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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dehydroepiandrosterone
(
DHEA
), administered per os, serves to prevent or retard the development of a variety of genetic and induced disorders in mice and rats. This treatment also results in the development of
hepatomegaly
, a change of liver color from pink to mahogany, peroxisome proliferation in hepatocytes and alterations in hepatocyte mitochondria morphology and respiration. We used one- and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to identify changes in the relative levels of liver proteins produced by
DHEA
treatment of rodents. In mouse liver, there were apparent increases in the levels of 26 proteins and decreases in the levels of 7 proteins. Of the induced proteins the most prominent had Mr approximately 72 K; this protein was identified in a previous study as enoyl-CoA hydratase/3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Another protein of Mr approximately 28 K, of unknown nature, also was induced markedly by
DHEA
treatment of mice and rats. A protein of Mr approximately 160 K, which was identified as carbamoyl phosphate synthetase-I (CPS-I), was decreased markedly by
DHEA
action. This enzyme, which comprises approx. 15-20% of mitochondrial matrix protein, is involved in the entry and rate-limiting step of the urea cycle. The specific activity of CPS-I also was significantly decreased by
DHEA
, but serum urea levels were normal. To determine whether steroids other than
DHEA
also induced similar changes, mice were treated with various steroids for 14 days and, thereafter, liver proteins were evaluated by SDS-PAGE: estradiol-17 beta and isoandrosterone induced both the approximately 72 and approximately 28 kDa proteins, testosterone and androsterone induced the 28 kDa protein only, but etiocholanolone, pregnenolone and progesterone were without effect. The findings of this study serve to demonstrate that: (i) hepatic protein levels are affected by
DHEA
treatment of mice and rats; (ii) liver CPS-I activity is decreased significantly by
DHEA
treatment, but serum urea levels remain within the normal range; and (iii) sex steroids and some of their precursors, when administered per os, also alter liver protein levels.
...
PMID:Inhibition of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase-I by dietary dehydroepiandrosterone. 182 77
Dehydroepiandrosterone
(
DHEA
) treatment is effective in the prevention of various genetic and induced disorders of mice and rats. In studies designed to define some of the basic mechanisms that underline the beneficial chemopreventive effects exerted by the action of this steroid, we found that the liver undergoes profound changes that result in: (i)
hepatomegaly
; (ii) color change from pink to mahogany; (iii) proliferation of peroxisomes; (iv) increased cross-sectional area and volume density of peroxisomes; (v) increased or decreased number of mitochondria per cell; (vi) decreased mitochondrial cross-sectional area; (vii) marked induction of the peroxisomal bifunctional protein enoyl-CoA hydratase/3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase; (viii) increased activities of enoyl-CoA hydratase and other peroxisomal enzymes assayed in this study, viz. catalase, carnitine acetyl-CoA transferase, carnitine octanoyl-CoA transferase, and urate oxidase; and (ix) increased activity of mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyl-CoA transferase. In addition, feeding
DHEA
to mice resulted in increased plasma cholesterol levels in two strains of mice evaluated in this study, and either slightly decreased or markedly increased plasma triglyceride levels, depending on the strain. Whether liver peroxisome proliferation, induced by
DHEA
feeding to mice and rats, plays a role in the chemopreventive effects elicited by this steroid remains to be established.
...
PMID:Peroxisome proliferation and induction of peroxisomal enzymes in mouse and rat liver by dehydroepiandrosterone feeding. 213 91
Dehydroepiandrosterone
(
DHEA
) treatment is effective in preventing or delaying the onset of various genetic and induced disorders of mice and rats. Associated with the beneficial therapeutic effects exerted by action of this steroid is the development of
hepatomegaly
. To determine whether the changes associated with
hepatomegaly
also involve alterations in activities of tissue enzymes, we evaluated the effects of
DHEA
(0.45% in food, w/w) on hepatic protein kinases, phosphatases, and lipogenic enzymes in mice of various strains. The rates of fatty acid and cholesterol syntheses also were evaluated.
DHEA
administration resulted in profound changes in the sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of endogenous radiophosphorylated proteins obtained by incubation of liver homogenates with (gamma-32P]ATP. These changes were dependent upon the medium used for homogenization. Thus, when homogenates of liver tissue of
DHEA
-treated mice were prepared in Tris buffer containing sucrose (0.25 M) there was a marked decrease in phosphorylation of the proteins of relative molecular weight approximately 116,000 (Mr approximately 116,000), approximately 82,000, approximately 80,000, approximately 58,000, approximately 56,000, approximately 48,000, approximately 34,000, and approximately 31,000 compared with controls. With liver homogenates of
DHEA
-treated mice prepared in Tris buffer alone, there was a marked increase in phosphorylation of the proteins of Mr approximately 70,000, approximately 49,000, approximately 34,000, approximately 31,000, and 28,000 compared with controls. Moreover, the specific activity of kinases for endogenous protein acceptors in liver of control mice was higher than that in liver of
DHEA
-treated animals. The specific activities of casein kinase, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and cGMP-dependent protein kinase remained unchanged with
DHEA
treatment, but the specific activity of histone kinase was increased approximately 30%. Long-term administration of
DHEA
also was associated with increases in the specific activities of liver AMPase and GTPase (approximately two times), but not of other nucleotidases, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase, or phosphotyrosine phosphatase. The activity of hepatic NADP-linked malic enzyme was increased significantly (two to three times) by
DHEA
treatment of female mice of three different strains, but was unchanged in male C57BL/6 mice. The specific activities of hepatic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase, and ATP-citrate lyase were not affected significantly by
DHEA
treatment of mice. The rate of hepatic lipogenesis, determined by incorporation of tritium from 3H2O into fatty acids, was decreased approximately 70% in
DHEA
-treated mice, while the rate of cholesterol synthesis was increased approximately 44% compared with controls.
...
PMID:Dehydroepiandrosterone feeding and protein phosphorylation, phosphatases, and lipogenic enzymes in mouse liver. 215 82
Dehydroepiandrosterone
(
DHEA
) is a newly identified peroxisome proliferator that causes
hepatomegaly
, peroxisome proliferation, and induction of peroxisome-associated enzymes in rats and mice, and hepatocellular carcinomas in rats. In the present study, we have systematically analyzed sex differences and the effect of castration on
DHEA
-induced peroxisome proliferation in male and female rats, since no information is available on this subject.
DHEA
was fed in diet at a concentration of 0.45% for 2 weeks and livers were analyzed for
hepatomegaly
, peroxisome volume density, peroxisome proliferator associated Mr 80,000 polypeptide (PPA-80), and enoyl-CoA hydratase/3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (PBE) mRNA. Both intact and castrated rats showed similar response to
DHEA
characterized by increased peroxisome volume density, PBE mRNA, and PPA-80. Significant difference was observed in the liver weights between castrated and intact animals in both the sexes. Castrated rats that received
DHEA
had 20%-30% more liver weight than
DHEA
-administered intact rats. These results clearly indicate that peroxisome proliferative effect of
DHEA
is not influenced by sex hormones and it is equally potent in both males and females.
...
PMID:Dehydroepiandrosterone-induced peroxisome proliferation in the rat: evaluation of sex differences. 793 49
A patient with classic Zellweger syndrome was treated with docosahexaenoic acid ethyl ester (DHA-EE) for three months. Five other patients with Zellweger variants (four of them less than one-year-old and a five-year-old) were treated with
DHA
-EE until normalization of the
DHA
levels in erythrocytes. When arachidonic acid (AA) concentration decreased, AA was added to the diet. Thereafter, a combined treatment with
DHA
plus AA followed, in a variable proportion that allowed the high levels of
DHA
in erythrocytes to be maintained. In the patient with Zellweger syndrome,
DHA
therapy produced an increase in plasmalogen and a decrease in 26:0 and 26:1. No clear clinical improvement could be detected in this patient during the short period of treatment with
DHA
-EE. The most consistent clinical effect produced by
DHA
therapy in the other patients with disorders of peroxisomal biogenesis was visual improvement, even in those patients that were virtually blind before the treatment. In general, the developmental curve began to accelerate. The infants became more alert, acquired better visual and social contact and muscular tone improved, with the beginning of good head control. The liver tests tended to normalize and some patients showed a reduction of
hepatomegaly
. All these favorable changes occurred when the patients were taking the
DHA
-EE alone. In some of the patients, muscular tone seemed to improve further after introducing AA supplements. From the biochemical point of view, the plasmalogen levels increased in most cases in erythrocytes, and the two ratios 26:0/22:0 and 26:1/22:0 decreased in plasma. In some patients there was a tendency for 26:1 to increase in plasma and for 18:0 plasmalogen to decrease in erythrocytes when AA was introduced in the diet. The significance of these findings remains to be elucidated, but they stress the importance of strict monitoring and control of the polyunsaturated fatty acids status during
DHA
therapy.
...
PMID:Docosahexaenoic acid therapy in docosahexaenoic acid-deficient patients with disorders of peroxisomal biogenesis. 872 10
Current dietary management of long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCHAD; long-chain-(S)-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA:NAD+ oxido-reductase, EC 1.1.1.211) deficiency (LCHADD) is based on avoiding fasting, and minimizing energy production from long-chain fatty acids. We report the effects of various dietary manipulations on plasma and urinary laboratory values in a child with LCHADD. In our patient, a diet restricted to 9% of total energy from long-chain fatty acids and administration of 1.5 g medium-chain triglyceride oil per kg body weight normalized plasma acylcarnitine and lactate levels, but dicarboxylic acid excretion remained approximately ten times normal. Plasma docosahexaenoic acid (
DHA
, 22:6n-3) was consistently low over a 2-year period;
DHA
deficiency may be related to the development of pigmentary retinopathy seen in this patient population. We also conducted a survey of metabolic physicians who treat children with LCHADD to determine current dietary interventions employed and the effects of these interventions on symptoms of this disease. Survey results indicate that a diet low in long-chain fatty acids, supplemented with medium-chain triclyceride oil, decreased the incidence of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, and improved hypotonia,
hepatomegaly
, cardiomyopathy, and lactic acidosis. However, dietary treatment did not appear to effect peripheral neuropathy, pigmentary retinopathy or myoglobinuria.
...
PMID:Dietary management of long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (LCHADD). A case report and survey. 1023 7
The purpose of this study was to determine whether esterification of dehydroepiandrosterone with aspartate (DHEA-aspartate) could reduce peroxisomal proliferation induced by
DHEA
itself, without loss of antiosteoporotic activity. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were ovariectomized, then
DHEA
or
DHEA
-aspartate was administered intraperitoneally at 0.34 mmol/kg BW 3 times a week for 8 weeks.
DHEA
-aspartate treatment in ovariectomized rats significantly increased trabeculae area in tibia as much as
DHEA
treatment. Urinary Ca excretion was not significantly increased by
DHEA
or
DHEA
-aspartate treatment in ovariectomized rats, while it was significantly increased by ovariectomy. Osteocalcin concentration and alkaline phosphatase activity in serum and cross linked N-telopeptide type I collagen level in urine were not significantly different between
DHEA
-aspartate and
DHEA
treated groups.
DHEA
-aspartate treatment significantly reduced liver weight and hepatic palmitoyl-coA oxidase activity compared to
DHEA
treatment.
DHEA
-aspartate treatment maintained a nearly normal morphology of peroxisomes, while
DHEA
treatment increased the number and size of peroxisomes in the liver. According to these results, it is concluded that
DHEA
-aspartate ester has an inhibitory effect on bone loss in ovariectomized rats with a marked reduction of
hepatomegaly
and peroxisomal proliferation compared to
DHEA
.
...
PMID:Dehydroepiandrosterone-dependent induction of peroxisomal proliferation can be reduced by aspartyl esterification without attenuation of inhibitory bone loss in ovariectomy animal model. 1106 90
Dehydroepiandrosterone
(
DHEA
) is a widespread nutritional "anti-aging" supplement. Exogenous supplementation of
DHEA
is now being commonly used to augment ovarian stimulation in perimenopausal women with diminished ovarian reserve. Whether
DHEA
causes side effects in such age is, however, unknown. Thus, this study investigates the effects of pharmacological doses of
DHEA
supplementation on the liver of perimenopausal rats.
DHEA
supplementation to perimenopausal rats resulted in slight
hepatomegaly
and steatosis, hepatocytic hypertrophy, mitochondrial swelling, elevation in serum alanine aminotransaminase levels, in addition to the accumulation of lipid droplets and lipolysosomes in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, long-term administration of high doses of
DHEA
causes ultrastructural alterations and changes in the levels of cholesterol and triglyceride in hepatocytes of perimenopausal rats.
DHEA
at a dose of 50 mg/kg improves health and decreases the body weight, with the least side effects on the liver of perimenopausal rats.
...
PMID:Effect of dehydroepiandrosterone on the liver of perimenopausal rat: multiple doses study. 2993 2