115 research outputs found

    New cellular tools reveal complex epithelial–mesenchymal interactions in hepatocarcinogenesis

    Get PDF
    To enable detailed analyses of cell interactions in tumour development, new epithelial and mesenchymal cell lines were established from human hepatocellular carcinoma by spontaneous outgrowth in culture. We obtained several hepatocarcinoma (HCC)-, B-lymphoblastoid (BLC)-, and myofibroblastoid (MF)-lines from seven cases. In-depth characterisation included cell kinetics, genotype, tumourigenicity, expression of cell-type specific markers, and proteome patterns. Many functions of the cells of origin were found to be preserved. We studied the impact of the mesenchymal lines on hepatocarcinogenesis by in vitro assays. BLC- and MF-supernatants strongly increased the DNA replication of premalignant hepatocytes. The stimulation by MF-lines was mainly attributed to HGF secretion. In HCC-cells, MF-supernatant had only minor effects on cell growth but enhanced migration. MF-lines also stimulated neoangiogenesis through vEGF release. BLC-supernatant dramatically induced death of HCC-cells, which could be largely abrogated by preincubating the supernatant with TNFβ-antiserum. Thus, the new cell lines reveal stage-specific stimulatory and inhibitory interactions between mesenchymal and epithelial tumour cells. In conclusion, the new cell lines provide unique tools to analyse essential components of the complex interplay between the microenvironment and the developing liver cancer, and to identify factors affecting proliferation, migration and death of tumour cells, neoangiogenesis, and outgrowth of additional malignancy

    Influence of Exogenous Calcium on Calciphylaxis and Calcergy.

    No full text

    Rare Earth Metals and Soft-Tissue Calcification

    No full text

    Experimental Production of an Anaphylactoid Purpura.

    No full text

    STUDIES ON THE MECHANISM OF EXPERIMENTAL SOFT-TISSUE CALCIFICATION

    Full text link
    Sodium phosphate increases, while calcium acetate inhibits, the calcium precipitation normally induced by calcergy in the rat. Presumably, phosphates play the leading role in the production of this type of calcification. </jats:p
    corecore