scholarly journals Macro- and microtranscriptomic evidence of the monocyte recruitment to regenerating liver after partial hepatectomy in mouse model

2021 ◽  
Vol 138 ◽  
pp. 111516
Author(s):  
Andrey Elchaninov ◽  
Maria Nikitina ◽  
Polina Vishnyakova ◽  
Anastasia Lokhonina ◽  
Andrey Makarov ◽  
...  
1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1043-1054 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. Myers ◽  
C. Anne Hemphill ◽  
Constance M. Townsend

Deoxycytidylate deaminase activity and net synthesis of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in vivo were found to increase at approximately the same time during the early stages of liver regeneration. However, deaminase activity in the regenerating liver remained at a high level for 1 day after DNA synthesis had slowed down again during the later stages of regeneration. The increase in deaminase activity was restricted as a result of exposure to 600 r X radiation during early regeneration, but this effect only became evident 11–16 hours after the irradiation. Irradiation on the second day after partial hepatectomy, when deaminase levels in control regenerating livers were relatively constant, failed to affect the deaminase activity immediately but did produce a 40–50% decrease in activity 11–16 hours later. Other antimitotic agents, e.g., colchicine, had little effect on deaminase activity.


1988 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.Mark Hoyle ◽  
Albert Banes ◽  
Stephen Bernard ◽  
Colin G. Thomas

1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 515-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Bryant

Lymphoid cells from mice injected 54 hours and 30 hours earlier with 3H-thymidine were washed and transfused into isogenic recipients at 29 to 30 hours after partial hepatectomy. The recipients were killed 28 to 30 hours later, and liver, intestine, Peyer's patch, spleen, and the transfused cells were examined in autoradiographs exposed 6 months. Approximately 80 per cent of the labeled transfused cells were classed as lymphocytes. The labeled DNA contained in the transfused cells was partitioned to about 14 times as many recipient liver and intestinal cells, appearing in 72 to 78 per cent of hepatocyte nuclei, in 30 to 35 per cent of liver reticuloendothelial nuclei, and in 90 to 95 per cent of intestinal crypt nuclei. The label was not comparably widespread in the lymphoid organs, but was limited to a few intensely labeled lymphocytes and a somewhat larger number of very weakly labeled cells. When heat-killed cells rather than living cells were transfused, intensely labeled lymphocytes were absent from the lymphoid organs, but the labeling of cells in the recipients was otherwise identical. The results suggest that (a) reutilized DNA is derived from dead cells, (b) reutilized DNA is mainly degraded to nucleosides and nucleotides, the usual immediate de novo DNA precursors, before reincorporation into DNA, and (c) DNA reutilization may occur in the lymphoid organs, but on a less active scale than in intestine or regenerating liver.


JCI Insight ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerie Z. Wall ◽  
Shelley Barnhart ◽  
Jenny E. Kanter ◽  
Farah Kramer ◽  
Masami Shimizu-Albergine ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 455-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rieko Nakata ◽  
Ikuyo Tsukamoto ◽  
Masamitsu Miyoshi ◽  
Shosuke Kojo

1. Thyroparathyroidectomy (TPTX) carried out at 72 h before partial hepatectomy (PH) reduced the induction of hepatic thymidylate synthetase (TS) and thymidine kinase (TK), which are rate-determining enzymes in DNA synthesis, at 24 h after PH. 2. When TPTX was carried out at 24 h before PH, TK activity at 24 h after PH was not reduced at all, yet TS activity was reduced significantly. Thus the effect of TPTX differed in time dependence between TS and TK. 3. The depression of TK activity in rats which were subjected to TPTX at 72 h before PH, was recovered by Ca2+ supplementation. This result demonstrated that the rise of TK activity in regenerating liver is regulated by plasma Ca2+. 4. Since a high dose of tri-iodothyronine (T3) was required to cause elevation of the activities of these enzymes and DNA content in 24 h-regenerating liver of TPTX rats, the relative contribution of T3 to liver regeneration may be small.


1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 855-859 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. F. Stich ◽  
M. L. Florian

The influence of serum and tissue homogenates on the mitotic rate of regenerating liver was tested. The following fractions were injected into Sprague–Dawley rats 24 hours after partial hepatectomy: (a) serum from normal 290–340 g. rats; (b) serum from rats 24 or 72 hours following partial hepatectomy; (c) liver homogenates from normal 290–340 g. rats; (d) regenerating liver homogenates (24 hours after partial hepatectomy); and, as controls, (e) brain homogenates representing non-mitotic tissues; (f) testes homogenates representing mitotically active tissues. Serum and liver from adult animals inhibit the onset of mitosis. Serum and regenerating liver from partially hepatectomized rats, as well as heterologous tissue, show no retarding effect.The results suggest the presence of an organ-specific inhibitor of mitosis in the serum and liver of adult animals.


1958 ◽  
Vol 193 (2) ◽  
pp. 439-442
Author(s):  
C. H. Liu ◽  
G. C. Ashton ◽  
V. W. Hays ◽  
D. V. Catron

In three experiments, partial hepatectomy was performed on 42 male rats weighing about 200 gm each, with excision of about 70% by weight of the liver. Then they were killed 1, 2, 4, 8 and 16 days after hepatectomy, respectively. The liver portion removed from each rat at the time of the operation was used as the corresponding control for the evaluation of change of the hepatic vitamin A content of the regenerating liver at killing. The concentration of the hepatic vitamin A decreased after partial hepatectomy. The decrease was about 30, 35 and 41%, at 1, 2 and 4 days, respectively, after the operation. Sixteen days after partial hepatectomy the average hepatic vitamin A concentration was 31% higher than the value at the time of operation. However, the value was much lower than that in the liver of the intact rat of the same age. Similar results were found when the partially hepatectomized rats were killed 21 days after operation. The vitamin A content in the kidneys of the operated rats also declined as the hepatic vitamin A decreased.


1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 317-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esther W. Yamada

The phosphorolysis of uridine and deoxyuridine by homogenates of normal and regenerating liver of rats was assayed by a modification of the method of Canellakis (J. Biol. Chem. 227, 701 (1957)). By this assay the Kmvalues for uridine and deoxyuridine were 1.035 × 10−3 M and 2.95 × 10−4 M, respectively. The activities at an arsenate concentration of 0.114 M were 87 to 95% of the activities at an equivalent phosphate concentration.Forty-eight hours after partial hepatectomy the activity of uridine phosphorylase of regenerating liver was 1.1 times that of normal liver, and the activity of deoxyuridine phosphorylase of regenerating liver was 0.75 times that of normal liver. After a single injection of 9 mg of cortisol sodium succinate ester per 100 g of body weight there was a 1.8-fold increase in the activity of uridine phosphorylase but no significant increase in the activity of deoxyuridine phosphorylase of regenerating liver. After a single injection of 9 mg of cortisol per 100 g of body weight into normal rats there was a 1.6-fold increase in the activity of uridine phosphorylase and a 1.4-fold increase in the activity of deoxyuridine phosphorylase of normal liver. Thus, the phosphorolysis of uridine and deoxyuridine increases at different rates in liver after partial hepatectomy, or after cortisol, and this finding lends support to the view of others that the activities are due to two enzymes. The effect of cortisol, whether direct or indirect, in increasing the activities of the two enzymes in normal or regenerating liver would aid in the regulation of concentrations of intermediates of nucleic acid metabolism.


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