thioacetamide has been researched along with Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-1* in 4 studies
4 other study(ies) available for thioacetamide and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-1
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Microarray analysis of thioacetamide-treated type 1 diabetic rats.
It is well known that diabetes imparts high sensitivity to numerous hepatotoxicants. Previously, we have shown that a normally non-lethal dose of thioacetamide (TA, 300 mg/kg) causes 90% mortality in type 1 diabetic (DB) rats due to inhibited tissue repair allowing progression of liver injury. On the other hand, DB rats exposed to 30 mg TA/kg exhibit delayed tissue repair and delayed recovery from injury. The objective of this study was to investigate the mechanism of impaired tissue repair and progression of liver injury in TA-treated DB rats by using cDNA microarray. Gene expression pattern was examined at 0, 6, and 12 h after TA challenge, and selected mechanistic leads from microarray experiments were confirmed by real-time RT-PCR and further investigated at protein level over the time course of 0 to 36 h after TA treatment. Diabetic condition itself increased gene expression of proteases and decreased gene expression of protease inhibitors. Administration of 300 mg TA/kg to DB rats further elevated gene expression of proteases and suppressed gene expression of protease inhibitors, explaining progression of liver injury in DB rats after TA treatment. Inhibited expression of genes involved in cell division cycle (cyclin D1, IGFBP-1, ras, E2F) was observed after exposure of DB rats to 300 mg TA/kg, explaining inhibited tissue repair in these rats. On the other hand, DB rats receiving 30 mg TA/kg exhibit delayed expression of genes involved in cell division cycle, explaining delayed tissue repair in these rats. In conclusion, impaired cyclin D1 signaling along with increased proteases and decreased protease inhibitors may explain impaired tissue repair that leads to progression of liver injury initiated by TA in DB rats. Topics: Animals; Blotting, Western; Cyclin D1; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1; DNA, Complementary; Expressed Sequence Tags; Gene Library; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Male; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA; Thioacetamide | 2006 |
Prior administration of a low dose of thioacetamide protects type 1 diabetic rats from subsequent administration of lethal dose of thioacetamide.
Previously, we reported that an ordinarily non-lethal dose of thioacetamide (TA, 300 mg/kg) causes 90% mortality in type 1 diabetic rats due to inhibited liver tissue repair, whereas 30 mg TA/kg allows 100% survival due to stimulated although delayed tissue repair. Objective of this investigation was to test whether prior administration of a low dose of TA (30 mg/kg) would lead to sustainable stimulation of liver tissue repair in type 1 diabetic rats sufficient to protect from a subsequently administered lethal dose of TA. Therefore, in the present study, the hypothesis that preplacement of tissue repair by a low dose of TA (30 mg TA/kg, ip) can reverse the hepatotoxicant sensitivity (autoprotection) in type 1 diabetic rats was tested. Preliminary studies revealed that a single intraperitoneal (ip) administration of TA causes 90% mortality in diabetic rats with as low as 75 mg/kg. To establish an autoprotection model in diabetic condition, diabetic rats were treated with 30 mg TA/kg (priming dose). Administration of priming dose stimulated tissue repair that peaked at 72h, at which time these rats were treated with a single ip dose of 75 mg TA/kg. Our results show that tissue repair stimulated by the priming dose enabled diabetic rats to overexpress, calpastatin, endogenous inhibitor of calpain, to inhibit calpain-mediated progression of liver injury induced by the subsequent administration of lethal dose, resulting in 100% survival. Further investigation revealed that protection observed in these rats is not due to decreased bioactivation. These studies underscore the importance of stimulation of tissue repair in the final outcome of liver injury (survival/death) after hepatotoxicant challenge. Furthermore, these results also suggest that it is possible to stimulate tissue repair in diabetics to overcome the enhanced sensitivity of hepatotoxicants. Topics: Animals; Carcinogens; Cell Nucleus; Cytochrome P-450 CYP2E1; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1; DNA; DNA Replication; Immunohistochemistry; Liver; Liver Function Tests; Male; Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Thioacetamide; Thymidine | 2006 |
Disrupted G1 to S phase clearance via cyclin signaling impairs liver tissue repair in thioacetamide-treated type 1 diabetic rats.
Previously we reported that a nonlethal dose of thioacetamide (TA, 300 mg/kg) causes 90% mortality in type 1 diabetic (DB) rats because of irreversible acute liver injury owing to inhibited hepatic tissue repair, primarily due to blockage of G(0) to S phase progression of cell division cycle. On the other hand, DB rats receiving 30 mg TA/kg exhibited equal initial liver injury and delayed tissue repair compared to nondiabetic (NDB) rats receiving 300 mg TA/kg, resulting in a delay in recovery from liver injury and survival. The objective of the present study was to test the hypothesis that impaired cyclin-regulated progression of G(1) to S phase of the cell cycle may explain inhibited liver tissue repair, hepatic failure, and death, contrasted with delayed liver tissue repair but survival observed in the DB rats receiving 300 in contrast to 30 mg TA/kg. In the TA-treated NDB rats sustained MAPKs and cyclin expression resulted in higher phosphorylation of retinoblastoma (pRb), explaining prompt tissue repair and survival. In contrast, DB rats receiving the same dose of TA (300 mg/kg) exhibited suppressed MAPKs and cyclin expression that led to inhibition of pRb, inhibited tissue repair, and death. On the other hand, DB rats receiving 30 mg TA/kg exhibited delayed up regulation of MAPK signaling that delayed the expression of CD1 and pRb, explaining delayed stimulation of tissue repair observed in this group. In conclusion, the hepatotoxicant TA has a dose-dependent adverse effect on cyclin-regulated pRb signaling: the lower dose causes a recoverable delay, whereas the higher dose inhibits it with corresponding effect on the ultimate outcomes on hepatic tissue repair; this dose-dependent adverse effect is substantially shifted to the left of the dose response curve in diabetes. Topics: Alanine Transaminase; Animals; Cell Cycle Proteins; Cyclin D1; Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21; Cyclin-Dependent Kinases; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1; ErbB Receptors; G1 Phase; Genes, p16; Liver; Male; MAP Kinase Signaling System; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Retinoblastoma Protein; S Phase; Signal Transduction; Streptozocin; Thioacetamide | 2005 |
The role of NF-kappaB signaling in impaired liver tissue repair in thioacetamide-treated type 1 diabetic rats.
Previously we reported that an ordinarily nonlethal dose of thioacetamide (300 mg/kg) causes liver failure and 90% mortality in type 1 diabetic rats, primarily because of inhibited tissue repair. On the other hand, the diabetic rats receiving 30 mg thioacetamide/kg exhibited equal initial liver injury and delayed tissue repair compared to nondiabetic rats receiving 300 mg thioacetamide/kg, resulting in a delay in recovery from that liver injury and survival. These data indicate that impaired tissue repair in diabetes is a dose-dependent function of diabetes. The objective of the present study was to test the hypothesis that disrupted nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB)-regulated cyclin D1 signaling may explain dose-dependent impaired tissue repair in the thioacetamide-treated diabetic rats. Administration of 300 mg thioacetamide/kg to nondiabetic rats led to sustained NF-kappaB-regulated cyclin D1 signaling, explaining prompt compensatory tissue repair and survival. For the first time, we report that NF-kappaB-DNA binding is dependent on the dose of thioacetamide in the liver tissue of the diabetic rats. Administration of 300 mg thioacetamide/kg to diabetic rats inhibited NF-kappaB-regulated cyclin D1 signaling, explaining inhibited tissue repair, liver failure and death, whereas remarkably higher NF-kappaB-DNA binding but transient down regulation of cyclin D1 expression explains delayed tissue repair in the diabetic rats receiving 30 mg thioacetamide/kg. These data suggest that dose-dependent NF-kappaB-regulated cyclin D1 signaling explains inhibited versus delayed tissue repair observed in the diabetic rats receiving 300 and 30 mg thioacetamide/kg, respectively. Topics: Alanine Transaminase; Analysis of Variance; Animals; Cyclin D1; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1; Disease Models, Animal; DNA; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; I-kappa B Kinase; I-kappa B Proteins; Liver; Liver Regeneration; Male; MAP Kinase Signaling System; Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; NF-kappa B; NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha; Phosphorylation; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Signal Transduction; Streptozocin; Thioacetamide; Time Factors; Transcription Factor RelA; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha | 2005 |