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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe the simple and rapid enzyme immunoassay of protein C in human plasma with use of a Cobas Fara centrifugal analyzer. The antibody, labeled with horseradish
peroxidase
, is reacted with antigen (protein C) for 15 min. The
peroxidase
activity of the resulting antigen-antibody conjugate is measured at 500 nm for 5 min in the presence of excess H2O2, phenol, and 4-aminoantipyrine, as compared with that of free conjugates. Results are calculated from a stored standard curve and expressed as a percentage of the value determined for a pooled specimen of normal adult plasma. The standard curve is linear from 0% to 200%. The CV is generally less than 4% for different concentrations of protein C. In liver cirrhosis,
hepatocellular carcinoma
, therapy with warfarin, thrombosis, and disseminated intravascular coagulation, protein C concentrations are about 40-70% of normal. Results obtained with the present homogeneous enzyme immunoassay correlated well with those by enzyme-labeled immunosorbent assay (r = 0.97).
...
PMID:Protein C in human plasma determined by homogeneous enzyme immunoassay with use of a centrifugal analyzer. 304 78
Immunolocalization of type III collagen and procollagen in cirrhotic human liver was studied using monoclonal antibody specific for the helical determinant of type III collagen extracted from human placenta. Deparaffinized, trypsin-treated cirrhotic liver sections from 8 autopsy cases were examined by the unlabeled
peroxidase
-antiperoxidase and immunofluorescence techniques. These techniques revealed the localization of this epitope shared by type III collagen and procollagen not only in the extracellular matrix of hepatocytes and sinusoidal cells but also in the cytoplasm. In
hepatocellular carcinoma
concurrent with cirrhosis, neoplastic cells were shown to react with this antibody as well. These results are consistent with data obtained using antiserum specific for bovine type III procollagen aminopeptide which appeared in our previous report.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization of type III collagen and procollagen in cirrhotic human liver using monoclonal antibodies. 308 39
We used a conjugate of transferrin and horseradish
peroxidase
(Tf/HRP) to label the intracellular transferrin receptor route in the human
hepatoma
cell line HepG2. The recycling kinetics of [125I]Tf/HRP were similar to those of unmodified [125I]Tf, implying identical routes for both ligands. 3,3'Diaminobenzidine (DAB)-cytochemistry was performed on post-nuclear supernatants of homogenates of cells which were incubated with both Tf/HRP and [125I]Tf, and caused two different effects: (a) the equilibrium density of [125I]Tf containing microsomes in a Percoll density gradient was increased, and (b) the amount of immunoprecipitable [125I]Tf from density-shifted lysed microsomes was only 20% of that of nonDAB treated microsomes. The whole biosynthetic route of alpha 1-antitrypsin (AT), a typical secretory glycoprotein in HepG2 cells, was labeled during a 60-min incubation with [35S]methionine. DAB cytochemistry was performed on post-nuclear supernatants of homogenates of cells which were also incubated with Tf/HRP. DAB cytochemistry caused approximately 40% of microsome-associated "complex" glycosylated [35S]alpha 1-antitrypsin ([35S]c-AT) to shift in a Percoll density gradient. Only part of the density shifted [35S]c-AT could be recovered by immunoprecipitation. A maximum effect was measured already after 10 min of Tf/HRP uptake. The density distribution of the "high mannose" glycosylated form of 35S-alpha 1-anti-trypsin [( 35S]hm-AT) was not affected by Tf/HRP. If in addition to Tf/HRP also an excess of non-conjugated transferrin was present in the medium, [35S]c-AT was not accessible for Tf/HRP, showing the involvement of the transferrin receptor (TfR) in the process. Furthermore, we show that if Tf/HRP and [35S]c-AT were located in different vesicles, the density distribution of [35S]c-AT was not affected by DAB-cytochemistry. Pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine was used to show that [35S]c-AT became accessible to endocytosed Tf/HRP minutes after acquirement of the complex configuration. A common intracellular localization of endocytosed Tf/HRP and secretory protein could be confirmed by immuno-electron microscopy: cryosections labeled with anti-albumin (protein A-colloidal gold) as well as DAB reaction product showed double-labeling in the trans-Golgi reticulum.
...
PMID:The pathways of endocytosed transferrin and secretory protein are connected in the trans-Golgi reticulum. 326 Feb 38
Using a monospecific, monoclonal antibody against the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), an immunocytochemical study was performed to investigate the intracellular localization of GR both in the presence or absence of ligand. With all fixation methods tested (paraformaldehyde, acetic acid in ethanol, Bouin's fixative, and bensochinone in PBS), it was possible to obtain specific GR staining. Fixation with paraformaldehyde was chosen for further studies on the effect of permeabilization, using several concentrations of Triton X-100 or saponin. A rat Rueber
hepatoma
(H-4-II-E) and a human uterus carcinoma (NHIK 3025) cell line were used as well as cultured hepatocytes from normal rat. The accessibility of the different cell compartments after fixation and permeabilization was tested for by using antibodies against cellular constituents with known locations (i.e. core-nucleosome proteins and tubulin), in combination with the anti-GR antibody in double immunofluorescence staining experiments. The specific GR stain obtained with the indirect
peroxidase
antiperoxidase technique or with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled second antibodies was shown to be present both in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. Staining of all cellular compartments was abolished (
peroxidase
antiperoxidase) or diminished (fluorescein isothiocyanate) if the monoclonal antibody was preincubated with a 90% pure GR preparation. These findings are in contrast to recently reported immunocytochemical studies, where a strict nuclear existence of the estrogen and progestin receptors has been reported. Consequently, generalizations with regard to steroid receptor localization cannot be made. Furthermore, an in vitro model is described, where the effect of dexamethasone administration upon the localization of receptor staining in H-4-II-E cells can be studied.
...
PMID:Intracellular localization of the glucocorticoid receptor: evidence for cytoplasmic and nuclear localization. 354 55
The calcium-binding protein oncomodulin, previously found only in tumors, has been detected during rat development. Specific antisera to purified rat
hepatoma
oncomodulin (MW 11,500) were used to detect oncomodulin by radioimmunoassay (RIA) and by avidin-biotin-
peroxidase
complex (ABC) immunohistochemistry. Using RIA, oncomodulin was found to increase in placenta from below the limits of detection (2 ng/mg protein) on Day 13 to approximately 25 ng/mg on Day 16 of pregnancy, and to remain high through to the end of gestation. Determinations on separated inner and outer placenta showed the increase to be greater in the outer placenta (basal zone and decidua) than in the inner placenta (labyrinth). The ABC technique on paraffin sections produced positive staining for oncomodulin throughout the placenta, with the most intense staining occurring in the outer placenta (cytotrophoblast and giant cells of the basal zone). Parietal and visceral yolk sac, and amnion also stained positively, while fetal organs did not. Oncomodulin synthesis measured by [35S]methionine incorporation into immunoprecipitates occurred in isolated inner and outer placenta, whole placenta, the separated trophectoderm and endoderm of the parietal yolk sac, and amnion. No oncomodulin synthesis could be measured in visceral yolk sac, fetal liver, or 16-day embryo. This occurrence in developing and transformed tissues demonstrates that oncomodulin is an oncodevelopmental protein.
...
PMID:Localization and synthesis of the tumor protein oncomodulin in extraembryonic tissues of the fetal rat. 390 38
Immunolocalization of type III procollagen (pro III) in normal and cirrhotic human liver was studied using rabbit antiserum specific for bovine type III procollagen aminopeptide. The material examined was deparaffinized, trypsin-treated hepatic tissue sections from 28 autopsy cases, including 19 cirrhotic and 9 normal liver donors. Immunostaining, performed by the unlabeled
peroxidase
-antiperoxidase antibody technique demonstrated that extracellular matrices corresponding to perisinusoidal reticulin, collagen in periportal areas, and blood vessel walls were the common sites of pro III antigenicity in both normal and cirrhotic liver. Moreover, in the cirrhotic liver, the fibrous septa of pseudolobules, and cytoplasm of hepatocytes and sinusoidal cells were positive when stained for pro III peptide. The differential counts of pro III positive cells in cirrhotic liver, however, revealed that the average ratio of these hepatocytes to sinusoidal cells was 25 to 1, indicating complete dominance of hepatocytes with respect to stainability for pro III peptide compared to sinusoidal cells. In hepatocellular carcinomas coexisting with cirrhosis, neoplastic cells also displayed pro III antigenicity. These data suggest that hepatocytes of cirrhotic liver and
hepatocellular carcinoma
cells play a significant role in type III collagen synthesis in vivo.
...
PMID:Localization of type III procollagen aminopeptide antigenicity in hepatocytes from cirrhotic human liver. 393 61
As previously described, a cell surface-associated adhesive factor (AF) was separated from differentiated rat ascites
hepatoma
AH136B cells (forming cell islands in vivo) and highly purified by chromatography. AF induces not only aggregation of dissociated AH136B cells or undifferentiated rat ascites
hepatoma
AH109A cells (present as free cells in vivo), but also adhesiveness characterized by the development of junctional complexes. The localization of AF on the surfaces of AH136B cell islands was investigated using anti-AF IgG (Fab fragment) coupled to
peroxidase
. AF was detected in the contact region of the lateral surfaces of the AH136B cells and in the intercellular spaces. In contacted free cell surfaces of AH136B cells. Fluorescence studies revealed that biotin-labeled AF did not bind to the apical surface of AH136B cell islands. These results indicate a distinct difference between apical and lateral surfaces of AH136B cells; neither AF nor binding site for AF were localized on the apical surface of AH136B cells, whereas both were localized on the lateral surface. On the other hand, AH136B cells detached from the cell islands, or during the process of partial dissociation from them, showed the loss of the AF localization and binding site of AF on the surfaces. The results suggest that AH136B cell surfaces may be polarized in terms of the AF localization, and this polarization may be lost after cell dissociation.
...
PMID:Cell membrane polarity in rat ascites hepatoma cells. Distribution of a cell surface-associated adhesive factor on the cell surfaces. 399 56
A case is reported in which non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis was followed serially by chronic persistent hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis, and liver cirrhosis that finally developed into
hepatocellular carcinoma
. The patient died after a 19-year clinical course. During the last 8 years, repeated attempts to identify serum hepatitis B surface antigen, antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen, and antibody to hepatitis B core antigen were consistently negative. Liver biopsy was performed five times during the clinical course, and at autopsy, liver tissue was obtained from four different nontumor regions. These specimens were investigated by a
peroxidase
immunoenzyme method which failed to detect hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatitis B core antigen. Non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis may become chronic and sometimes may advance to
hepatocellular carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma after non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis. 609 43
A microplate leukocyte adherence inhibition (micro-LAI) assay was performed with peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained from patients with
hepatoma
and control subjects (including healthy donors and patients with other diseases). Cell extracts of human
hepatoma
cells (
HCC
-M) and human hepatic cells (Chang liver cell) in tissue culture were prepared by sonication followed by centrifugation. The supernatants of these two cell lines were used as a specific antigen and a nonspecific antigen, respectively. It was found that monocytes were major indicator cells and that monocytes produced an LAI reaction in the absence of lymphocytes. Therefore, a repeated microplate monocyte adherence inhibition (MAI) assay was developed, in which the monocyte population of adherent cells is increased by removing nonadherent cells after an initial assay in fetal calf serum-containing medium without test antigens, and monocytes are counted selectively as
peroxidase
-positive cells in a subsequent second assay with test antigens. With regard to sensitivity and reproducibility, the repeated micro-MAI assay is superior to a micro-MAI assay in which the initial assay is omitted although monocytes are selectively counted. With this simple and sensitive technique a
hepatoma
-associated immune response to the extract of
HCC
-M was detected in 16 out of 22 patients (73%) with
hepatoma
, whereas the false-positive rate was 7% (3/41) in all control subjects.
...
PMID:Repeated micro-monocyte adherence inhibition assay: a new technique of leukocyte adherence inhibition to detect tumor immunity in patients with hepatoma. 609 91
Data from studies of ascitic cells of Chang
hepatoma
have shown that acid phosphatase (ACPase) can be localized simultaneously within the trans portion of the Golgi apparatus and in tubules of the Golgi-endoplasmic reticulum-lysosome (GERL) system. Reaction products of thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) were also present consistently within trans elements of the Golgi apparatus and within GERL tubules. These new findings indicate that a close physiological association may exist between the Golgi apparatus and GERL, a concept that is consistent with previous observations of fibroblasts. When horseradish
peroxidase
(PO) is injected intraperitoneally into ascites-bearing rats and the ascitic cells withdrawn at different time intervals, PO could be localized within vesicles and tubules in the GERL region but could not be detected within the Golgi apparatus. Bulk-phase endocytosis requires a long time and a high concentration of PO to occur. The presence of PO within GERL indicates that this organelle may play a role in transporting or processing of certain exogenous proteins.
...
PMID:A cytochemical study of acid phosphatase, thiamine pyrophosphatase and horseradish peroxidase in the Golgi-GERL complex of hepatoma ascites cells. 613 85
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