acute inflammation is characterized by increased liver output of acute phase proteins (APP). Several cytokines including IL-6, leukemia inhibitory factor, and IL-11 are capable of stimulating APP synthesis by hepatocytes and
hepatoma
cells. We have tested the activity of a separate and unique
cytokine
oncostatin M (OM) and have found potent APP-inducing activity of human recombinant OM on hepatocytes. OM acted in a dose-dependent fashion (ED50 5 to 10 ng/ml) in stimulating APP synthesis in human HepG2 cells, rat H35 cells, and primary rat hepatocyte cultures, but not human Hep3B cells. Human OM induced equivalent to or greater responses than IL-6 in HepG2 cells, however, it was less effective than human IL-6 in stimulating rat cells. Northern analysis showed that OM stimulated mRNA levels of haptoglobin and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin in HepG2 cells. OM induced CAT activity in HepG2 cells transfected with CAT constructs containing IL-6-responsive elements, suggesting that OM induces transcription of native proteins through mechanisms involving IL-6-responsive element-like sequences in gene promoters. OM was also shown to act additively with IL-6 or leukemia inhibitory factor and synergistically with glucocorticoid or IL-1 in the induction of specific APP. These results suggest that OM plays a role as a mediator of APP synthesis in inflammatory responses.
...
PMID:Recombinant oncostatin M stimulates the production of acute phase proteins in HepG2 cells and rat primary hepatocytes in vitro. 137 87
Several endocrine hormones which influence liver metabolism are known to increase in activity during the acute phase of injury or inflammation. We determined whether these hormones have the potential to influence acute-phase protein production in human and rat
hepatoma
cells. Catecholamines, glucagon, growth hormone, triiodothyronine, and cyclic nucleotides individually or in combination did not modulate the basal or the interleukin-1 (IL-1)-, IL-6-, and dexamethasone-stimulated levels of acute-phase plasma proteins. Insulin, however, was found to be a rapid, nonspecific, and dose-dependent inhibitor of the
cytokine
and glucocorticoid stimulation of acute-phase protein gene expression and to exert its effect at the transcriptional level. The insulin inhibition applied to all cytokines tested but to various degrees, depending upon the particular acute-phase gene. Insulin resulted in an early and prominent increase in the transcription of genes encoding the AP-1 components of JunA, JunB, and c-Fos, as has been observed for other growth factors. However, the effect of insulin on C/EBP beta was unexpected and paradoxical: while insulin completely inhibited the transcriptional activation of the C/EBP beta gene in
cytokine
- and dexamethasone-treated cells, the level of cytoplasmic C/EBP beta RNA was elevated. Quantitation of C/EBP beta mRNA by Northern (RNA) blot analysis and of C/EBP beta DNA binding activity by Southwestern (DNA-protein) blot analysis showed that insulin, when combined with cytokines and dexamethasone, stimulated both the mRNA and DNA binding activity by a factor of 1.6 compared with that of cells treated with cytokines and dexamethasone alone. Transient transfection of H-35 and HepG2 cells with a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene expression vector containing the C/EBP beta response element also resulted in a 1.5-fold increase of C/EBP beta-mediated transcription in insulin-treated cells. Transfection of CAT gene constructs containing increasing lengths of heptaglobin gene 5' flanking sequences indicated that insulin inhibition of IL-6 stimulation required the presence of the region from -4100 to -1030. These results suggest that insulin has the potential to control the transcription of acute-phase genes by at least two separate mechanisms.
...
PMID:Insulin is a prominent modulator of the cytokine-stimulated expression of acute-phase plasma protein genes. 137 89
Rat hepatic cells respond to interleukin (IL) -1, IL-6, and dexamethasone treatment by increasing the transcription rate of acute-phase plasma protein genes. The same conditions lead to changes in the expression of CAAT-enhancer binding protein (C/EBP) isoforms which are specific to the hepatic cell line. To identify the relationship between C/EBP isoforms and acute-phase protein gene activation, the hormone-specific expression of C/EBP alpha, beta, and delta was determined in H-35 and HTC cells and was compared to acute-phase liver. C/EBP beta was found to be the principal isoform in
hepatoma
cells and to be strongly stimulated by cytokines and dexamethasone in H-35 cells. Transactivating functions were observed for all three C/EBP isoforms by cotransfection of CAT gene reporter constructs containing
cytokine
and glucocorticoid response elements of acute-phase protein genes and expression plasmids for mouse C/EBP alpha, beta, and delta into rat and human
hepatoma
cells. The degree of C/EBP-mediated transactivation was, however, extremely variable among the different regulatory elements. Transcription run-on reactions with nuclei from transiently transfected H-35 cells indicated that cotransfected C/EBP beta increases basal expression of reporter gene constructs as well as the dexamethasone-mediated stimulation of constructs containing the glucocorticoid response elements of the rat alpha 1-acid glycoprotein gene, but did not accelerate or enhance hormone-dependent transcription activation of reporter gene plasmids containing the IL-6 regulatory element of the beta-fibrinogen gene. Activation of the reporter gene constructs appeared to be temporally and quantitatively correlated with the amount of nuclear C/EBP as determined by two-dimensional Western and Southwestern blot analyses.
...
PMID:Role of CAAT-enhancer binding protein isoforms in the cytokine regulation of acute-phase plasma protein genes. 138 74
The regulation of the synthesis by the cytokines interleukin-1 (IL-1) and IL-6 of the positive acute-phase protein alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) and of the negative acute-phase protein alpha 2-HS glycoprotein (AHSG) has been studied in a long-term culture system of the human
hepatoma
cell line Hep3B. The culture system contained 30 nM-sodium selenite as the only supplement. This allowed maintenance of the synthesis of the proteins under study at a near steady state for over 3 months. An increase in AGP mRNA and a decrease in AHSG mRNA were observed when cells were treated for two successive 48 h-periods with monocyte-conditioned medium. A return to basal levels was obtained after cessation of the
cytokine
addition. Two further additions of cytokines led to alterations in mRNA levels similar to those observed following the first
cytokine
treatment. The amounts of AGP and AHSG secreted were altered in accordance with the mRNA modifications. These results suggest that new
cytokine
receptors were being constantly synthesized during cell culture. When cytokines were present in the culture medium for 10 days, maximum alterations in AGP and AHSG synthesis were obtained following 2 and 4 days of treatment respectively, but further alterations in protein levels could not be observed afterwards. Expression of IL-6 receptor mRNA was not up-regulated by cytokines, but only by 1 microM-dexamethasone. Our results show that, in this long-term culture system, cytokines induce a response in
hepatoma
cells similar to that observed in vivo during human inflammatory states. This model could be used to evaluate the effects of agonists or antagonists of cytokines responsible for the hepatic acute-phase protein response.
...
PMID:The human hepatoma Hep3B cell line as an experimental model in the study of the long-term regulation of acute-phase proteins by cytokines. 138 66
The decreased synthesis of hepatic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), the rate-limiting enzyme of gluconeogenesis, that occurs during endotoxemia was shown previously in rats to occur at the transcriptional level. In the current study, the exogenous administration of human recombinant tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a proximal mediator of endotoxic shock, reduced the PEPCK transcription rate, mRNAPEPCK levels, and PEPCK enzyme activity in a time- and dose-dependent manner in CD-1 mice. Comparable amounts of circulating TNF were measured in mice 2 h after injection of human recombinant TNF (10(5) U) or a 50% lethal dose of Escherichia coli endotoxin (20 mg/kg). Direct action of TNF to decrease the PEPCK transcription rate was confirmed in vitro with H-4-II-E Reuber
hepatoma
cells, in which a dose-dependent inhibition of PEPCK transcription was observed with 1 to 100 U of TNF per ml. A role for TNF-elicited changes in PEPCK gene expression during endotoxemia was confirmed by the protective effect of rabbit polyclonal antibodies to recombinant murine TNF. C57BL/6 mice passively immunized with anti-TNF 4 h prior to endotoxin challenge exhibited normal PEPCK enzyme activity. Neutralization of circulating TNF with anti-TNF failed, however, to prevent the hypoglycemia commonly observed during endotoxemia, suggesting the participation of other mediators. Anti-TNF treatment reduced circulating interleukins 1 and 6 at 3 and 6 h after endotoxin treatment, respectively. These results suggest that during endotoxemia, the development of hypoglycemia is multifaceted and that several cytokines are most likely involved. The findings from the Reuber
hepatoma
cell model afford an opportunity in future work to map putative
cytokine
response elements in the PEPCK promoter responsible for perturbed hormonal regulation of the gene during endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Identification of tumor necrosis factor as a transcriptional regulator of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene following endotoxin treatment of mice. 139 16
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