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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause worldwide of chronic hepatitis,
liver cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma, and the development of an effective vaccine represents a high priority goal. The hyper variable region 1 (HVR1) of the second envelope protein (E2) of HCV contains a principal neutralizing determinant, but it is highly variable among different isolates and it is involved in the escape from host immune response. To be effective, a vaccine should elicit a cross-reacting humoral response against the majority of viral variants. We show that it is possible to achieve a broadly cross-reactive immune response in rabbits by immunization with mimotopes of the HVR1, selected from a specialized phage library using HCV patients' sera. Some of the cross-reacting anti-mimotope antibodies elicited in rabbits, recognize discontinuous epitopes in a manner similar to those induced by the virus in infected patients.
Mol
Immunol 2001 Dec
PMID:Mimotopes of the hyper variable region 1 of the hepatitis C virus induce cross-reactive antibodies directed against discontinuous epitopes. 1174 98
Cells termed myofibroblasts are prominent in the injury response of all epithelial tissues. They exhibit proliferation, migration, production of collagen and other extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules, and contraction, all for containing the injury and closing the wound. When the injury is limited in time, the final stage of the repair involves a dismantling of the cellular apparatus and restoration of normal tissue structure. With multiple cycles of repair, however, there is net accumulation of ECM, to the detriment of tissue structure and function. Repair-related ECM coalesces into fibrous bundles and, over time, undergoes changes that render it resistant to degradation. The result is a scar. In the skin, a scar may have cosmetic importance only. In the liver, however, extensive scarring is the setting for unregulated growth and neoplasia; also, fibrous bands disrupt normal blood flow, leading to portal hypertension and its complications. With regard to therapy for fibrosis, the first consideration is elimination of the injury factor. However, given that many liver diseases do not have effective therapies at present, strategies targeting fibrogenesis per se are under development. The main source of myofibroblast-like cells and ECM production in the liver is the perisinusoidal stellate cell, which responds to injury with a pleiotypic change termed activation. Activation is orchestrated by cytokines and the ECM itself. Among the cytokines involved in this process, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is particularly prominent. The early changes in ECM include de novo production of a specific "fetal" isoform of fibronectin, which arises from sinusoidal endothelial cells. It is stimulated by TGF-beta and acts directly on stellate cells to promote their activation. Based on these and other advances in understanding the fundamentals of the injury response, several strategies now exist for altering fibrogenesis, ranging from agents that block TGF-beta to traditional Chinese herbal extracts. Arrest of fibrogenesis, even with underlying
cirrhosis
, is likely to extend life or prolong the time to transplant. Whether it reduces the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma remains to be proven. Although TGF-beta antagonists are effective anti-fibrogenic agents, they will require detailed safety testing because of the finding that several forms of epithelial neoplasia are associated with altered regulation of TGF-beta.
Exp
Mol
Med 2001 Dec 31
PMID:Chronic liver injury, TGF-beta, and cancer. 1179 78
Serum concentration levels of des-gamma-carboxy prothrombin (DCP), alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and Lens culinaris agglutinin-reactive fraction (AFP-L3) are useful tumor markers for the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Recently, a novel immunoassay using the electrochemiluminescence (ECLIA) was developed to enable measurement of low-concentration of DCP. This study investigated the usefulness of high-sensitive DCP for the early diagnosis of HCC. The subjects consisted of 90 patients with viral
cirrhosis
who could be followed for at least 24 months from 1992 to 1997. Fifty-six of these patients developed HCC and 34 patients had not by 1998. We measured the serum levels of high-sensitive DCP, AFP and %AFP-L3 every 3 months during 2 years before the detection of tumor in patients with HCC and during 2 years from 1995 to 97 in patients without HCC. Youden's index was calculated for evaluation of the ideal cut-off levels. The patterns of serial changes during 2 years were divided into two types: fluctuating type and non-fluctuating type. Cut-off levels of 40 mAU/ml for high-sensitive DCP (Youden's index = 0.435), 20 ng/ml for AFP (Youden's index = 0.442) and 10% for %AFP-L3 (Youden's index = 0.364) gave the highest index for each marker. When these markers were combined, the combination of high-sensitive DCP, AFP and %AFP-L3 gave the highest accuracy (sensitivity = 82.1%, specificity = 82.4%, accuracy = 82.2%). Fluctuating type of high-sensitive DCP, AFP and %AFP-L3 levels were found in 15 (17%), 29 (32%) and 11 (12%) patients, respectively. The rate of complication with HCC in the patients who showed the fluctuating type of high-sensitive DCP levels was significantly greater than that in the patients who showed non-fluctuating type (P<0.01). These results suggest that periodic measurement of serum DCP levels using ECLIA method is very useful for HCC screening and predicting the development of HCC.
Int J
Mol
Med 2002 Mar
PMID:Sequential fluctuation pattern of serum des-gamma-carboxy prothrombin levels detected by high-sensitive electrochemiluminescence system as an early predictive marker for hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with cirrhosis. 1183 30
Studies of animal models suggest that the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide is altered in liver disease. We studied 77 patients with liver disease and 17 controls, to investigate whether the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase is altered in lymphocytes from patients with liver disease. The basal content of guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) in lymphocytes was decreased both in patients with
liver cirrhosis
(by 52%) and in patients with chronic hepatitis (by 62%). Activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide was higher in lymphocytes from patients with
cirrhosis
(3100+/-1000% of basal) or with hepatitis (5200+/-2500% of basal) than in lymphocytes from controls (1200+/-500% of basal). cGMP in plasma was increased in patients with liver disease. Successful (but not unsuccessful) treatment with interferon of patients with hepatitis due to virus C reversed all the above alterations. Altered modulation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide in liver disease may play a role in the hemodynamic alterations found in these patients.
J
Mol
Med (Berl) 2002 Feb
PMID:Altered modulation of soluble guanylate cyclase in lymphocytes from patients with liver disease. 1190 48
Erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP), an inborn error of heme metabolism, causes in the majority of the patients only a symptom of photosensitivity. However, around 2% of the EPP sufferers develop liver complication in the form of
liver cirrhosis
and progressive liver failure. Mutations in the human ferrochelatase (FECH) gene causing EPP are highly heterogeneous and mostly family-specific. Actually, 62 FECH mutations have been published, 48 of them are "null allele" mutations inducing the formation of a truncated protein. The remaining 14 are missense mutations. In contrast to the null allele mutations, the latter lead to substitution of a single amino acid residue in the protein molecule and generate an enzyme that, although functionally impaired, is in its full length. In order to study the association between "null allele" mutation and liver complication, we combined our data with those in the literature. A total of 112 EPP patients were counted among 93 EPP families with a known FECH mutation. All 18 EPP patients who had severe liver complication carried a "null allele" mutation. In contrast, none of the 20 patients who carried a missense mutation had developed liver complication till the time of study (Fisher's exact test, p<0.05). High protoporphyrin blood concentration are considered to be a sign of an increased risk of liver disease. No correlation of protoporphyrin blood level with the type of mutation, was found, if patients with overt liver disease were excluded from the sample. Furthermore, no significant association of the liver complication with the location of the mutation within the FECH gene was found (Fisher exact test p = 0.46). These available data indicate a significant genotype-phenotype correlation between "null allele" mutation and protoporphyrin related liver disease in EPP. Although the risk for a EPP patient with a missense mutation to develop liver disease cannot be totally eliminated based on these data, it is comparably low.
Cell
Mol
Biol (Noisy-le-grand) 2002 Feb
PMID:A genotype-phenotype correlation between null-allele mutations in the ferrochelatase gene and liver complication in patients with erythropoietic protoporphyria. 1192 53
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is at the origin of severe liver diseases like chronic active hepatitis,
liver cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma. There are some groups of patients with high risk of generation of HBV mutants: infected infants, immunosuppressed individuals (including hemodialysis patients), patients treated with interferon and lamivudine for chronic HBV infection. These groups are the target for molecular investigations reviewed in this paper. The emergence of lamivudine- or other antiviral-resistant variants, rises concern regarding long term use of these drugs. Infection or immunization with one HBV subtype confers immunity to all subtypes. However, reinfection or reactivation of latent HBV infection with HBV mutants have been reported in patients undergoing transplant and those infected with HIV. Mutations of the viral genome which are not replicative incompetent can be selected in further course of infection or under prolonged antiviral treatment and might maintain the liver disease. Four open reading frames (ORF) which are called S-gene, C-gene, X-gene and P-gene were identified within the HBV genome. Mutations may affect each of the ORFs. Mutated S-genes were described to be responsible for HBV-infections in successfully vaccinated persons, mutated C-genes were found to provoke severe chronic liver diseases, mutated X-genes could cause serious medical problems in blood donors by escaping the conventional test systems and mutated P-genes were considered to be the reason for chemotherapeutic drug resistance. This paper reviews molecular, immunological and clinical aspects of the HBV mutants.
J Cell
Mol
Med
PMID:Molecular, immunological and clinical properties of mutated hepatitis B viruses. 1200 75
Juvenile hemochromatosis (JH) is a characteristic form of genetic hemochromatosis with an early onset and severe clinical course leading to death if iron depletion treatment is not timely applied. Clinical complications include
liver cirrhosis
, heart failure, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, and diabetes. In the present study we report the first case of JH described in Spain. Biochemical and genetic characteristics of the patient and relatives (parents and siblings) were investigated. No individual presented either the mutation at position 845 of the HFE gene or at position 750 of the TFR2 gene, associated with other types of hemochromatosis. Nevertheless, some individuals were homozygous for the mutation at position 187 of HFE. The hypothetic region of association with JH, located at chromosome 1q, was also investigated and results show that the patient presented a unique genotypic combination in 1q. The only brother with heavy iron deposits in hepatocytes was found to be heterozygous for the JH-associated region and homozygous for the HFE187 gene, suggesting a synergistic effect between both hemochromatosis-associated genes.
Blood Cells
Mol
Dis
PMID:Juvenile hemochromatosis in a Spanish family. 1248 7
During hepatopulmonary syndrome caused by
liver cirrhosis
, pulmonary endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) expression and NO production are increased. Increased NO contributes to the blunted hypoxic pressor response (HPR) during
cirrhosis
and may induce heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression and carbon monoxide (CO) production, exacerbating the blunted HPR. We hypothesized that NO regulates the expression of HO-1 during
cirrhosis
, contributing to hepatopulmonary syndrome.
Cirrhosis
was induced in rats by common bile duct ligation (CBDL). Rats were studied 2 and 5 wk after CBDL or sham surgery. Lung HO-1 expression was elevated 5 wk after CBDL. Liver HO-1 was increased at 2 wk and remained elevated at 5 wk. In catheterized rats, the blunted HPR was partially restored by HO inhibition. Rats treated with the NOS inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester for the entire 2- or 5-wk duration had normalized HO-1 expression and HPR. These data provide in vivo evidence for the NO-mediated upregulation of HO-1 expression and support the concept that hepatopulmonary syndrome is multifactorial, involving not only NO, but also HO-1 and CO.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell
Mol
Physiol 2002 Aug
PMID:Regulation of heme oxygenase-1 by nitric oxide during hepatopulmonary syndrome. 1211 96
Phytoestrogens are plant substances that are similar to 17-beta-estradiol and produce estrogenic effects. A protective role in the development of breast and prostate cancer has been hypothesized. Estrogen receptors and their variant forms play a significant role in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC); therefore weak estrogenic substances in the diet may play a role in its development. To investigate the role of phytoestrogens in HCC an investigation of dietary intake of these substances has been performed. Cases, patients at first diagnosis of
cirrhosis
or HCC were chosen. Questionnaire was built up using indications from previously published papers, extending the registration of details of the diet to reconstruct intake of nutrients for the last year. Interviews were always performed by the same dietician. Quantities determined with the help of photos of servings. Data were analyzed with Winfood database completed with data regarding content in phytoestrogens of food, beverages and seasonings. So far 92 cirrhotic patients and 32 HCCs have been interviewed. No significant difference was registered among the two groups regarding total caloric intake or single nutrients (lipids, carbohydrates, proteins). A significant lower intake of genistein was evidenced in patients at first diagnosis of HCC in comparison with cirrhotics; no significant difference was found in daidzein intake. Lignans intake was strictly related with wine intake; intake was significantly lower in cases only when wine was taken into account otherwise it was similar. Results can be summarized as follows: (1) there are no clear-cut differences (both qualitative or quantitative) between cirrhotics and HCC patients in the overall daily caloric intake while; (2) definite differences exist in the intake of some of the phytoestrogens (genistein, SEC, MAT); (3) differences between cases and controls in SEC and MAT are mainly attributable to lower alcohol intake in cases while; (4) significantly lower genistein intake in HCC only seems due to personal preferences of patients. In conclusion, these differences that we have evidenced in the diet in regard to estrogen-like substances may be relevant in modulating the risk of developing HCC in cirrhotic patients.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 2002 Jul 31
PMID:Phytoestrogens and liver disease. 1216 Oct 5
There is considerable evidence that reactive oxygen species (ROS) have a causative role in chronic hepatic injury and cancer development via direct and indirect mechanisms. Estrogens produce free oxygen radicals through redox cycling and affect cell proliferation, also in the liver. We are presently involved in evaluating the possible relationship between estrogens receptor expression, type of receptor, oxidative DNA damage and c-myc in chronic liver disease. The data on DNA adducts, c-myc mRNA and variant estrogen receptor in patients with HCV- or HBV-related chronic liver disease are suggesting that those positive for variant liver estrogen receptor present higher genomic oxidative damage, as reflected in 8-OHdG levels. We are also observing that patients with chronic hepatitis and
cirrhosis
, when positive for variant estrogen receptor, present higher c-myc m-RNA expression, a factor reportedly associated with increased genomic instability, augmented cytoproliferation and carcinogenesis. Our own and other author's data are shedding new light on estrogen pathophysiology, liver damage and hepatic cancer.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 2002 Jul 31
PMID:Estrogens receptors and oxidative damage in the liver. 1216 Oct 6
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