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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As the
somatostatin
analog octreotide suppresses pituitary GH secretion and circulating IGF-1 levels, we examined its effects on human
hepatoma
(hep G2) cells which selectively express IGFBP-1. Octreotide (60 nM) stimulated IGFBP-1 up to 4.1-fold (p < 0.001 after 24 hrs). Induction of IGFBP-1 was first detectable after 12 hrs of 6 nM octreotide (1.5-fold, p < 0.03), and was confirmed by ligand blotting. Cholera toxin and forskolin induced IGFBP-1 independently and were also additive with octreotide. IGFBP-1 mRNA expression was induced 2.7-fold by octreotide. Thus, octreotide induces basal and stimulated IGFBP-1 in hepatocytes independently of insulin and GH. As IGFBP-1 may regulate peripheral IGF-1 action, induction of IGFBP-1 represents a novel pituitary-independent mechanism for octreotide action.
...
PMID:Somatostatin analog induces insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) expression in human hepatoma cells. 138 3
A minute carcinoid tumor of the gallbladder is reported. The tumor was incidentally identified in a 77-year-old Japanese man with cholecystolithiasis,
hepatocellular carcinoma
and sigmoid colon carcinoma. The tumor formed a 5-mm-sized sessile polyp at the neck of the gallbladder. The tumor cells, which were argyrophilic and non-argentaffinic, belonged to the foregut-type. Immunohistochemically, they were positive for neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and
somatostatin
.
...
PMID:Minute carcinoid tumor of the gallbladder. 167 42
Variceal bleeding has a high mortality, as the majority of patients have cirrhosis, with hepatic coma, renal failure, ascites and clotting deficiencies as complicating factors. Bleeding varices must therefore be treated as an emergency. Resuscitation, endoscopic diagnosis and haemostasis are the cornerstones of treatment. Once bleeding varices have been identified, attempts to stop the bleeding must be made at once as this will lessen the chances of hepatic failure developing. Endoscopic sclerotherapy at the time of diagnosis is the best available treatment at present, although profusely bleeding varices can be difficult to see and inject. In these circumstances the passage of a Sengstaken tube should stop the bleeding, allowing later sclerotherapy to be successful. If rebleeding recurs and cannot be controlled, oesophageal transection with a stapling gun may be life-saving, although the varices may later recur and long-term endoscopic follow-up will be necessary. Portacaval shunting and the distal splenorenal shunt involve arduous surgery and are followed by a significant incidence of hepatic encephalopathy; they should be reserved for those few cases when simpler measures have failed, although shunts do lead to permanent decompression of the portal system. The acute variceal bleed may also be dealt with pharmacologically. Vasopressin, used in combination with nitroglycerin to lessen the harmful side-effects, is cheaper and as effective as terlipressin or
somatostatin
and its synthetic analogue octreotide. Several courses of injection sclerotherapy will be required to eliminate oesophageal varices. Thereafter, long-term follow-up will be necessary to deal with any recurrence. The place of non-selective beta-blockers is still contentious, but they do reduce portal pressure and may lessen the chance of rebleeding. There is also a growing role for hepatic transplantation, which not only eliminates the varices but also restores liver function to normal and greatly reduces the risk of subsequent
hepatoma
development.
...
PMID:The management of variceal bleeding. 168 66
The uptake of the cyclopeptide c(Phe-Thr-Lys-Trp-Phe-D-Pro) (008), an analog of
somatostatin
with retro sequence, was studied in isolated hepatocytes. 008 is taken up by hepatocytes in a concentration-, time-, energy- and temperature- dependent manner. Since 008 is hydrophobic, it binds rapidly to liver cells. This is evident by the positive intercept at the gamma-axis in the uptake curves. At higher concentrations, a minor part of the transport occurs by diffusion at a rate of 8.307.10(-6) cm/s. This part of diffusion is measured at 4 degrees C and can be subtracted from the uptake at 37 degrees C resulting in the carrier mediated part of uptake which is saturable. Kinetic parameters for the saturable part of uptake are Km 1.5 microM and Vmax 40.0 pmol/mg per min. The transport is decreased in the absence of oxygen and in the presence of metabolic inhibitors. Uptake is accelerated at temperatures above 20 degrees C. The activation energy was determined to be 30.77 kJ/mol. The membrane potential and not a sodium gradient is the main driving force for 008 transport. Cholate (a typical substrate of the multispecific bile acid transporter) and taurocholate are mutual competitive inhibitors of 008 uptake. Phalloidin, antamanide and iodipamide, typical foreign substrates of the transporter, interfere with the uptake of 008. AS 30D ascites
hepatoma
cells, known to be unable to transport bile acids, phalloidin and iodipamide, are also unfit to transport 008. Interestingly, sulfobromophthalein (BSP) but not rifampicin, both foreign substrates of the bilirubin carrier, inhibits the transport of 008 in a competitive manner.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular transport of cyclosomatostatins: evidence for a carrier system related to the multispecific bile acid transporter. 170 41
We applied Southwestern and Western blotting and gel retardation techniques to investigate the changes that occur in the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-responsive element (CRE) binding (CREB) proteins in rapidly growing, chemically induced 5123tc and 5123D Morris hepatomas. Using the CRE sequences from the c-fos, E2A, and
somatostatin
gene promoters, we identified in the nuclear proteins from normal unstimulated or proliferating rat liver cells six different protein factors of Mr 34,000, 36,000, 40,000, 47,000, 56,000, and 72,000 capable of binding to the element. The Mr 47,000 protein had the highest specificity for the core CRE, suggesting its importance in cAMP-mediated gene expression. We could not find the Mr 47,000 CREB protein in the 5123tc and 5123D hepatomas. Our efforts to detect this protein in the tumors by (a) using the CRE sequence from different gene promoters, (b) altering the protocol for extracting nuclear proteins, or (c) attempting to restore its DNA-binding property by phosphorylation [with endogenous protein kinase(s), a catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and protein kinase C/dephosphorylation (with alkaline phosphatase)] were unsuccessful. The loss of tje Mr 47,000 CREB protein from solid tumors of the Morris
hepatoma
is likely to be related to the neoplastic properties of the tumor cell rather than to cell growth because the level of this protein remained unchanged during a 6-day period of liver regeneration. The nuclear extract from the Morris
hepatoma
that did not have the Mr 47,000 CRE-binding factor contained proteins immunologically related to the CREB, c-Jun, and c-Fos proteins. We conclude that the Mr 47,000 factor represents a distinct member of the CRE-binding protein family and that its absence from the hepatomas may lead to aberrant expression of cAMP-inducible genes.
...
PMID:Changes in cyclic adenosine monophosphate-responsive element binding proteins in rat hepatomas. 182 83
The effects of
somatostatin
(SRIF), insulin, and triiodothyronine (T3) on the growth of human
hepatoma
cells were investigated on the well-differentiated human
hepatoma
cell line Hep3B. Results showed that both insulin and T3 can stimulate cell growth of serum starved Hep3B cells at physiological concentrations. SRIF alone showed little growth-promoting activity. When added concurrently with insulin, however, SRIF suppressed the insulin-induced cell proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. On the other hand, SRIF had no inhibitory effect on T3-induced cell proliferation. SRIF is labile in the medium, with a half-life of about 2 h during culture incubation. SRIF did not disturb the insulin binding to its surface receptors nor inhibit the insulin-dependent receptor kinase activity of Hep3B cells in vitro. These results suggest that postreceptor regulation may be involved. The selective suppression by SRIF of insulin-induced cell growth provides an unique approach to the study of insulin actions on proliferation of human
hepatoma
cells.
...
PMID:Selective suppression of insulin-induced proliferation of cultured human hepatoma cells by somatostatin. 287 37
A liver tumour, initially diagnosed by light microscopy as a
hepatocellular carcinoma
, was later shown to be endocrine by argyrophilia and electron microscopy. It was tested by immunohistochemistry for insulin, glucagon, gastrin, VIP, pancreatic polypeptide, glicentin, C-peptide and
somatostatin
. A few cells were shown to contain
somatostatin
, but the secretion product in most of the cells was not identified. The patient is well, without any sign of endocrine disturbances, 18 months after the operation.
...
PMID:Endocrine liver tumour differential diagnosis from hepatocellular carcinoma. 299 28
A patient with biopsy-proved biliary cirrhosis and previous gastrojejunostomy and portacaval anastomosis experienced episodes of severe hypoglycemia. She was found to have hyperinsulinemia and hyperglucagonemia. An oral glucose tolerance test showed postgastrectomy hypoglycemia. Results of the intravenous tolbutamide test were diagnostic for insulinoma, but results of the intravenous glucagon test and prolonged fast (96 hours) were not. Failure, on two occasions, to suppress C-peptide normally during insulin-induced hypoglycemia led to a diagnosis of pancreatogenous hyperinsulinemia. The pancreas showed a 10-fold increase in islet volume, with intensely positive staining with anti-insulin and anti-glucagon antiserums in addition to anti-
somatostatin
and anti-pancreatic polypeptide antiserums. Incidental findings at pancreatic exploration were a mesothelioma, which did not stain with anti-insulin antiserum, and, at autopsy one year later, a
hepatoma
.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of pancreatic islet hyperplasia causing hypoglycemia in a patient with portacaval anastomosis. 699 72
We describe a case of recurrent hypoglycaemia associated with a
hepatoma
. During hypoglycaemia serum insulin was undetectable. Plasma insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II) was not elevated although 71% of plasma IGF-II was present as big IGF-II (molecular weight 11 kDa) which probably represents a non-glycated form of pro-IGF-II. The GH response to hypoglycaemia was impaired and plasma levels of both IGF-I and the GH-dependent IGF binding protein (IGFBP-3) were low. A recently described unextracted assay directed against the first 21 amino acids of the E-domain (E-21) of proinsulin-like growth factor-II (pro-IGF-II) allows direct plasma estimation (plasma E-21) of larger molecular forms of IGF-II without interference from normal IGF-II and IGF binding proteins. Basal values were grossly elevated (23.7 and 23.8 nmol/l). Treatment with GH led to an increase in the mean plasma glucose across 24 hours (4.25 +/- 0.21 mol/l (mean +/- SEM) before treatment, compared with 4.86 mmol/l +/- 0.17 following GH (P < 0.01)) and a reduction in hypoglycaemic attacks. The treatment was associated with a rise in IGFBP-3 and small increases in insulin like growth factors. Subsequent treatment with the
somatostatin
analogue octreotide did not produce a significant change in plasma glucose levels or insulin-like growth factors. Two courses of intrahepatic adriamycin restored elevated levels of E-21 to normal. Total IGF-II remained normal and IGF-I increased. GH treatment was successfully withdrawn with no effect on plasma glucose or growth factor levels. The patient remained free from hypoglycaemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A case of hepatoma associated with hypoglycaemia and overproduction of IGF-II (E-21): beneficial effects of treatment with growth hormone and intrahepatic adriamycin. 752 21
Peptide 23 is a newly identified protein secreted by rat pituitary cells in primary culture. Although the secretion of this protein is stimulated by GH-releasing hormone and inhibited by
somatostatin
, the N-terminal amino acid sequence of peptide 23 shows no homology to rat GH. Using the polymerase chain reaction technique, we cloned and sequenced the peptide 23 complementary DNA (cDNA). By means of the mixed oligonucleotide-primed amplification of cDNA technique, primers corresponding to the NH2-amino acid sequence of peptide 23 were used to amplify, clone, and sequence a 74-basepair cDNA of peptide 23. This polymerase chain reaction product was then used as a primer to amplify the complete peptide 23 cDNA by means of the rapid amplification of cDNA ends procedure. The cDNA of peptide 23 obtained by the rapid amplification of cDNA ends procedure contained 777 nucleotides and encoded a 175-amino acid protein with a 26-amino acid putative signal peptide. The calculated mol wt of the mature protein (16,613 daltons) was in good agreement with that estimated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (16 kilodaltons). Northern blot analysis revealed a major messenger RNA species of about 0.9 kilobase and a minor species of about 1.7 kilobases in cultured rat anterior pituitary cells. In rats, peptide 23 was most abundant in the pancreas and gastrointestinal tract. A GenBank sequence search revealed complete sequence identity between peptide 23 cDNA and pancreatitis-associated protein cDNA, an approximately 73% homology with human
hepatocellular carcinoma
cDNA from human
hepatocellular carcinoma
, 64% homology with bovine pancreatic thread protein cDNA, and 55% homology with rat and human reg cDNAs, which have been reported to be expressed in regenerating pancreatic islets. Therefore, peptide 23 is identical to pancreatitis-associated protein and a member of the C-type lectin supergene family.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of peptide 23, a growth hormone-releasing hormone-inducible pituitary protein. 789 43
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