scholarly journals Regulation of rat liver maturation in vitro by glucocorticoids.

1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 203-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Y Chou ◽  
Y J Wan ◽  
T Sakiyama

The biochemistry of liver maturation was studied by using the RLA209-15 fetal rat hepatocyte line that is temperature sensitive for maintenance of the differentiated fetal liver phenotype. At 33 degrees C these cells were dedifferentiated; but at 40 degrees C they were phenotypically differentiated and, like normal fetal hepatocytes, synthesized moderate levels of albumin and transferrin, high levels of authentic (69,000 and 73,000 molecular weight) rat fetal alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), and low levels of a 65,000-molecular-weight variant AFP. Our results indicated that administration of glucocorticoid hormones to RLA209-15 cells at 40 degrees C induced a series of events associated with normal hepatocyte maturation; synthesis of fetal AFP was inhibited, whereas the synthesis of variant AFP, albumin, transferrin, tyrosine aminotransferase, and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein was induced. The variant AFP was produced by RLA209-15 cells at both temperatures and was encoded by an mRNA of 1.7 kilobases (kb). The fetal AFP was encoded by an mRNA of 2.2 kb. Normal adult rat liver contained three AFP mRNAs of 2.2 (minor), 1.7, and 1.5 kb. The 1.7-kb adult liver AFP mRNA comigrated with the RNA found in RLA209-15 cells, and both directed the synthesis of a 50,000-molecular-weight precursor polypeptide of the variant AFP. Administration of glucocorticoids to RLA209-15 cells grown at 33 degrees C stimulated synthesis of both the fetal and variant AFPs, but the levels of the 2.2-kb AFP mRNA were preferentially increased. RLA209-15 cells contained two glucocorticoid receptor mRNAs of 6.8 and 4.5 kb. The glucocorticoid-mediated maturation described above was blocked by the antiglucocorticoid RU486.

1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 203-209
Author(s):  
J Y Chou ◽  
Y J Wan ◽  
T Sakiyama

The biochemistry of liver maturation was studied by using the RLA209-15 fetal rat hepatocyte line that is temperature sensitive for maintenance of the differentiated fetal liver phenotype. At 33 degrees C these cells were dedifferentiated; but at 40 degrees C they were phenotypically differentiated and, like normal fetal hepatocytes, synthesized moderate levels of albumin and transferrin, high levels of authentic (69,000 and 73,000 molecular weight) rat fetal alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), and low levels of a 65,000-molecular-weight variant AFP. Our results indicated that administration of glucocorticoid hormones to RLA209-15 cells at 40 degrees C induced a series of events associated with normal hepatocyte maturation; synthesis of fetal AFP was inhibited, whereas the synthesis of variant AFP, albumin, transferrin, tyrosine aminotransferase, and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein was induced. The variant AFP was produced by RLA209-15 cells at both temperatures and was encoded by an mRNA of 1.7 kilobases (kb). The fetal AFP was encoded by an mRNA of 2.2 kb. Normal adult rat liver contained three AFP mRNAs of 2.2 (minor), 1.7, and 1.5 kb. The 1.7-kb adult liver AFP mRNA comigrated with the RNA found in RLA209-15 cells, and both directed the synthesis of a 50,000-molecular-weight precursor polypeptide of the variant AFP. Administration of glucocorticoids to RLA209-15 cells grown at 33 degrees C stimulated synthesis of both the fetal and variant AFPs, but the levels of the 2.2-kb AFP mRNA were preferentially increased. RLA209-15 cells contained two glucocorticoid receptor mRNAs of 6.8 and 4.5 kb. The glucocorticoid-mediated maturation described above was blocked by the antiglucocorticoid RU486.


Author(s):  
F. G. Zaki

Fetal and neonatal liver injury induced by agents circulating in maternal plasma, even though well recognized, its morphological manifestations are not yet established. As part of our studies of fetal and neonatal liver injury induced by maternal nutritional disorders, metabolic impairment and toxic agents, the effects of two anti-inflammatory steroids have been recently inves tigated.Triamcinolone and methyl prednisolone were injected each in a group of rats during pregnancy at a-dosage level of 2 mgm three times a week. Fetal liver was studied at 18 days of gestation. Litter size and weight markedly decreased than those of control rats. Stillbirths and resorption were of higher incidence in the triamcinolone group than in those given the prednisolone.


1972 ◽  
Vol 126 (2) ◽  
pp. 347-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A.-B. Badawy

1. Salicylate, in concentrations of 0.25mm and above, enhances the basal activity of tyrosine–2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase in homogenates of rat liver incubated in the absence of added pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (endogenous activity). The effect is decreased by increasing the concentration of the cofactor. 2. The intraperitoneal administration of sodium salicylate enhances the activity of rat liver tyrosine aminotransferase; the major effect during the first hour being on the enzyme in the absence of added pyridoxal phosphate. Actinomycin D prevents the induction of the enzyme by cortisol and tryptophan. Induction by pyridoxine or salicylate is 50% inhibited by actinomycin D. The effects of the injections of various combinations of cortisol, pyridoxine and salicylate were also studied in the absence or presence of actinomycin D. 3. It is suggested that salicylate induces rat liver tyrosine aminotransferase by displacing its protein-bound cofactor and that a cofactor-type induction of the hepatic enzyme occurs in pyridoxine-treated rats.


Blood ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 675-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Pulford ◽  
N Lecointe ◽  
K Leroy-Viard ◽  
M Jones ◽  
D Mathieu-Mahul ◽  
...  

Rearrangement of the tal-1 gene (also known as SCL or TCL-5) occurs in at least 25% of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs) and results in the aberrant expression of tal-1 mRNA in the neoplastic cells. Also, tal-1 mRNA is constitutively expressed in erythroid precursors and megakaryocytes. This report describes a direct immunocytochemical study of the distribution and localization of TAL-1 protein in normal human tissues and cell lines using four monoclonal antibodies raised against recombinant TAL-1 proteins. One of these reagents recognizes a protein of 41 kD molecular weight in in vitro- translated TAL-1 proteins, two others recognize proteins of 39 and 41 kD molecular weight, and the fourth antibody also recognizes a TAL-1 protein of 22 kD in addition to the 39- and 41-kD proteins. These anti- TAL-1 antibodies label the nuclei of erythroid precursor cells and megakaryocytes in fetal liver and adult bone marrow. The punctate pattern of nuclear labeling suggests that TAL-1 may comprise part of a novel nuclear structure, similar to that recently found for the PML protein. The nuclei of T cell lines known to express mRNA encoding the full-length TAL-1 protein (eg, CCRF-CEM, RPMI 8402, and Jurkat) are also labeled. A study of normal human tissues (including thymus) showed labeling of smooth muscle, some tissue macrophages, and endothelial cells. TAL-1 protein is undetectable in other cell types. These reagents may play an important role in the diagnosis of T-ALL and could also be used in the context of lymphoma diagnosis on routinely fixed material.


1971 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. K. Shires ◽  
L. Narurkar ◽  
H. C. Pitot

1. Pancreatic ribonuclease in dilute EDTA has been shown to condition rough-microsomal membranes from adult rat liver to accept exogenously added rat liver polyribosomes in vitro at 0–4°C. Treated smooth membranes would not significantly interact with polyribosomes. 2. The conditioning process decreased the membrane RNA content and removed polyribosomes from vesicle surfaces as viewed electron-microscopically. 3. Binding to these conditioned membranes was shown to be uninfluenced by changes of temperature (0–37°C) and pH (6.9–7.8) or the presence of cell sap, but was inhibited by increasing the concentration of potassium chloride. 4. Possession of a polyribosome-binding capacity by conditioned rough membranes was not dependent on adventitious materials that could be dislodged by high ionic strengths. 5. Trypsin treatment under mild conditions destroyed the binding capacity of ribonuclease-conditioned rough membranes. 6. A 2–10S residual RNA was recovered from ribonuclease-conditioned membranes, but its partial removal had no effect on the capacity of membranes to accept polyribosomes. However, some role for this residual RNA in attaching polyribosomes could not be discounted. 7. Evidence is considered that polyribosome-binding sites are intrinsic features of conditioned membranes isolated from rough-microsomal fractions, and that long-range ionic bonding is a primary factor in polyribosome interaction with these binding sites.


1983 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Weber ◽  
Govindranathsing Khittoo ◽  
A. Rashid Bhatti

Advenovirus type 2 core proteins were studied with the aid of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants affecting them. Cores prepared from wild-type virions with pyridine contained the structural proteins IVa2, V, VII, and X. Cores from the H2ts3 mutant contained an altered polypeptide V (50 K) of higher molecular weight and additional peptides. Ts1 virions produced at the restrictive temperature contained precores with proteins IVa2, V, pre-VI, pre-VII, and 11 K. This precore could be matured to a wild-type-like core by the adenovirus endoprotease. Of these core proteins only V, pre-VI, pre-VII, VII, and 11 K could be shown to reassociate in vitro with double-stranded heterologous DNA. Proteins IVa2 and X may bind to these core proteins rather than to the DNA directly.


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