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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycolysis is not of importance for the process of
carcinogenesis
. It is very likely, however, that certain molecular-biological and genetic changes are produced which enable the malignant cell to develop an intensive glycolysis, for instance, to form specialized glycolytic isoenzymes already during oncogenesis, and may possible become effective in the primary tumour. As soon as the capacity of the cancer cell to intensive aerobic and anaerobic glycolysis has become manifest, this process is an irreversible one. The extent of glycolysis of a malignoma is greatly dependent on the degree of its dedifferentiation and vascularization (glucose supply), although a direct correlation between growth and the amount of lactic acid formed does not seem to exist. However, a certain utilization of glucose is essential for cell proliferation (supply of basic substances). In many cases there is a correlation between the extent of glycolysis measurable under optimal conditions in vitro (glycolytic power) in a malignant tumour and its growth rate recognizable in vivo. The formation of a strong capacity for glucose degradation via the Embden-Meyerhof pathway that cannot be fully utilized by the whole tumour in vivo is first of all designed to ensure survival and proliferation of cells even at extremely low levels of glucose supply. This process can be regarded as an adaptation of cancer cells to a situation of unsufficient supply. This circumstance endows the cancer cell with an essential advantage over the normal cell which enables or even promotes its invasive and destructive growth and metastatic dissemination. In this respect they differ, for instance, from benignant neoplasms. The possibility is discussed to control
neoplastic growth
by adjusting an optimal pH difference between normal and tumour tissue by combined administration of detoxicated drugs which are converted to their toxic forms only in the tumour by means of strongly pH-dependent exogenous enzymes.
...
PMID:[Origination and importance of glycolysis for malignomas and utilization of this property in the chemotherapy of cancer (author's transl)]. 0 18
In these experiments, we tested in various in vivo assays the immune responses of inbred C3H/HeN(MTV-) (C3H-) mice during
carcinogenesis
by chronic exposure to UV irradiation. Although the UV-treated mice were unable to reject syngeneic UV-induced
tumor
transplants, they rejected H-2-incompatible
tumor
allografts and H-2-compatible skin allografts. The primary hemagglutinin response to sheep red blood cells was normal in these mice, as were the induction of a local graft-versus-host reaction with lymphoid cells from UV-irradiated donors and the induction of an inflammatory response to dimethyl sulfoxide in the footpads of UV-treated mice. An early transient depression of two reactions in UV-irradiated mice occurred: delayed hypersensitivity to dinitrochlorobenzene measured by footpad swelling and the graft-versus-host reaction in UV-irradiated recipients measured by the use of the popliteal lymph node weight gain assay. Both of these reactions returned to a normal level before the development of primary tumors. We conclude that the inability of UV-irradiated mice to reject syngeneic and autochthonous UV-induced tumors was not due to a generalized immunosuppressive effect of chronic UV irradiation.
...
PMID:In vivo immune responses of mice during carcinogenesis by ultraviolet irradiation. 2 May 14
The stages of initiation and promotion in the natural history of epidermal
carcinogenesis
have been known for many years. Recently, experimental systems other than skin have been shown to exhibit similar, if not completely analogous, stages in the natural history of
neoplasia
. In particular, the demonstration by Peraino and his associates that phenobarbital may enhance the production of hepatomas by a relatively subcarcinogenic dose of acetylaminofluorene was one of the first demonstrations of stages occurring in an extraepidermal
neoplasm
. Studies reported in this paper have demonstrated that administration of phenobarbital (0.05% in the diet) for 6 months following a single dose of diethylnitrosamine (5 to 10 mg/kg) given within 24 hours after partial hepatectomy resulted in a marked increase in the number of enzyme-altered foci in the liver as well as in the production of hepatocellular carcinomas. This was compared to animals receiving only a single dose of diethylnitrosamine following partial hepatectomy with no further treatment, in which only a relatively small number of foci were evident in the absence of phenobarbital feeding. Using three different enzyme markers, a distinct degree of phenotypic heterogeneity of the enzyme-altered foci in liver was demonstrated. These studies have shown that liver carcinogensis can be readily divided into two stages: a) initiation by a single dose of diethylnitrosamine following partial hepatectomy and b) promotion by the continuous feeding of phenobarbital. Furthermore, the immediate progeny of the initiated cells, the enzyme-altered focus, may be recognized by suitable microscopic means prior to the formation of gross lesions as required in the skin system. These initiated cell populations exhibit a degree of biochemical heterogeneity which reflects that seen in fully developed hepatic neoplasms, suggesting that promotion and progression in this system does not significantly alter the basic biochemical characteristics of the initiated cell.
...
PMID:The natural history of neoplasia. Newer insights into an old problem. 2 65
The two-stage or cocarcinogenic hypothesis of
carcinogenesis
involves an initiator (carcinogen) and a promotor (cocarcinogen) being utilized in combination to produce more tumors than either would alone. This theory was tested at the cellular level utilizing
Tumor
Promoting Agent, 12-0-tetradecanoly-phorbol-13-acetate, (promotor) in combination with submaximal and maximal doses of methylnitrosourea (initiator).
Tumor
promoting agent, which can cause some tumors itself, was found to enhance the activity of guanylate cyclase (E.C.4.6.1.2.), an enzyme that has been associated with normal and abnormal growth.
Tumor
promoting agent when utilized in combination with submaximal stimulatory doses of methylnitrosourea had an additive effect on guanylate cyclase activity, but the agent had no further additive effect on guanylate cyclase activation when methylnitrosourea was utilized in maximal stimulatory doses. These results indicate a carcinogen acting alone without a promoter can maximally activate guanylate cyclase and would suggest that at the cellular level a promotor is not absolutely necessary for the changes observed morphologically in canerous cells. The promotor, however, did enhance the enzyme's activity when a submaximal dose of the carcinogen was used indicating that promoting agents, at least biochemically, appear capable of potentially contributing to the development of a cancerous cell.
...
PMID:Biochemical evidence of cocarcinogenesis: tumor promoting agent enhances methylnitrosourea activation of rat guanylate cyclase activity. 3 62
Areas of hyperplastic livers that acquire hyperbasophilic properties at advanced stages of
carcinogenesis
apparently represent the sites of neoplastic trasnformation, and hyperstaining of cytoplasmic RNA with basic dyes also characterizes the cancer cells. Estimations of the RNA content of cell fractions from normal rat liver and solid Novikoff hepatoma provided no evidence that the intense staining of cancer cells could be explained on the basis of an increase in cytoplasmic RNA content. The possibility that cytoplasmic fractions of Novikoff hepatoma show greater affinity for basic dyes than corresponding normal fractions has been examined by means of a test-tube toluidine blue-binding assay. The results revealed that the dye-binding capacity of total cytoplasmic fractions from tumors is 75% higher than normal after Carnoy fixation which retains mostly ribosomal RNA. Assays on fresh ribosomes indicated that
tumor
ribosomes bind 71% more toluidine blue per mg of RNA than the ribosomal preparation from normal liver. This study thus demonstrates a greater affinity of
tumor
RNA for basic dyes, and a comparison of biochemical and cytophotometric analyses suggests that an increase in basophilia by a factor OF ABOUT 2 WOULD BE DUE TO A qualitative alteration in robosomal RNA molecules and/or ribosome structure in cnacer cells.
...
PMID:Biochemical estimation of the basic dye-binding capacity of RNA from rat hepatoma. 4 92
To estimate the influence of topical treatment with DMBA and induced tumors on delayed hypersensitivity, the response of spleen lymphocytes to PHA in vitro and macrophage migration inhibition with PHA were studied in DMBA-treated hairless mice. DNA synthesis and blastic transformation of cultured lymphocytes decreased after 6-12 weeks of DMBA application. Lymphocyte response to PHA gradually diminished during the experiment, as compared with control animals. Since the malignant transformation of skin tumors was not observed before 16 weeks of DMBA
carcinogenesis
, it seems that derangements in cellular immunity preceded the malignant proliferation. The increase in spleen weight and the absence of PHA-induced inhibition of macrophage migration in hairless mice with malignant tumors may also be related to the influence of the
tumor
itself on the lymphatic system of experimental animals.
...
PMID:Immunological phenomena in harmless mice during experimental carcinogenesis induced with long-term topical application of 7, 12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA). 4 67
Restriction of the total diet or the number of calories fed to rats and mice inhibits the formation of tumors in several tissues. Unless animals are fed equivalent levels of food, or attain equivalent body weights, it is difficult to assess the significance of the effect of other nutritional modifications on
carcinogenesis
. The effects of altering the levels of protein or fat are much less than those seen with dietary restriction. Feeding a protein-free diet is tolerated for a limited period and can alter the metabolism of carcinogens. It may thus affect the
tumor
incidence induced by one-shot carcinogens. Vitamins have specific effects on the activity of certain carcinogens, the fullest information being available for vitamin A, which has been shown to inhibit or enhance
carcinogenesis
, and vitamin C, which by reducing sodium nitrite, prevents nitrosation of secondary and tertiary amines occurring in acidic conditions of the stomach. Inorganic substances, such as iodine (thyroid) and copper (liver), may affect the
tumor
incidence in specific tissues. The metabolic activation of carcinogens is modified by enzyme induction and the administration of antioxidants. The relevance of these results to the induction of cancer in humans is briefly discussed.
...
PMID:Nutrition and experimental carcinogenesis: a review. 5 97
Studies of dietary effects on chemical carcinogenesis in rats have demonstrated that colon
tumor
induction is enhanced by increased dietary fat intake or dietary deficiency of vitamin A in some but not all cases. The enhancing effect of a high-fat diet is augmented by lipotrope deficiency. Induction of hepatic tumors by several different carcinogens also is enhanced in rats fed a high-fat diet marginally deficient in lipotropes. The dietary effects may be exerted through alteration of metabolism of carcinogens, which has been demonstrated in lipotrope-deficient rats, through immunological mechanisms, which influence induction of colon tumors, or through effects on gastrointestinal bacteria and bile acid metabolism. Demonstration of dietary effects on
carcinogenesis
may require utilization of combined dietary stresses that alter metabolic loads but do not seriously impair growth.
...
PMID:Dietary effects on chemical carcinogenesis in animal models for colon and liver tumors. 5 98
(1) Passive hemagglutination and radioimmunoassay are suitable methods for the detection of AFP in the low concentration range. (2) In 3.72% of the cases a clinically unknown carcinoma was found in an unselected group of patients with liver cirrhosis. (3) 21.9% of the patients showed AFP elevations up to 2000 ng/ml. In 10.6% of this group, increasing titers demonstrated a primary liver cell carcinoma. In 89.4% a transitory rise of AFP was not associated with tumor growth. Levels return to normal values within three months in 90% of the cases. (4) Transitory AFP elevations are not correlated to clinical conditions (praecoma, coma, delirium, bleeding, ascites, shunt) or to biochemical parameters (GOT, GPT, bilirubin, prothrombin complex time, gamma-globulin). (5) A temporary rise in AFP is more frequently observed in groups with high hepatoma incidence than in groups with low hepatoma incidence. (6) Therefore, it may be suggested that a transitory rise of AFP could reflect a "primary reaction" of
carcinogenesis
. (7) Primary liver cell carcinoma is found to be more frequent in posthepatitic than in postalcoholic, cryptogenic, and other cirrhosis and to be more frequent in australia-antigen positive than in australia-antigen negative cases. (8) Routine serological
tumor
antigen screening of patients with a precancerous disease is useful.
...
PMID:Early detection of hepatoma: prospective study in liver cirrhosis using passive hemagglutination and the radioimmunoassay. 5 21
In studies in this and other laboratories, induction of hepatocardinoma by several different chemical carcinogens was enhanced in rats fed diets deficient in lipotropes (choline, methionine, folic acid), amino acids, and niacin, and high in fat. In some cases, specific supplementation with lipotropes blocked
carcinogenesis
. In studies reported here, specific supplementation of a marginally deficient diet that enhanced
carcinogenesis
in rats, with the amino acids or lipotropes in which it was deficient, significantly decreased induction of hepatocarcinoma by N-nitrosodiethylamine. Niacin supplementation decreased hepatocarcinoma incidence only slight; the addition of beef fat to an adequate diet did not enhance
tumor
induction. Rats fed the amino acid- or lipotrope-supplemented diets had an increased incidence of hepatic hemangioendothelial sarcomas, compared to deficient rats or to rats fed the adequate control diet. Methionine was contained in both the amino acid and the lipotrope supplement and probably was responsible for reducing hepatocarcinoma incidence. Methionine has been found to have an anticarcinogenic effect in other studies and also to block the depletion of hepatic folate stores that is induced by N-nitrosodiethylamine. Interactions between carcinogens, S-adenosylmethionine, and folate may be significant in hepatic or other tissue
carcinogenesis
. One of more hepatic microsomal oxidases were depressed in rats fed any of the high-fat diets but were not correlated with
tumor
incidence.
...
PMID:Reduction of N-nitrosodiethylamine carcinogenesis in rats by lipotrope or amino acid supplementation of a marginally deficient diet. 6 28
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