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)
The close relationship between serum levels of cholesterol and bile acid has been confirmed in 46 patients with primary
hepatoma
. Serum levels of cholesterol and bile acid are roughly correlated with serum
alpha-fetoprotein
concentration. Because the relationship between serum cholesterol and bile acid did not exist in common hepatocellular diseases, the results suggest a peculiar sterol metabolism occurring in human
hepatoma
.
...
PMID:Serum cholesterol and bile acid in primary hepatoma. 6 Oct 74
The expression of an "oncodevelopmental" protein,
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
), has been systematically studied in rats during normal development and during regeneration of the liver by fetal rat hepatocytes in vitro, in rats bearing transplantable hepatomas, in rats fed chemical carcinogens, and in mice that spontaneously develop hematomas.
AFP
is a serum protein made normally during fetal and neonatal stages by liver and yolk sac cells. In newborn rats at approximately 4 weeks of age, the production of
AFP
is abruptly terminated, a process which is closely associated with cessation of liver cell proliferation. In adult rats,
AFP
production recurs following the reinitiation of hepatic DNA synthesis induced by partial hepatectomy or by the administration of heaptotoxic chemicals. Detailed metabolic and direct labeling studies of fetal rat hepatocytes in vitro also demonstrate a kinetically similar pattern of hepatocyte DNA synthesis and
AFP
production. In vitro studies utilizing combined autoradiography for DNA-synthesizing cells and immunofluorescence for
AFP
-containing cells demonstrates that replicating hepatocytes produce
AFP
, however, available data do not yet permit a distinction between G1 (pre- or postmitotic) and/or G2 production. During growth of an
AFP
- producing tumor, the serum concentration of
AFP
may be used as a accurate index of tumor growth, and, if a transplanted tumor is removed, as a marker for metastatic growth of the tumor. Using this model, we have shown that radiation to the lung at the time of surgical removal of a growing tumor in the leg will prevent establishment and growth of pulmonary metastases and that anti-
AFP
serum treatment may inhibit growth of a transplantable
hepatoma
that produces
AFP
. The exposure of rats to chemical hepatocarcinogens results in the appearance of evaluated serum
AFP
concentration as early as within 1 week of feeding; noncarcinogenic chemical analogs do not cause an elevation.
AFP
elevation also occurs with low doses of the hepatocarcinogen in the absence of detectable cell injury (by morphological examination of serum enzyme levels) or any other known morphological or biochemical change. This may represent a highly selective derepression of protein synthesis that occurs following the formation of a complex between the metabolites of the carcinogen and specific chromatin loci. Although every rat so far treated with even subcarcinogenic doses of hepatocarcinogens has elevated serum
AFP
concentrations, many primary carcinogen-induced hepatomas do not produce detectable
AFP
. Either there is a subsequent change in the preneoplastic
AFP
-producing cell that occurs prior to irreversible neoplastic alteration, or the hepatocytes originally influenced by the carcinogens to produce
AFP
are not necessarily the same cells that are the progenitors of the
hepatoma
produced by more prolonged exposure...
...
PMID:Expression of an oncodevelopmental gene product (alpha-fetoprotein) during fetal development and adult oncogenesis. 6 4
Transplabtable Zajdela rat ascites
hepatoma
cells, previously considered "nonproducers," synthesize detectable amounts of intracellular
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
) and fibrinogen, but fail to secret or release these serum proteins. Evidence for defective secretory mechanisms for serum proteins in these
hepatoma
cells (a) explains the failure to detect
AFP
in either the serum or ascitic fluid of rats bearing this
hepatoma
, (b) indicates that some
hepatoma
cells should be classified as "nonsecretors," rather than nonproducers of
AFP
, and (c) suggests that failure to detect
AFP
in some human and animal hepatomas in vivo and in vitro may also reflect failure of secretion rather than failure of intracellular synthesis.
...
PMID:Intracellular synthesis of alpha-fetoprotein and fibrinogen without secretion by Zajdela rat ascites hepatoma cells. 6 10
The clinical and biochemical findings in 207 Black patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
are presented. A bruit over the liver was heard in 25% of the patients, a previously underemphasised sign. In 28 of the 30 biopsy-proven cases
alpha-fetoprotein
levels were elevated. Hepatitis B antigen was found in 41% of the patients.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of hepatocellular carcinoma in man. 6 8
Serum alpha-globulin fractions isolated by physiocochemical techniques from normal adult Buffalo rats suppressed lymphocyte proliferation in vitro. The factors responsible for mixed lymphocyte culture suppression appeared to be strain specific since they were not demonstrable in the same fractions from normal LBN rat serum. Similar fractionation of the serum from Buffalo rats bearing the Morris Hepatoma 7777 obtained from two different sources also yielded suppressive protein fractions that differed both chemically and functionally. Both variants of this
hepatoma
produced high serum concentrations of
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
), providing an opportunity to study the possible immunoregulatory role of their fetal-associated globulins. Fractions rich in
AFP
that lacked other serum alpha-globulins were obtained by gel filtration chromatography and were devoid of any in vitro immunosuppressive activity. When
AFP
that was further purified by immunoabsorption was added to mixed lymphocyte cultures, no effect was observed at doses below 400 mug/ml. The MLC response was augmented with higher doses, similar to albumin purified by the same methods.
...
PMID:Effect of alpha-fetoprotein and other serum factors derived from hepatoma-bearing rats on the mixed lymphocyte response. 6 91
Three of 42 (7%) monkeys given aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) for longer than 2 years have developed primary malignant neoplasms of the liver. Liver biopsies performed at intervals during aflatoxin administration revealed that neoplasia was preceded by pathologic lesions of the liver, including toxic hepatitis, proliferation of pseudotubules, and hyperplastic nodules. Serum
alpha-fetoprotein
levels, monitored in one of the monkeys by radioimmunoassay, paralleled tumor growth and recurrence of the
hepatocellular carcinoma
. Normal serum
alpha-fetoprotein
levels were noted for a monkey with hemangioendothelial sarcoma. Our results implicate AFB1 as a liver carcinogen in monkeys and add additional support to the hypothesis that humans exposed to this substance may be at risk of developing liver cancer.
...
PMID:Carcinogenicity of aflatoxin B1 in rhesus monkeys: two additional cases of primary liver cancer. 6 57
Human
alpha-fetoprotein
(HAFP) isolated by immunoadsorbent column was shown to suppress the mitogenic response of human lymphocytes to phytomitogens, antihuman thymocyte antiserum, and the mixed lymphocyte culture. HAFP isolated from the sera and ascitic fluid of five
hepatoma
patients, and from fetal liver, varied in biological potency over three orders of magnitude. Extended agarose gel electrophoresis and crossed immunoelectrophoresis demonstrated three molecular species of HAFP. Quantitation of the three species revealed a correlation between the relative amount of the most negatively charged species and biological potency. Treatment of HAFP with neuraminidase to remove completely sialic acid residues did not alter the biological potency, but converted the three species to two species having slower electrophoretic mobilities. We conclude that differences in sialic acid content are only partly responsible for the microheterogeneity demonstrated by HAFP, and that variability in another charged moiety is also present. Variation in the relative proportions of the different molecular species of HAFP may be important in the regulation of its immunosuppressive properties.
...
PMID:Human alpha-fetoprotein as a modulator of human lymphocyte transformation: correlation of biological potency with electrophoretic variants. 6 52
The clinical features of 57 autopsied cases of intrahepatic bile duct carcinoma including 28 cases of the peripheral type (cholangiocarcinoma in the narrow sense) and 29 cases of the hilar type are described in comparison with those of
hepatocellular carcinoma
, with a review of the literature on the clinicopathological aspects of intrahepatic bile duct carcinoma. As compared with
hepatocellular carcinoma
, the average age of the patients was older; the male predominance was not obvious, chronic parenchymal liver disease was infrequent in the past history, association of primary cirrhosis was seldom, cholestatic features were frequently the early signs and more pronounced during the course, the liver was enlarged to a lesser extent, ascites was less common, signs of portal hypertension were absent or minimal, and extrahepatic metastases were less frequent. In many respects, the hilar type resembled extrahepatic bile duct carcinoma, and the peripheral type was somewhat between it and
hepatocellular carcinoma
. Although the overall survival was not much different from that for
hepatocellular carcinoma
, early diagnosis is emphasized; this would make surgical management possible. Differential diagnosis from
hepatocellular carcinoma
may be possible in the majority with direct cholangiography, liver scan, celiac angiography, determination of
alpha-fetoprotein
and hepatitis B antigen, and blood chemistry such as SGOT, SLDH, serum bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase. Illustrative cases are given including one patient with a hilar carcinoma who survived for more than 2 years after transhepatic biliary drainage.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of intrahepatic bile duct carcinoma including hilar carcinoma: a study of 57 autopsy-proven cases. 6 93
The cytotoxic potential of heterologous rabbit antibody directed against mouse serum albumin (MSA) and
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
) was investigated in vitro with a cell line (Hepa) derived from the mouse
hepatoma
BW7756. Anti-
AFP
in the presence of complement could kill Hepa cells at concentrations of anti-MSA that were virtually nontoxic. The specificity of the anti-
AFP
was defined by demonstrating that Hepa cell toxicity was dependent upon and paralleled the secretion of
AFP
in synchronized cultures. Furthermore, neither antiserum could be shown to be significantly toxic to mouse neuroblastoma cells (Neuro-2A). Immunoglobulin purified from pools of antisera was also highly effective in producing cytotoxicity even in a complement-free system. This reaction proceeded more slowly, requiring nearly 48 hr to reach maximum effect in comparison to the 12 hr for complement-mediated toxicity. MSA and
AFP
are secreted during different phases of the cell cycle. In cultures arrested by isoleucine starvation, labeled
AFP
appears in the medium 10 hr after release of the blockade in association with S phase. The appearance of labeled MSA is delayed until the first mitosis. Cytotoxic effects of anti-
AFP
parallel the secretion of
AFP
in synchronous cultures. Both antisera could be inhibitory to the secretion and synthesis of the proteins of their antigenic specificity. MSA synthesis was more susceptible to this inhibition than was
AFP
synthesis. The significance of this phenomenon and its association with the differential cytotoxicity of the antiserum are discussed.
...
PMID:The influence of antisera specific for alpha-fetoprotein and mouse serum albumin on the viability and protein synthesis of cultured mouse hepatoma cells. 6 16
Germinal cell tumors of the testis were studied for the presence of several tumor-associated antigens. Antisera were produced by immunizing rabbits with the purified antigens of
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), and
hepatoma
ferritin. Indirect immunofluorescence on embryonal carcinoma with or without teratoma components demonstrated that their staining range was 1--60 per cent with antiserum against
AFP
, 0--16 per cent with anti-serum against ferritin, and 0-40% with antiserum against CEA. Ferritin-like substances have not been described previously in germinal tumors of the testis. No staining was seen with seminoma cells or benign testicular tissues. Raised serum levels of
AFP
and the ferritin-like substance were related both to the presence of tumor and to dissemination of the disease. CEA occurred transiently in serum. Eleven patients with primary tumors had no antigen in their sera and have all survived, but the median survival time for 8 patients with either antigen in preoperative sera was 12 months. Five patients with advanced tumor in whom neither
AFP
nor ferritin was detected had a much longer median survival time (58 mo) than did 13 patients with high levels of serum
AFP
or ferritin (12 mo). The presence of either
AFP
or ferritin in sera of patients with primary or advanced disease, therefore, seemed to indicate a poor prognosis. The determination of both substances in serum may be useful in the follow-up of patients with certain types of testicular tumors. The proportion of cells containing each antigen varied in the different tumors. Similarly, each antigen could occur independently in serum. This suggested that certain germ cell tumors contained subpopulations of cells, which differed in their production and release of the antigens studied.
...
PMID:Multiple antigens as marker substances in germinal tumors of the testis. 6 76
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>