Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fas antigen (ag) is a cell surface protein known to trigger apoptosis in a variety of cells upon specific antibody binding. On the other hand, Bcl-2 protein, an oncogene product located at the mitochondrial inner surface, prolongs cell survival by blocking apoptosis. In this study we examined the expression of Fas ag and bcl-2 protein in 17 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to determine their role on HCC. By flow cytometric analysis, mean (SD) value of the expression of Fas ag on hepatocytes derived from normal liver, diseased liver (chronic hepatitis or liver cirrhosis) and HCC was 5.8 (4.7)%, 10.3 (6.9)%, and 24.0 (18.2)%, respectively. Fas ag expression on hepatoma cells was significantly greater than normal and diseased liver cells. The expression of Bcl-2 protein in normal liver, diseased liver and HCC was 4.3 (8.5)%, 0.8 (2.5)% and 2.1 (3.4)%, respectively, and the difference was not significant. These results suggest that induction of apoptosis may be a possible therapy against HCC.
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PMID:Expression of Fas antigen and Bcl-2 protein in hepatocellular carcinoma. 750 84

Apoptosis occurs in the normal liver and in various forms of liver disease. The CD95 (APO-1/Fas) (CD95) receptor mediates apoptosis, and liver cells in animal models are acutely sensitive to apoptosis initiated by this receptor. We have used primary human hepatocytes as a model system to investigate CD95-mediated apoptotic liver damage. Treatment of fresh human hepatocytes with low concentrations of agonistic antibodies against CD95 resulted in apoptosis of > 95% of the cultured liver cells within 4 and 7.5 h. Immunohistology of a panel of explanted liver tissues revealed that hepatocytes in normal livers (n = 5) and in alcoholic cirrhosis (n = 13) expressed low constitutive levels of CD95. CD95 receptor expression was highly elevated in hepatocytes in hepatitis B virus-related cirrhosis (n = 9) and in acute liver failure (n = 8). By in situ hybridization CD95 ligand messenger RNA expression was absent in normal liver but detected at high levels in livers with ongoing liver damage. In cases of hepatitis B virus-related cirrhosis and acute hepatic failure, ligand expression was found primarily in areas with lymphocytic infiltration. In contrast, in patients with alcoholic liver damage, high CD95 ligand messenger RNA expression was found in hepatocytes. These findings suggest that liver destruction in hepatitis B may primarily involve killing of hepatocytes by T lymphocytes using the CD95 receptor-ligand system. In alcoholic liver damage, death of hepatocytes might occur by fratricide and paracrine or autocrine mechanisms mediated by the hepatocytes themselves.
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PMID:Involvement of the CD95 (APO-1/Fas) receptor and ligand in liver damage. 759 93

The primary diseases of 209 explanted livers of the transplantation center of the University of Heidelberg are presented. Liver cirrhosis was found in 48.8% as the primary disease followed by the group of malignancies of the liver (28.2%) with HCC as the predominant tumor. Fulminant liver failure was found in 13.8% as the primary disease. Metabolic disorders comprised a small group of 11 cases (5.3%). 7 cases were transplanted for Budd Chiari syndrome (3.3%) and one case was transplanted for E. alveolaris. The examination of fulminant viral hepatitis revealed evidence of the involvement of the APO-1/Fas (CD95) system in the pathogenesis of this disorder. Prognostic factors for recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma are size and number of tumor nodules as well as proliferative activity of the tumors determined by Ki67 immunostaining. Diagnosis of HCV infection of the livers is best established by RT-PCR after RNA extraction and is still superior to other immunohistochemical or in-situ methods.
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PMID:[Pathology of the explanted liver in liver transplantation]. 860 Jun 90

In liver, apoptosis is a physiological process involved in the clearance of injured cells and in homeostatic control [1]. However, in patients with viral fulminant hepatitis or with nonacute liver diseases [2], dramatic liver failure or secondary cirrhosis results from the death of hepatocytes, which express the cell-surface receptor Fas, by apoptosis. To date, treatment of fulminant hepatitis relies mainly on orthotopic liver transplantation, which is limited by immunological complications and graft availability. Unravelling the molecular mechanisms that underlie acute liver failure could allow the design of an appropriate therapy. Ligand-bound Fas and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) induce hepatic apoptosis in mice [3-6]. In various cell types, Fas- or TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis is blocked by viral proteins (such as p35 and CrmA) as well as by a decoy peptide (YVADcmk) [7-11], suggesting that these mechanisms of apoptosis involve ICE (interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme)-like proteases. Here, we report that, in vivo, pre-treatment of mice with YVADcmk protects them from the lethal effect of anti-Fas antibody and from liver failure induced by injection of TNF-alpha. Remarkably, YVADcmk administration is also highly effective in rescuing mice that have been pretreated with anti-Fas antibody from rapid death, despite extensive hepatic apoptosis. This dramatic curative effect could be of clinical benefit for the treatment of viral and inflammatory liver diseases.
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PMID:ICE inhibitor YVADcmk is a potent therapeutic agent against in vivo liver apoptosis. 880 75

Cirrhotic patients frequently manifest neutropenia and are predisposed to bacterial infections. We examined neutrophil apoptosis to determine if neutrophil survival in cirrhotic patients is shortened. Neutrophils isolated from 10 cirrhotic patients and 10 healthy volunteers were cultured for 24 hours. The time course of neutrophil viability was assessed by the trypan blue dye exclusion test and apoptosis was determined morphologically by light and electron microscopy. Apoptotic cells were also confirmed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick and labeling (TUNEL) and DNA gel electrophoresis. Fas expression of neutrophils was examined by flow cytometry. Viabilities were significantly decreased in liver cirrhosis (p<0.0001). Neutrophils from cirrhotic patients exhibited significantly greater apoptosis. Fas expression of neutrophils was significantly reduced for cirrhotic patients (p=0.0001). Neutrophils from cirrhotic patients exhibited markedly accelerated apoptosis in vitro. Shortening of neutrophil survival via apoptosis may explain in part the mechanism of neutropenia in cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:In vitro study of neutrophil apoptosis in liver cirrhosis. 951 Mar 93

To elucidate the role of apoptosis in the pathological lesion of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, biopsied liver tissue specimens of 38 patients with chronic hepatitis B of varying severity were investigated with in situ immunohistochemistry and TUNEL test. Apoptotic hepatocytes were found to be rare, while the nuclei of many cells were positively stained with TUNEL, suggesting 3'-OH ends generated as the DNA was impaired. Of the 17 cases with mild lesion or without piecemeal necrosis, 14 were negative or weakly positive with both Fas and TUNEL test. Of the 7 cases with piecemeal and bridging necrosis, none was strongly positive. In the 14 cases with active hepatitis and early cirrhosis, strongly positive results with Fas were found in 9 and with TUNEL in 3 respectively. It is suggested that the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-Fas-apoptosis mechanism was involved in the hepatocyte death of hepatitis B as well. The Fas expression, DNA damage and apoptotic cells distributed mostly in the piecemeal necrosis region, and the ballooning and the necrotic hepatocytes were also clustering in this region. As both the apoptosis and necrosis are mediated by CTL, they are closely related: while transducted by different ways, they occurred independently.
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PMID:[Fas expression and DNA impairment of hepatocyte in chronic hepatitis B]. 959 43

Fas (APO-1/CD95)-mediated apoptosis plays an important role in liver cell destruction in viral hepatitis. Using sandwich ELISA, we measured serum levels of soluble Fas (sFas) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who were positive for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) or anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody. sFas levels were significantly higher in HCC patients (median 4.07 ng/ml; range 0.14-29.18 ng/ml) than levels in age-matched healthy donors (0.29 ng/ml; 0-4.90 ng/ ml) (P < 0.0001) and HBsAg or anti-HCV antibody-positive patients with liver cirrhosis (LC) (2.16 ng/ ml; 0.24-8.39 ng/ml) (P = 0.0015). An arbitrary cut-off level of 3.03 ng/ml (mean + 3 s.d. of controls) revealed the positive frequency of sFas in each group: 1.7% in healthy subjects, 25.9% in LC, and 59.0% in HCC (sensitivity 59.0% and specificity 74.1%). All HCC sera tested contained transmembrane-deleted sFas and some contained another sFas lacking the Fas C-terminal. The positive frequency of either sFas (59.0%) or alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) (57.4%) in HCC patients reached 77.0%. HCC patients with multiple tumour foci (7.53 ng/ml; 1.40-29.18 ng/ml) had significantly higher sFas levels than did patients with a solitary tumour (2.70 ng/ml; 0.14-19.0 ng/ml) (P = 0.003). In all of the sFas-positive patients with a solitary tumour, surgical removal of the tumour reduced sFas levels to the negative in the first post-op week. These findings suggest that sFas may be closely linked with HCC and may be a candidate for a clinical parameter for HCC.
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PMID:Elevated serum levels of soluble Fas/APO-1 (CD95) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 964 77

Paraffin-embedded liver tissue from 60 biopsied or autopsied cases, including 20 cases each of acute mild hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis and active cirrhosis were studied with immunohistochemical double labelling technique by using polyclonal anti-Fas and anti-Fas ligand. The detection rates for Fas and Fas ligand were 76.7% (46/60) and 70.0% (42/60), respectively. Fas antigen was located in cytoplasm of hepatocytes. Fas ligand was expressed mainly in infiltrating lymphocytes in portal or periportal areas (34/42, 80.9%) and also in the cytoplasm of some hepatocytes (25/42, 59.5%). The distribution of Fas ligand-positive hepatocytes was similar to that of Fas-positive hepatocytes in liver tissue. The positive cells were scattered in the intralobular areas in acute mild hepatitis, but they were more commonly aggregated in periportal areas, especially near the edges of the piecemeal necrosis region or in infiltrating mononucleocytes in chronic active hepatitis and active cirrhosis, Double labelling studies showed that both Fas and Fas ligand might be expressed in the same or different hepatocytes of the same area. Our results suggest that Fas-Fas ligand system may play an important role in liver cell injury due to hepatitis B virus infection.
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PMID:[Expression of Fas and Fas ligand in liver tissue infected with hepatitis B virus]. 1043 77

The release of soluble circulating molecules represents a prominent feature during the course of immune-mediated clinical conditions. To further assess the relationship between serum concentrations of adhesion or apoptotic-related soluble structures and liver diseases, we evaluated the levels of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1), Fas receptor (CD95) and Fas ligand (sCD95L) in a group of patients affected by Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)-induced chronic hepatitis (CH-C), HCV-positive liver cirrhosis with superimposed hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and alcoholic liver cirrhosis (ALC). Results show that sICAM-1 values were in all instances significantly elevated when compared to those seen in healthy donors. Similar findings were noted in subjects with liver diseases in terms of sCD95 concentrations, even if to a different degree of statistical significance. Finally, sCD95L amounts were augmented in AIH, PBC, ALC and CH-C in comparison to controls, while in the HCC counterpart sCD95L levels fell within normal range. All together, these findings emphasize the occurrence of circulating soluble molecules in patients with various chronic liver diseases, likely reflecting the involvement of several pathogenetic mechanisms.
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PMID:sICAM-1, sCD95 and sCD95L levels in chronic liver diseases of different etiology. 1073 54

In this study we assessed the usefulness of serum Transforming Growth Factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) and soluble Fas (sFas) in distinguishing liver cirrhosis (LC) with and without hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as compared with alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). Serum TGF-beta1 and sFas levels were measured by ELISA in 51 LC patients, 54 patients with HCC and 30 healthy donors. Considering as a cut-off limit (mean+1SD of controls) 74 pg/ml and 637 pg/ml for TGF-beta1 and sFas, respectively, we computed serum concentrations of TGF-beta1 and sFas as a score (mean+/-SD). The positive frequency of serum TGF-beta1 levels in HCC patients (54%) was greater than in LC patients (26%) and healthy donors (3%). TGF-beta1 levels were higher in HCC (1.6+/-0.5) than in LC (1.1+/-0.2) (P<0.0001) and healthy donors (0.6+/-0.2). Using a cut-off limit of 82 pg/ml (mean+2SD), the positive frequency of TGF-beta1 was 20% in HCC patients. None of the controls and LC patients had TGF-beta1 levels higher than 82 pg/ml. The positive frequency of serum sFas levels was 100% in HCC patients, 98% in LC patients and 3% in healthy controls. Serum sFas levels were higher in HCC (2.5+/-0.7) than in LC (1.9+/-0.5) (P<0. 001) and healthy donors (0.6+/-0.3). No significant change of positive frequency was obtained by setting sFas cut-off at higher levels. sFas values did not correlate with TGF-beta1 levels. No relationship was found between TGF-beta1 amounts and AFP levels. However, in the 23% of HCC patients, with normal AFP values TGF-beta1 levels were higher than the cut off. These findings suggest the potential usefulness for TGF-beta1 assay in AFP-negative HCC.
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PMID:Transforming growth factor beta1 and soluble Fas serum levels in hepatocellular carcinoma. 1084 70


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