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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A high molecular weight, mucous glycoprotein (MG) from the pleural fluid of lung adenocarcinoma was purified by the DEAE-cellulose, gel-filtration and wheat germ agglutinin affinity chromatography. Protein portion of the molecule was composed of amino acids rich in serine,
threonine
and proline, but methionine and tyrosine concentrations were relatively low. About 65% of the weight, was composed of galactose, galactosamine, glucosamine, fucose and sialic acid. The gel-filtration pattern on Sepharose 4B revealed Mr greater than 10(6) Da. The SDS-PAGE pattern revealed a main band at the position of the Mr about 350 kDa under the reducing condition. Rabbit antibody against this molecule recognized mainly the peptide portion, and the radioimmunoassay (RIA) using the double antibody method was developed by this antibody. Serum MG level was low in healthy subjects and in benign diseases (0.8 +/- 0.7 U/ml; mean +/- SD and 1.1 +/- 2.3 U/ml, respectively). Thus, 3 U/ml was used as the cut-off value. The mean of serum MG levels and positive rates in malignant diseases were significantly high; 4.4 U/ml and 32.3% in lung cancer, 20.1 U/ml and 77.5% in pancreas cancer 11.6 U/ml and 64.3% in gastric cancer, 12.9 U/ml and 57.1% in
hepatoma
, 12.3 U/ml and 77.8 in colon cancer. Other malignancies such as ovarial and uterus cancer showed also high levels. Elevated values in these malignancies were observed frequently in patients with metastasis. On the other hand, the false positive cases were found in 10% of benign diseases. Determination of MG seems to be useful for the detection of several kinds of malignancies, but it is not adequately sensitive as a screening method for early cancer detection.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of mucin-like high molecular weight glycoprotein originated from lung cancer as tumor marker. 274 68
A human umbilical vein endothelial cell cDNA library in lambda gt11 was screened for expression of thrombomodulin antigens with affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal anti-thrombomodulin immunoglobulin G (IgG) and mouse monoclonal anti-human thrombomodulin IgG. Among 7 million recombinant clones screened, 12 were recognized by both antibodies. Two of these, lambda HTm10 and lambda HTm12, were shown to encode thrombomodulin by comparison of the amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence to the amino acid sequence determined directly from tryptic peptides of thrombomodulin. Thrombomodulin mRNA was estimated to be 3.7 kilobases in length by Northern blot analysis of endothelial cell and placental poly(A)+ RNA. Thrombomodulin mRNA was not detected in human brain, HepG2
hepatoma
cells, or the monocytic U937 cell line. Additional cDNA clones were selected by hybridization with the 1.2-kilobase insert of lambda HTm10. One isolate, lambda HTm15, contained a 3693 base pair cDNA insert with an apparent 5'-noncoding region of 146 base pairs, an open reading frame of 1725 base pairs, a stop codon, a 3'-noncoding region of 1779 base pairs, and a poly(A) tail of 40 base pairs. The cDNA sequence encodes a 60.3-kDa protein of 575 amino acids. The predicted protein sequence includes a signal peptide of approximately 21 amino acids, an amino-terminal ligand-binding domain of approximately 223 amino acids, an epidermal growth factor (EGF) homology region of 236 amino acids, a serine/
threonine
-rich segment of 34 amino acids, a membrane-spanning domain of 23 amino acids, and a cytoplasmic tail of 38 amino acids. The EGF-homology region consists of six tandemly repeated EGF-like domains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Human thrombomodulin: complete cDNA sequence and chromosome localization of the gene. 282 87
Cyclo(-Phe(p-NH[1-14C]Ac)-
Thr
-Lys-(CO(p-N3)C6H4)-Trp-Phe-DPro++ +), in the following named azidobenzamido-008, was synthesized in order to identify binding sites for c(Phe-
Thr
-Lys-Trp-Phe-DPro), named 008, (a cyclosomatostatin with retro sequence) in liver cell plasma membranes. In the dark the above photolabel was taken up into isolated hepatocytes, inhibiting the sodium dependent uptake of cholate and taurocholate in a competitive manner (Ki for cholate uptake inhibition = 1 microM; Ki for taurocholate uptake inhibition = 5 microM). When activated by flashed light the inhibition became irreversible (IC50 for cholate uptake inhibition = 2 microM; IC50 for taurocholate uptake inhibition = 9 microM) and the activated cyclopeptide bound chiefly to hepatocellular membrane proteins of 67, 54, 50, 37 kDa. Excess of the initial 008, or of cholate or phalloidin partially protected the above membrane components against labeling with 14C-labeled azidobenzamido-008. In contrast AS 30 D ascites
hepatoma
cells, known to be deficient in bile acid and cyclosomatostatin transport, could not be specifically labeled by azidobenzamido-008. The membrane proteins preferentially labeled in hepatocytes (50 and 54 kDa) are integral glycoproteins. The 67 kDa protein is a hydrophilic nonglycosylated membrane component. Independent of labeling with 14C-labeled azidobenzamido-008 or with 14C-labeled azidobenzamido-taurocholate, the main radioactive peaks in the pH region of 7, 5.5, 5.25 were identical after solubilization with Nonidet P-40 and subsequent isoelectric focusing. Proteins of 67, 54, 50 and 37 kDa could be enriched by use of 008-containing gels in affinity electrophoresis. Binding sites for 008 were not destroyed by SDS or Nonidet P-40 treatment of plasma membranes.
...
PMID:Azidobenzamido-008, a new photosensitive substrate for the 'multispecific bile acid transporter' of hepatocytes: evidence for a common transport system for bile acids and cyclosomatostatins in basolateral membranes. 290 68
Insulin caused a rapid, dose-dependent increase in the binding of 125I-insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) to the surface of cultured H-35
hepatoma
cells. The [32P]phosphate content of the IGF-II receptors, immunoprecipitated from extracts of H-35 cell monolayers previously incubated with [32P]phosphate for 24 h, was decreased after brief exposure of the cells to insulin. Analysis of tryptic digests of labeled IGF-II receptors by bidimensional peptide mapping revealed that the decrease in the content of [32P]phosphate occurred to varying degrees on three tryptic phosphopeptides. Thin layer electrophoresis of an acid hydrolysate of isolated IGF-II receptors revealed the presence of [32P] phosphoserine and [32P]phosphothreonine. Insulin treatment of cells caused a decrease in the labeled phosphoserine and phosphothreonine content of IGF-II receptors. The ability of a number of highly purified protein kinases (cAMP-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C, phosphorylase kinase, and casein kinase II) to catalyze the phosphorylation of purified IGF-II receptors was examined. Casein kinase II was the only kinase capable of catalyzing the phosphorylation of the IGF-II receptor on serine and
threonine
residues under the conditions of our assay. Bidimensional peptide mapping revealed that the kinase catalyzed phosphorylation of the IGF-II receptor on a tryptic phosphopeptide which comigrated with the main tryptic phosphopeptide found in receptors obtained from cells labeled in vivo with [32P]phosphate. IGF-II receptors isolated by immunoadsorption from insulin-treated H-35 cells were phosphorylated in vitro by casein kinase II to a greater extent than the receptors isolated from control cells. Similarly, IGF-II receptors from plasma membranes obtained from insulin-treated adipocytes were phosphorylated by casein kinase II to a greater extent than the receptors from control adipocyte plasma membranes. Thus, the insulin-regulated phosphorylation sites on the IGF-II receptor appear to serve as substrates in vivo for casein kinase II or an enzyme with similar substrate specificity.
...
PMID:Insulin action inhibits insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) receptor phosphorylation in H-35 hepatoma cells. IGF-II receptors isolated from insulin-treated cells exhibit enhanced in vitro phosphorylation by casein kinase II. 296 23
The regulation of the insulin receptor kinase by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation has been examined. Under in vitro conditions, the tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptor toward histone is markedly activated when the receptor either undergoes autophosphorylation or is phosphorylated by a purified preparation of src tyrosine kinase on tyrosine residues of its beta subunit. The elevated kinase activity of the phosphorylated insulin receptor is readily reversed when the receptor is dephosphorylated with alkaline phosphatase. Analysis of tryptic digests of phosphorylated insulin receptor using reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography suggests that phosphorylation of a specific tyrosine site on the receptor beta subunit may be involved in the mechanism of the receptor kinase activation. Further studies indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation-mediated increase in insulin receptor activity also occurs in intact cells. Thus, when the histone kinase activities of insulin receptor from control and insulin-treated H-35
hepatoma
cells are assayed in vitro following the purification of the receptors under conditions which preserve the phosphorylation state of the receptors, the insulin receptors extracted from insulin-treated cells exhibit histone kinase activities 100% higher than those from control cells. The elevated receptor kinase activity from insulin-treated cells appears to result from the increase in phosphotyrosine content of the receptor. Taken together, these results indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor beta subunit exerts a major stimulatory effect on the kinase activity of the receptor. Insulin receptor partially purified by specific immunoprecipitation from detergent extracts of control and isoproterenol-treated cells have similar basal but diminished insulin-stimulated beta subunit autophosphorylation activities when incubated with [gamma-32 P]ATP. Similarly, the ability of insulin to stimulate the receptor beta subunit phosphorylation in intact isoproterenol-treated adipocytes is greatly attenuated, whereas, the basal phosphorylation of the insulin receptor is slightly increased by the beta-catecholamine. These data indicate that in rat adipocytes, a cyclic AMP-mediated mechanism, possibly through serine and
threonine
phosphorylation of the receptor or its regulatory components, may uncouple the receptor tyrosine kinase activity from activation by insulin. Treatment of 32P-labeled H-35
hepatoma
cells with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) results in a marked increase in serine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor beta subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Regulation of insulin receptor kinase by multisite phosphorylation. 300 Apr 58
The transport of L-threonine and L-glutamine into murine P388 leukemia cells has been characterized.
Threonine
appears to be a specific substrate for a Na+-dependent amino acid transport system similar to system ASC of the HTC
hepatoma
cell.
Threonine
transport is uninhibited by 2-aminobicyclo[2,2,1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid and alpha-(methylamino)isobutyric acid, shows a pattern of transport similar to that seen in HTC
hepatoma
cells over the pH range of 5.5-7.5, and is inhibited by L-serine and L-cysteine. Approximately two-thirds of glutamine transport into P388 cells also appears to enter P388 cells via this ASC-analogous system. However, based upon (a) inhibition studies with
threonine
(where the K1 of
threonine
inhibition of glutamine transport was 7-fold the Km of
threonine
transport), (b) inhibition analysis of glutamine transport with various amino acids and amino acid analogues, and (c) different patterns of transport between
threonine
and glutamine over the pH range of 5.5-7.5, approximately one-third of glutamine transport can be attributed to a second Na+-dependent amino acid transport system. This system appears to be similar to the system N of rat hepatocytes. Glutamine and
threonine
do not appear to enter P388 cells via systems A or L to any significant degree. P388 cells do not appear to exhibit 'adaptive regulation' of amino acid transport. Differences in 'adaptive regulation' could therefore not be utilized for comparing
threonine
and glutamine transport.
...
PMID:Characterization of L-threonine and L-glutamine transport in murine P388 leukemia cells in vitro. Presence of an N-like amino acid transport system. 308 65
The transport of glycine and L-lysine into murine P388 leukemia cells has been examined. Glycine transport appears to be shared by both systems A and ASC in P388 cells. Glycine transport is Na+-dependent and is effectively blocked by alpha-(methylamino)isobutyric acid,
threonine
and alanine but only a marginal reduction in transport is seen with 100-fold excess cold 2-aminobicyclo[2,2,1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid. System gly is not expressed in P388 cells. Lysine is largely transported by a Na+-independent, pH-insensitive system with a Km of 0.079 mM. Lysine transport is relatively unaffected by the addition of 100-fold excess cold alpha-(methylamino)isobutyric acid, 2-aminobicyclo[2,2,1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid and the anionic amino acids, L-glutamate and L-aspartate. A partial inhibition of lysine transport was observed with L-threonine and L-leucine while L-arginine and L-histidine radically decreased lysine transport. Lysine appears to be transported by a system similar to the system y+ seen in cultured human fibroblasts, Ehrlich ascites cells, and
hepatoma
cell lines.
...
PMID:Further studies on amino acid transport in murine P388 leukemia cells in vitro. Presence of system y+. 310 85
Tyr(P)-containing proteins were purified from extracts of insulin-treated rat
hepatoma
cells (H4-II-E-C3) by antiphosphotyrosine immunoaffinity chromatography. Two major insulin-stimulated, Tyr(P) proteins were recovered: an Mr 95,000 protein (identified as the insulin receptor beta subunit by its immunoprecipitation by a patient-derived anti-insulin receptor serum and several anti-insulin receptor (peptide) antisera) and an Mr 180,000 protein (which was unreactive with all anti-insulin receptor antibodies). After purification and tryptic digestion of the Mr 95,000 protein, tryptic peptides containing Tyr(P) were purified by sequential antiphosphotyrosine immunoaffinity, reversed-phase, anion-exchange chromatography. The partial amino acid sequence obtained by gas- and solid-phase Edman degradation was compared to the amino acid sequence of the intracellular extension of the rat insulin receptor deduced from the genomic sequence. Approximately 80% of all beta subunit [32P]Tyr(P) resides on two tryptic peptides: 50-60% of [32P]Tyr(P) is found on the tryptic peptide Asp-Ile-Tyr-Glu-
Thr
-Asp-Tyr-Tyr-Arg from the tyrosine kinase domain, which is recovered mainly as the double phosphorylated species (predominantly in the form with Tyr(P) at residues 3 and 7 from the amino terminus; the remainder with Tyr(P) at residues 3 and 8), with 10-15% as the triple phosphorylated species. A second tryptic peptide is located near the carboxyl terminus, contains 2 tyrosines, and has the sequence,
Thr
-Tyr-Asp-Glu-His-Ile-Pro-Tyr-
Thr
-; this contains 20-30% of beta subunit [32P]Tyr(P) and is identified primarily in a double phosphorylated form. Approximately 10% of beta subunit [32P]Tyr(P) resides on an unidentified tryptic peptide of Mr 4,000-5,000. The insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor in intact rat
hepatoma
cells thus involves at least 6 of the 13 tyrosine residues located on the beta subunit intracellular extension. These tyrosines are clustered in several domains in a distribution virtually identical to that previously found for partially purified human insulin receptor autophosphorylated in vitro in the presence of insulin. This multisite regulatory tyrosine phosphorylation is the initial intracellular event in insulin action.
...
PMID:Identification of the insulin receptor tyrosine residues undergoing insulin-stimulated phosphorylation in intact rat hepatoma cells. 327 43
Insulin stimulates a novel Ser/
Thr
kinase, which phosphorylates microtubule associated protein-2 (MAP-2) in vitro. MAP kinase was studied in cell models of the principal insulin responsive tissues using analytical fast-protein liquid chromatography for partial purification of the enzyme. Stimulation of MAP kinase (1.3- to 2-fold) by insulin was readily detected in BC3H1 smooth and 23A2 skeletal muscle cells; 3T3-L1 adipocytes; and isolated rat hepatocytes and adipocytes. No phosphatase activity was detectable under the assay conditions used, proving that stimulation of a kinase, not inhibition of a phosphatase, is responsible for the increased incorporation of 32PO4 catalyzed by supernatants from insulin-treated 3T3-L1 cells. In H4
hepatoma
cells, stimulation of MAP kinase was much less evident after gel filtration in comparison to the other cell types. The activated enzyme present in supernatants from insulin-treated cells migrated as a single peak of approximately 35 kDa apparent molecular mass (except in the case of isolated hepatocytes in which a shoulder was present). These results suggest that the insulin-stimulatable MAP kinase may be ubiquitous in insulin responsive cells.
...
PMID:Insulin-stimulated microtubule associated protein kinase is detectable by analytical gel chromatography as a 35-kDa protein in myocytes, adipocytes, and hepatocytes. 328 89
1. The occurrence and characterization of acidic amino acid transport in the plasma membrane of a variety of cells and tissues of a number of organisms is reviewed. 2. Several cell types, especially in brain, possess both high- and low-affinity transport systems for acidic amino acids. 3. High-affinity systems in brain may function to remove neurotransmitter amino acid from the extracellular environment. 4. Many cell systems for acidic amino acid transport are energized by an inwardly directed Na+ gradient. Moreover, certain cell types, such as rat brain neurons, human placental trophoblast and rabbit and rat kidney cortex epithelium, respond to an outwardly directed K+ gradient as an additional source of energization. This simultaneous action may account for the high accumulation ratios seen with acidic amino acids. 5. Rabbit kidney has been found to have a glutamate-H+ co-transport system which is subject to stimulation by protons in the medium. 6. Acidic amino acid transport in rat brain neurons occurs with a stoichiometric coupling of 1 mol of amino acid to 2 mol of Na+. For rabbit intestine, one Na+ is predicted to migrate for each mol of amino acid. 7. Uptake in rat kidney cortex and in high-K+ dog erythrocytes is electrogenic. However, uptake in rabbit and newt kidney and in rat and rabbit intestine is electroneutral. 8. Na+-independent acidic amino acid transport systems have been described in the mouse lymphocyte, the human fibroblast, the mouse Ehrlich cell and in rat
hepatoma
cells. 9. In a number of cell systems, D-acidic amino acids have substantial affinity for transport; D-glutamate, in a number of systems, however, appears to have little reactivity. 10. Acidic amino acid transport in some cell systems appears to occur via the "classical" routes (Christensen, Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 49, 41-101, 1979). For example, uptake in the Ehrlich cell is partitioned between the Na+-dependent A system (which transports a wide spectrum of neutral amino acids), the Na+-dependent ASC system (which transports alanine, serine,
threonine
, homoserine, etc.), and the Na+-independent L system (which shows reactivity centering around neutral amino acids such as leucine and phenylalanine). Also, a minor component of uptake in mouse lymphocytes occurs by a route resembling the A system. 11. Human fibroblasts possess a Na+-independent adaptive transport system for cystine and glutamate that is enhanced in activity by cystine starvation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acidic amino acid transport in animal cells and tissues. 330 25
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