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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aristolochic acid (AA), extensively used as a traditional herbal medicine, was withdrawn from the market in the last century because it was found to be a potent carcinogen in humans and animals. The aim of this study was to evaluate the genotoxic effect of AA and obtain further insight into whether the nitrative DNA damage can be induced by reactive
nitrogen
species (RNS), including nitric oxide (NO) and its derivative peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) using human
hepatoma
HepG2 cells. To identify the genotoxic effect, the comet assay and micronucleus test (MNT) were performed. In the comet assay, 25-200microM of AA caused a significant increase of DNA migration in a dose-dependent manner. A significant increase of the frequency of micronuclei was found in the range between 12.5 and 50microM in the MNT. The results showed that AA caused DNA and chromosome damages. To elucidate the nitrative DNA damage mechanism, the level of nitrite and 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), which can be generated by ONOO(-), were monitored with the 2,3-diaminonaphthalene (DAN) assay and immunoperoxidase staining, respectively. The results showed that AA causes a significant increase in the levels of NO and formation of 8-OHdG at concentrations >/=50microM. This observation supports the assumption that AA could exert genotoxicity probably via NO and its derivatives at higher concentrations in HepG2 cells.
...
PMID:Genotoxic effect and nitrative DNA damage in HepG2 cells exposed to aristolochic acid. 1750 82
Obesity is a risk factor for
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) complicated with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and cryptogenic cirrhosis. Leptin is a 16-kDa antiobesity hormone secreted mainly by adipocytes. The role of leptin on alcohol-mediated effects in cell line is yet to be unraveled. Therefore, we investigated the effect of leptin against ethanol-elicited cytoxicity in human
hepatoma
cell lines (HepG2). HepG2 cells were treated with leptin (31.2 nM), ethanol (500 mM), ethanol+leptin and untreated cells served as control. 48 h after treatment, cell viability, apoptosis, TNF-alpha secretory response and oxidative damage were analysed. Our results suggest that leptin at a concentration of 31.2 nM prevents ethanol elicited cytotoxicity as evidenced by MTT and trypan blue dye exclusion assay. Leptin also inhibited ethanol-induced apoptosis, which was confirmed by [(3)H] thymidine uptake and cell cycle analysis using propidium iodide (PI) staining. Further, simultaneous leptin treatment along with ethanol showed protection against ethanol mediated cellular damage as indicated by significantly decreased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) and significantly increased levels of reactive
nitrogen
species (RNS), reduced glutathione (GSH) and elevated activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT). In addition, leptin downregulated the secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) by ethanol-induced HepG2 cells. Our results demonstrate that simultaneous leptin treatment along with ethanol could be useful in preventing the damage produced by ethanol, which might be of therapeutic interest.
...
PMID:Mouse recombinant leptin protects human hepatoma HepG2 against apoptosis, TNF-alpha response and oxidative stress induced by the hepatotoxin-ethanol. 1754 59
IFNgamma is a potent immunomodulator which plays important roles in host defense. IFNgamma modulates transcription of growth-related genes [N-myc downstream regulator 1, growth arrest and DNA damage inducible gamma and inhibitor of DNA binding 2 (Id2)], which is followed by increased growth suppression in the mouse
hepatoma
cell line, H6. Further studies revealed modulation of genes involved in oxidative and nitrosative stress (iNos, gp91phox and Catalase) and increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive
nitrogen
intermediates (RNIs) upon IFNgamma treatment. High amounts of ROS and RNI are responsible for IFNgamma-mediated reduction in cell growth as this process is blocked, using either diphenylene iodonium (DPI), an inhibitor of flavin-containing NADPH oxidases, or N-methyl L-arginine (LNMA), an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase. Based on studies with LNMA and DPI, IFNgamma-modulated genes can be categorized into two distinct sets: oxidative and nitrosative stress independent (transporter associated with antigen processing 2, Cd80, Lmp10 and Icosl) and oxidative and nitrosative stress dependent (iNos, gp91phox, Catalase and Id2). In addition, DPI or LNMA blocked IFNgamma-induced activation of Ras, demonstrating the involvement of oxidative and nitrosative stress. Manumycin A, a farnesyl transferase inhibitor, blocked Ras activation and reduced NADPH oxidase activity and ROS amounts leading to increased cell growth in the presence of IFNgamma. Notably, the IFNgamma-induced MHC class I levels are not modulated in cells treated with DPI, LNMA or manumycin A. Together, these results delineate the role of high amounts of ROS, RNI and Ras activation in modulating expression of some genes and, thereby, function by IFNgamma. The implications of these results during modulation of immune responses by IFNgamma are discussed.
...
PMID:Involvement of oxidative and nitrosative stress in modulation of gene expression and functional responses by IFNgamma. 1760 79
The paper presents a set of two-dimensional experiments that utilize direct (13)C detection to provide proton-carbon, carbon-carbon and carbon-
nitrogen
correlations in the bases of nucleic acids. The set includes a (13)C-detected proton-carbon correlation experiment for the measurement of (13)C-(13)C couplings, the CaCb experiment for correlating two quaternary carbons, the HCaCb experiment for the (13)C-(13)C correlations in cases where one of the carbons has a proton attached, the
HCC
-TOCSY experiment for correlating a proton with a network of coupled carbons, and a (13)C-detected (13)C-(15)N correlation experiment for detecting the
nitrogen
nuclei that cannot be detected via protons. The IPAP procedure is used for extracting the carbon-carbon couplings and/or carbon decoupling in the direct dimension, while the S(3)E procedure is preferred in the indirect dimension of the carbon-
nitrogen
experiment to obtain the value of the coupling constant. The experiments supply accurate values of (13)C and (15)N chemical shifts and carbon-carbon and carbon-
nitrogen
coupling constants. These values can help to reveal structural features of nucleic acids either directly or via induced changes when the sample is dissolved in oriented media.
...
PMID:13C-detected NMR experiments for measuring chemical shifts and coupling constants in nucleic acid bases. 1770 Oct 76
The diterpene ferruginol has shown a strong protective effect in animal gastric ulcer models. In the present work, we report the gastroprotective effect and cytotoxicity of 16 new semisynthetic ester derivatives of ferruginol. The gastroprotective effect of these compounds was assessed with the HCl/EtOH-induced gastric lesions model in mice and the cytotoxicity was measured using MRC-5 fibroblasts, gastric adenocarcinoma (AGS) and liver
hepatoma
Hep G2 cells. The compounds were tested for a gastroprotective effect at a single oral dose of 20 mg/kg. The best gastroprotective effect was elicited by ferruginyl nicotinate ( 13), reducing the lesion index by 71 %, while the derivatives ferruginyl chloroacetate ( 2), ferruginyl palmitate ( 6), ferruginyl oleate ( 7), ferruginyl 3,5-dinitrobenzoate ( 11), ferruginyl 3-methylbenzofuran-2-carbonyl ester ( 12), ferruginyl indoleacetate ( 14), ferruginyl indolebutyrate ( 15) and ferruginyl pthalate ( 16) reduced the lesions by 49 - 66 %. The most promising compounds were 11, 13 and 14, presenting a gastroprotective effect higher or similar to that of ferruginol but with a high selectivity towards the tumor AGS cells. Among the three products, the most selective towards AGS cells was 14, followed by 13, and 11 (IC (50) values of 12, 22 and 29 microM, respectively). The isobutyrate 4, inactive as a gastroprotective agent, showed selective cytotoxicity against AGS and Hep G2 cells (IC (50) values of 60 and 39.2 microM, respectively). The cytotoxicity of the above cited compounds towards fibroblasts was >1000 microM. Considering the aliphatic esters of ferruginol, the best gastroprotective activity was found in the C (16) and C (18) derivatives but tended to decrease with increasing aliphatic chain unsaturation. For short-chain esters, the gastroprotective effect could be observed when the chain contained a chlorine atom. For aromatic esters, the presence of nitro groups or a
nitrogen
atom in the aromatic ring enhanced the gastroprotective activity. The compounds with the best gastroprotective effect and the highest selectivity against tumor cells bear an amino group (indoleacetate and nicotinate) or nitro group (3,5-dinitrobenzoate).
...
PMID:New gastroprotective ferruginol derivatives with selective cytotoxicity against gastric cancer cells. 1849 84
"Non-classical" di- and trinuclear Pt(II) complexes with polydentate
nitrogen
ligands; ionic [(PtCl(2))(2)(tptz)(2)(mu-PtClNCPh)]Cl (1) [tptz =2,4,6-tris(2-pyridyl)-1,3,5-triazine], [(PtCl(2))(2)(bptz)(2)(mu-Pt)]Cl(2) (2) [bptz = 3,6-bis(2-pyridyl)-1,2,4,5-tetrazine] and neutral [(PtCl(2))(2)(tptz)(2)(mu-PtCl(2))](H(2)O)(4) (3), [(PtCl(2))(2)(mu-tppz)](CHCl(3)) (4) [tppz = 2,3,5,6-tetra(2-pyridyl)pyrazine] complexes, have been prepared and structurally characterized. The neutral tptz and tppz complexes present three and two separate PtCl(2) moieties, respectively, in a cis position, presumably acting in a bifunctional mode towards DNA; the cationic tptz and bptz complexes contain monofunctional and bifunctional bridging Pt(II) moieties, respectively, (other Pt(II) moieties in the complexes are bifunctional). All complexes were tested for their biological activity. Both tptz complexes, neutral and ionic, show a potent cytotoxic activity and reduced cell viability in a concentration-dependent manner that was evaluated in a panel of different cancer cell lines: human HT29 colon-rectal carcinoma, HepG2
hepatoma
, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer and MG63 osteosarcoma cells; their activity was higher than cisplatin, IC50 values have been calculated for the active compounds and flow cytometric analysis for the tptz complexes performed. Therefore, these new platinum drugs warrant further investigation into their antitumor activity against different types of tumors.
...
PMID:Synthetic, structural and biochemical studies of polynuclear platinum(II) complexes with heterocyclic ligands. 1867 63
Toward probing an hitherto unexplored structure-activity issue namely, the relative in vitro and in vivo efficacies of cationic glycolipids with cyclic and acyclic sugar heads for targeting of genes to liver, we have designed and synthesized two novel series of cationic glycolipids with cyclic (lipids 1-5) and open d-galactose heads (lipids 6-10) containing varying spacer arm lengths in between the sugar and positively charged
nitrogen
atoms. Among the cyclic glycolipids, lipid 3 with six methylene units spacer in between the quaternary
nitrogen
atom and among the glycolipids with the open-sugar heads, lipid 6 with only two methylene units spacer were found to be the most efficacious in targeting genes to cultured HepG2 (human
hepatocarcinoma
cells) and primary hepatocytes. Findings in the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) studies revealed biomembrane fusibilities as important physico-chemical parameters behind the varying spacer arm dependencies in the two series. Importantly, both the serum compatible glycolipids 3 &6 were found to be equally efficacious in selectively targeting genes to mouse livers under systemic settings. The significantly reduced efficiencies of the glycolipids 3 &6 in transfecting primary hepatocytes as well as mice pretreated with asialofetuin (the ligands of asialoglycoprotein receptors) support the notion that the cellular uptake of the lipoplexes prepared from both the open and the cyclic sugar-head series is mediated via asialoglycoprotein receptor. In summary, our present findings demonstrate for the first time that cationic glycolipids with cyclic sugar-head require longer spacer arms than their acyclic sugar-head counterparts for efficient gene transfection and both the series hold equal promise for selective gene targeting to liver under systemic settings.
...
PMID:Cationic glycolipids with cyclic and open galactose head groups for the selective targeting of genes to mouse liver. 1915 38
Obesity and related metabolic abnormalities, including insulin resistance, are risk factors for
hepatocellular carcinoma
in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis as well as in chronic viral hepatitis. Branched-chain amino acids (BCAA), which improve insulin resistance, inhibited obesity-related colon carcinogenesis in a rodent model, and also reduced the incidence of
hepatocellular carcinoma
in obese patients with liver cirrhosis. In the present study, we determined the effects of BCAA on the development of diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-induced liver tumorigenesis in obese C57BL/KsJ-db/db (db/db) mice with diabetes mellitus. Male db/db mice were given tap water containing 40 ppm DEN for an initial 2 weeks and thereafter they received a basal diet containing 3.0% of BCAA or casein, which served as a
nitrogen
content-matched control of BCAA, throughout the experiment. Supplementation with BCAA significantly reduced the total number of foci of cellular alteration, a premalignant lesion of the liver, and the expression of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, IGF-2, and IGF-1 receptor in the liver when compared to the casein supplementation. BCAA supplementation for 34 weeks also significantly inhibited both the development of hepatocellular neoplasms and the proliferation of hepatocytes in comparison to the basal diet or casein-fed groups. Supplementation with BCAA improved liver steatosis and fibrosis and inhibited the expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin in the DEN-treated db/db mice. The serum levels of glucose and leptin decreased by dietary BCAA, whereas the value of the quantitative insulin sensitivity check index increased by this agent, indicating the improvement of insulin resistance and hyperleptinemia. In conclusion, oral BCAA supplementation improves insulin resistance and prevents the development of liver tumorigenesis in obese and diabetic mice.
...
PMID:Dietary supplementation with branched-chain amino acids suppresses diethylnitrosamine-induced liver tumorigenesis in obese and diabetic C57BL/KsJ-db/db mice. 1990 67
Herein we report an investigation of the efficacy of pyridine and pyrimidine analogs of acetaminophen (ApAP) as peroxyl radical-trapping antioxidants and inhibitors of enzyme-catalyzed lipid peroxidation by cyclooxygenases (COX) and lipoxygenases (LOX). In inhibited autoxidations we find that ApAP, the common analgesic and antipyretic agent, is a very good antioxidant with a rate constant for reaction with peroxyl radicals (k(inh) = 5 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) that is higher than many widely-used phenolic antioxidants, such as the ubiquitous butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT). This reactivity is reduced substantially upon incorporation of
nitrogen
into the phenolic ring, owing to an increase in the O-H bond dissociation enthalpy of pyridinols and pyrimidinols with respect to phenols. Incorporation of
nitrogen
into the phenolic ring of ApAP was also found to decrease its efficacy as an inhibitor of prostaglandin biosynthesis by ovine COX-1 (oCOX-1). This is explained on the basis of an increase in its oxidation potential and its reduced reactivity as a reducing co-substrate of the peroxidase protoporphyrin. In contrast, the efficacy of ApAP as an inhibitor of lipid hydroperoxide biosynthesis by soybean LOX-1 (sLOX-1) increased upon incorporation of
nitrogen
into the ring, suggesting a different mechanism of inhibition dependent on the acidity of the phenolic O-H which may involve chelation of the catalytic non-heme iron atom. The greater stability of the 3-pyridinols and 5-pyrimidinols to air oxidation as compared to phenols allowed us to evaluate some electron-rich pyridinols and pyrimidinols as inhibitors of oCOX-1 and sLOX-1. While the pyridinols had the best combination of activities as antioxidants and inhibitors of oCOX-1 and sLOX-1, they were found to be more toxic than ApAP in preliminary assays in human
hepatocellular carcinoma
(HepG2) cell culture. The pyrimidinols, however, were up to 17-fold more reactive to peroxyl radicals and up to 25-fold better inhibitors of prostaglandin biosynthesis than ApAP, with similar cytotoxicities to HepG2 cells at high levels of exposure.
...
PMID:Pyridine and pyrimidine analogs of acetaminophen as inhibitors of lipid peroxidation and cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase catalysis. 2002 5
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive
nitrogen
species (RNS) are created in normal hepatocytes and are critical for normal physiologic processes, including oxidative respiration, growth, regeneration, apoptosis, and microsomal defense. When the levels of oxidation products exceed the capacity of normal antioxidant systems, oxidative stress occurs. This type of stress, in the form of ROS and RNS, can be damaging to all liver cells, including hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, stellate cells, and endothelial cells, through induction of inflammation, ischemia, fibrosis, necrosis, apoptosis, or through malignant transformation by damaging lipids, proteins, and/or DNA. In Part I of this review, we will discuss basic redox biology in the liver, including a review of ROS, RNS, and antioxidants, with a focus on nitric oxide as a common source of RNS. We will then review the evidence for oxidative stress as a mechanism of liver injury in hepatitis (alcoholic, viral, nonalcoholic). In Part II of this review, we will review oxidative stress in common pathophysiologic conditions, including ischemia/reperfusion injury, fibrosis,
hepatocellular carcinoma
, iron overload, Wilson's disease, sepsis, and acetaminophen overdose. Finally, biomarkers, proteomic, and antioxidant therapies will be discussed as areas for future therapeutic interventions.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and redox regulation in the liver: part II. Redox biology in pathologic hepatocytes and implications for intervention. 2040 Jan 12
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