Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Monoclonal antibody (A9-84) against a
hepatocellular carcinoma
cell line (PLC/PRF-5) was produced by somatic cell fusion. The hybridoma clones were screened by a rapid solid-phase enzyme-linked binding assay. The target cells were cultured in 96-well Linbro plate and fixed by
methanol
for screening. The specificity of the antibody was studied by enzyme-linked binding assay and immunofluorescence methods. It shows that A9-84 do not respond to 8 different human cancer cell lines (4 liver cancer, 1 esophageal cancer, 1 stomach cancer, 1 multiple myeloma and 1 lymphoblast cell line) and the peripheral mononuclear cells of 91 normal subjects. A9-84 is the subtype of IgG3. It is capable of inhibiting the growth of cultured PLC/PRF/5 cells with or without complement.
...
PMID:[Action of monoclonal antibody against a hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (PLC/PRF/5)]. 301 21
The H-35 rat
hepatoma
is relatively insensitive to the anthracycline antibiotic, daunorubicin (DNR), requiring 0.25 microM daunorubicin for inhibition of cell proliferation by 50%. Studies were undertaken to investigate the basis for the apparent intrinsic resistance in this cell line. The relative insensitivity of the H-35 cells to DNR is not a function of metabolic inactivation of DNR to deoxyaglycone derivatives; after a 2-h incubation, less than 10% of drug is metabolized, exclusively by conversion to daunorubicinol. The limited toxicity of DNR to the rat
hepatoma
may be explained, in part, by the absence of DNA strand breaks at daunorubicin concentrations up to 1 microM while higher (supraclinical) DNR concentrations (5 and 10 microM) produce direct, "non-protein-associated" DNA strand breaks. Limited daunorubicin toxicity in this tumor cell line may also be related to the apparent absence of free radical-mediated cellular damage as the free radical scavengers dimethyl sulfoxide, catalase,
methanol
, and mannitol fail to reverse the inhibitory effect of 1 microM DNR on cell proliferation. Daunorubicin does not induce leakage of the cytoplasmic enzyme, glutamic oxaloacetate transaminase, or diminish mitochondrial enzyme function. Conversely, while drug effects on RNA synthesis are small, and protein synthesis is minimally diminished, inhibition of cell proliferation corresponds closely with inhibition of DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Evidence for inhibition of growth related to compromised DNA synthesis in the interaction of daunorubicin with H-35 rat hepatoma. 335 5
Plasma-membrane-bound kinases of AS-30D ascites from transplantable rat
hepatocarcinoma
were shown to extensively catalyze the phosphorylation of plasma membrane proteins and membrane lipids, using [gamma-32P]ATP or [gamma-32P]GTP as a phosphate donor. In contrast, plasma membranes from normal adult rat liver or fast-growing regenerating liver (24 h after partial hepatectomy) produce significantly less activity for protein phosphorylation and little phosphorylation of the lipids. However, neonatal (24 h old) rat liver plasma membrane preparations show levels of phosphorylation of proteins and lipids intermediate between those in the tumor cell line and normal adult plasma membrane preparations. Phosphatidic acid was identified as one of the 32P-labelled lipids in the tumor plasma membrane chloroform-
methanol
(2:1, v/v) extract. Phosphorylation of protein was not affected by cAMP or cGMP. However, calcium ion (in the presence or absence of calmodulin) significantly modifies the 32P labelling of a series of proteins in normal tissue but has little effect with the neoplastic preparations. Some plasma membrane proteins were capable of nucleotide binding, instead or in addition to being phosphorylated. Finally, the presence of membrane-bound phosphoprotein phosphatase(s) was also demonstrated in all the preparations examined by means of chase experiments with nonlabelled ATP or GTP, and (or) by the use of the phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibitor, orthovanadate.
...
PMID:Endogenous hyperphosphorylation in plasma membrane from an ascites hepatocarcinoma cell line. 337 Jan 39
We have identified an unusual resonance at 16.5 ppm in the 31P NMR spectrum of a Morris (7777)
hepatoma
grown in the inguinal fossa of a Buffalo rat as myoinositol 1,2-(cyclic) phosphate. This compound has been observed in all of the 32 tumors examined as well as in cultured cells derived from the tumor, but it has not been observed in normal rat tissues. Its level in the aqueous phase of chloroform/
methanol
/water extracts of the tumor is 70 +/- 40 nmol/g, wet weight (n = 4). The presence of a breakdown product of phosphatidylinositol at such high levels in a fast growing tumor may provide an important clue for understanding the metabolic defect that results in the malignant growth of this tumor.
...
PMID:Observation of myo-inositol 1,2-(cyclic) phosphate in a Morris hepatoma by 31P NMR. 379 28
A large proportion of the metabolites formed from benzo[a]pyrene (BP) in cell cultures from rodents, fish and humans result from conjugation of an oxidized metabolite of BP with sulfate, glucuronic acid or glutathione (GSH). To improve the analysis of these metabolites, a reversed-phase ion-pair h.p.l.c. system using a step gradient of
methanol
:tetrabutyl-ammonium bromide in ammonium formate buffer has been developed for the separation of these three classes of conjugates. This system separated 3-hydroxy-BP glucuronide and sulfate conjugates and resolved them from GSH conjugates of BP 4,5-oxide, 7,8-oxide and 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide. Cultures of early passage Syrian hamster, Wistar rat and Sencar mouse embryo cells, a bluegill fry (BF-2) cell line and a human
hepatoma
cell line (HepG2) were exposed to [3H]BP for 24 h. Medium samples from each were extracted with chloroform:
methanol
:water, and the water-soluble metabolites were analyzed by ion-pair h.p.l.c. The largest peak of metabolites in the media from cell cultures from rodents and the bluegill fry cell line co-eluted with the glucuronic acid conjugate of 3-hydroxy-BP. These phenol-glucuronides represented 48-62% of the total water-soluble metabolites in the fish and rodent cell cultures. Treatment of this material with beta-glucuronidase released 3-hydroxy-BP and 9-hydroxy-BP in ratios from 3:4 to 13.3:1 in various cultures. Media from the bluegill fry cell line and the mouse embryo cell cultures also contained a peak of BP-diol glucuronides; treatment of these peaks with beta-glucuronidase released mainly BP-7,8-diol. In HepG2 cells, 40% of the water-soluble metabolites were identified as sulfate conjugates of 3-hydroxy-BP and 9-hydroxy-BP. No glucuronic acid conjugates of BP metabolites were detected in HepG2 cells. Only small amounts of the water-soluble metabolites from these cell cultures eluted in the same volumes as the synthetic GSH conjugate of BP-4,5-oxide, BP-7,8-oxide and BP-7,8-diol-9,10-oxide. These studies indicate that conjugation with glucuronic acid represents a major pathway of formation of water-soluble metabolites from BP in cells derived from a number of species and demonstrate the value of this ion-pair h.p.l.c. system for the analysis of conjugates formed from BP.
...
PMID:Separation by ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatography of the glucuronide, sulfate and glutathione conjugates formed from benzo[a]pyrene in cell cultures from rodents, fish and humans. 380 96
The clone C2 derived from a rat
hepatoma
cell line was used to investigate the mechanism of the induction of gamma-glutamyltransferase by ethanol. gamma-glutamyltransferase activity was detected in the C2 cell (1.4 mU per mg protein), and its kinetic properties were similar to normal rat liver gamma-glutamyltransferase. Ethanol provoked a dose- and time-dependent increase in gamma-glutamyltransferase activity, the maximum (2- to 3-fold) occurring 48 hr after the addition of ethanol (180 mM). In contrast, the activity of five other enzymes tested were not markedly modified by ethanol. Propanol was more potent than ethanol in inducing gamma-glutamyltransferase (5-fold stimulation), whereas
methanol
had no effect. The release of the enzyme in the medium was increased by ethanol and propanol. Several observations argue in favor of an increase in the biosynthesis of gamma-glutamyltransferase after ethanol addition: (i) ethanol increased the maximal velocity of the enzyme and did not modify the affinity for its substrates. It did not alter gamma-glutamyltransferase subcellular distribution; (ii) ethanol had no immediate effect when added directly to the assay mixture; (iii) the lag period and the time course of the increase in gamma-glutamyltransferase activity were those expected for an induction process; (iv) the increase in gamma-glutamyltransferase activity was prevented by cycloheximide and actinomycin D suggesting that ethanol acted at the transcriptional level. The effect of ethanol was not mimicked by acetaldehyde. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that ethanol increases the biosynthesis of gamma-glutamyltransferase in a rat
hepatoma
cell line which provides a new in vitro system.
...
PMID:Ethanol effects in a rat hepatoma cell line: induction of gamma-glutamyltransferase. 613 64
The target antigens for the complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies in D23 tumour-bearer serum from rats carrying the chemically induced D23
hepatoma
were extractable from extranuclear membranes of tumours with chloroform/
methanol
. The antigenic activity, measured by inhibition of D23 TBS cytotoxicity against D23 cells, was recovered in the phospholipid-containing fraction after silica gel chromatography. Preparative thin-layer chromatography (in chloroform/
methanol
/0.25% CaCl2) revealed that the antigenic activity migrated similarly to phosphatidylethanolamine and cardiolipin, although these phospholipids did not cause the inhibition seen with the antigenic fractions. Phospholipase A2 digestion of the phospholipid fraction did not affect the antigenic activity nor did it after the mobility of the antigen when analysed with thin-layer chromatography. From these results it was concluded that the antigen extracted from D23
hepatoma
may be of phospholipid nature, although its molecular identity remains to be established.
...
PMID:The lipid nature of a tumour-associated autoantigen from a chemically induced rat hepatoma. 617 53
The retinyl palmitate content of the postnuclear membrane fraction from 10 Morris hepatomas, their host rat livers, one acetylaminofluorene-induced rat liver
hepatoma
, and the host liver and of regenerating rat liver was measured by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography of the chloroform:
methanol
extracts. Membranes from the
hepatoma
tissue contained less than detectable levels of retinyl acyl esters, whereas membranes from host liver tissue and regenerating liver contained levels of retinyl palmitate within normal ranges. The amount of cellular retinol-binding protein was also decreased considerably in cytosols from 9618 and 7777 hepatomas. The ratio of endogenous retinyl phosphate to the polyisoprenoid dolichyl phosphate available for mannosylation in an assay containing postnuclear membranes and guanosine dephospho[14C] mannose was decreased by a factor of 3 to 10 in
hepatoma
tissue. Such change in ratio was not attributable to specific changes in retinyl phosphate mannose-synthesizing activity, but it appeared to be related to the vitamin A deficiency condition of the membrane from tumors. As for membranes from vitamin A-deficient liver tissue, postnuclear membranes from rat cystic
hepatocarcinoma
, Morris 7777, 3924A1-1, and 5123D-1-2 transplantable rat hepatomas and guinea pig line 10
hepatoma
all synthesized a mannolipid with intermediate hydrophobic properties between retinyl phosphate mannose and dolichyl phosphate mannose and not normally found in liver tissue. These alterations in patterns of lipid intermediates may be responsible for altered glycosylation of glycoproteins in neoplastic cells. In conclusion, the present investigation establishes that
hepatoma
cell membrane is in a status of vitamin A and of retinyl phosphate depletion, while dolichyl phosphate contents appear similar to host liver membrane.
...
PMID:Retinyl palmitate, retinyl phosphate, and dolichyl phosphate of postnuclear membrane fraction from hepatoma, host liver, and regenerating liver: marginal vitamin A status of hepatoma tissue. 669 36
The permeability coefficients of Novikoff
hepatoma
ascites cell membranes for tritiated water (3HHO) and for a homologous series of monohydric alcohols (
methanol
through hexanol) were deduced from linear diffusion coefficients by means of a series-parallel pathway model (Redwood et al. (1974) J. Gen. Physiol. 64, 706-729). Membrane permeability coefficients for 3HHO at 20, 30 and 37 degrees C were (all x 10(-5)) 97, 125, and 163 cm . s-1, respectively, and were significantly smaller than the corresponding values for the alcohols tested. In the alcohols series, ethanol had the lowest permeability coefficient 198 x 10(-5) cm . s-1 at 20 degrees C. The apparent activation energy for water permeation was 6.7 +/- 1.9 S.E. kcal . mol-1. The apparent membrane diffusion coefficients for the alcohols were a complex function of molecular properties with less diffusional membrane resistance to the alcohols in the middle of the homologous series than would have been expected on the basis of oil-water partitioning or molar volume considerations. The conventional parallel aqueous lipophilic pathway model is not consistent with the present data which can be interpreted by consideration of parallel lipophilic pathways through the Novikoff
hepatoma
cell membrane.
...
PMID:Permeability of Novikoff hepatoma cells to water and monohydric alcohols. 722 79
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>