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)

Male Fischer rats, 6 weeks old, were injected once with one of five doses of azoxymethane. There was a dose response to the carcinogen as determined by weight gain and tumor induction. Rats given the three highest doses developed tumors of the gastrointestinal tract, auditory sebaceous glands, kidney, liver, and preputial gland, whereas rats receiving the lowest doses had tumors mainly of the intestine. Chronic liver lesions in high-dose rats were cirrhosis with megalocytosis, mild fibrosis, nodular hepatocellular hyperplasia, and hyperplasia of bile ductules.
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PMID:Dose response to a single injection of azoxymethane in rats. Induction of tumors in the gastrointestinal tract, auditory sebaceous glands, kidney, liver and preputial gland. 17 70

Liver carcinogenesis with a single dose of aflatoxin B1 (7 mg/kg body weight) has been investigated in a group of female Wistar strain rats by repeated biopsies and necropsies. Another group received a subsequent intoxication with carbon tetrachloride by inhalation (approximately 200 doses) and another one was overloaded with riboflavin (25 parts/10(6) in drinking water). The frequency of hepatomata was almost equal in the aflatoxin and aflatoxin-carbon tetrachloride group. It was lowere in the riboflavin-aflatoxin group. In these 3 groups cirrhosis was never present in neoplastic livers. Megalocytosis was the first lesion observed. All tumoral livers had previous or concomitant megalocytosis. This modification was about as frequent, intense and widespread in aflatoxin-CCl4 and aflatoxin groups but appeared much earlier, as did the first hepatoma, in the aflatoxin-CCl4 group. It was less frequent, less intense and less widespread in the riboflavin-aflatoxin group than in the aflatoxin group. There was also a lower frequency of hepatomata in the riboflavin-aflatoxin group, but the difference was not significant due to the too small number of animals involved. The facts are not a proof of the existence of an obligatory link between megalocytosis and carcinogenesis since a slight megalocytosis was observed in the riboflavin group not affected by the neoplastic process. However, the simplest explanation of our results would be to consider that the potential tumour cells are located among the megalocytic cells, without admitting that every megalocyte is obligatorily a precancerous cell. CCl4 seems to act in shortening the time of appearance of megalocytosis. The protective effect of riboflavine should be regarded with more caution.
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PMID:Influence of carbon tetrachloride or riboflavin on liver carcinogenesis with a single dose of aflatoxin b1. 17 84

Monocrotaline, a pyrrolizidine alkaloid derived from Crotalaria spectabilis, is known to be toxic to a variety of domestic and laboratory animals and to humans. Major pathological effects induced by monocrotaline poisoning include hepatic cirrhosis and megalocytosis, venocclusive disease, pulmonary hypertension, and right ventricular hypertrophy. The present investigation explored the structural and functional relationships that exist between pulmonary artery pressure, small pulmonary artery medial thickness, and right ventricular hypertrophy. The results of this physiological and histological study on monocrotaline-intoxicated rats has demonstrated that there is a positive correlation between progressive pulmonary hypertension, thickening of the medical wall of small pulmonary vessels, and right ventricular hypertrophy as a function of time.
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PMID:Changes in pulmonary structure and function induced by monocrotaline intoxication. 645 Nov 83

Lasiocarpine (LC), a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, is able to induce a series of chronic and progressive lesions in rat liver, including a long-lasting block in the cell cycle, the appearance of enlarged hepatocytes (megalocytosis), fibrosis, cirrhosis and malignant neoplasma. In this study the effect of transplantation of normal hepatocytes on the development of LC-induced chronic lesions in rat liver was examined. Two-month-old male Fischer 344 rats were given a single dose of LC (80 mumol/kg i.p.). Four weeks later all animals were subjected to 2/3 partial hepatectomy (PH). In addition, at the time of PH one group of rats were transplanted with normal hepatocytes isolated from a syngeneic donor (10(6) cells/rats via the portal vein), while the other group received only the culture medium. All rats were killed 14 weeks after the operation. Grossly, the liver of rats exposed to LC followed by PH with no transplantation of normal hepatocytes was small in size (% liver wt/body wt 1.66 +/- 0.08) and exhibited a few whitish nodules. Histologically, approximately 88% of the liver section was occupied by enlarged hepatocytes and hepatocyte nodules composed of smaller hepatocytes developed in every animal in this group. In addition, extensive bile ductular proliferation was present. However, the liver of rats that were similarly treated but received normal hepatocytes were significantly larger in size (% liver wt/body wt 2.16 +/- 0.07) and were almost completely free of megalocytosis, bile ductular proliferation and hepatocyte nodules. These findings indicate that transplantation of normal hepatocytes is able to modulate the development of chronic liver lesions induced by LC and may be relevant to the pathogenesis of progressive liver diseases such as neoplasia and cirrhosis.
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PMID:Transplantation of normal hepatocytes modulates the development of chronic liver lesions induced by a pyrrolizidine alkaloid, lasiocarpine. 783 99

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids initiate disease in the lung (pulmonary hypertension), liver (veno-occlusive disease and cirrhosis), and kidneys (afferent arteriolar block and mesangiolysis) by inducing a megalocytotic phenotype in target endothelial and parenchymal cells. A "hit-and-run" type of exposure to the bioactive pyrrolizidine results, within 2-3 days, in enlarged cells with large nuclei and enlarged Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum, while the cells remain in G2/M block. In the present study, we recapitulated monocrotaline pyrrole (MCTP)-induced megalocytosis in cultures of bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAEC), human Hep3B hepatocytes, human type II-like alveolar epithelial cells (A549), and human pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMC) and investigated the subcellular mechanism involved. There was an inverse relationship between reduction in caveolin (Cav)-1 levels and stimulation of promitogenic STAT3 and ERK1/2 cell signaling. In megalocytotic PAEC, the Golgi scaffolding protein GM130 was shifted from membranes with heavy density to those with a lighter density. This lighter Golgi fraction was enriched for hypo-oligomeric Cav-1, indicating dysfunctional trafficking of cargo. Immunofluorescence imaging studies confirmed the trapping of Cav-1 in a GM130-positive Golgi compartment. There was an increase in Ser25 phosphorylation of GM130 (typically a prelude to Golgi fragmentation and mitosis) and increased association between pGM130, cdc2 kinase, and Cav-1. Nevertheless, megalocytotic MCTP-treated cells showed reduced entry into mitosis upon stimulation with 2-methoxyestradiol (2-ME), reduced 2-ME-induced Golgi fragmentation, and a slowing of Golgi reassembly after nocodazole-induced fragmentation. These data suggest that a disruption of the trafficking and mitosis sensor functions of the Golgi may represent the subcellular mechanism leading to MCTP-induced megalocytosis ("the Golgi blockade hypothesis").
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PMID:Monocrotaline pyrrole-induced endothelial cell megalocytosis involves a Golgi blockade mechanism. 1556 61