Linoleic Acid Specifically Stimulates the Growth of Hepatoma Cell Lines Transfected with the Target Protein of a Liver Carcinogen

[1]  S. Sorof,et al.  Preferential binding of growth inhibitory prostaglandins by the target protein of a carcinogen. , 1990, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[2]  R. Cook,et al.  A 14-kilodalton selenium-binding protein in mouse liver is fatty acid-binding protein. , 1989, The Journal of biological chemistry.

[3]  H. Raza,et al.  Specific high affinity binding of lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid by liver fatty acid binding protein. , 1989, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.

[4]  N. Bass The cellular fatty acid binding proteins: aspects of structure, regulation, and function. , 1988, International review of cytology.

[5]  P. Tsichlis,et al.  Liver fatty acid binding protein is the mitosis-associated polypeptide target of a carcinogen in rat hepatocytes. , 1987, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[6]  J. Gordon,et al.  The metabolic significance of mammalian fatty-acid-binding proteins: abundant proteins in search of a function. , 1987, Annual review of nutrition.

[7]  R. Custer,et al.  Elevated expression and cell cycle deregulation of a mitosis-associated target polypeptide of a carcinogen in hyperplastic and malignant rat hepatocytes. , 1987, Cancer research.

[8]  R. Custer,et al.  Target polypeptide of a carcinogen is associated with normal mitosis and carcinogen-induced hyperplasias in adult hepatocytes. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[9]  S. Vinores,et al.  Normal liver chromatin contains a firmly bound and larger protein related to the principal cytosolic target polypeptide of a hepatic carcinogen. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[10]  R. Hogue-Angeletti,et al.  Principal polypeptide target of carcinogen at the beginning of liver carcinogenesis by three carcinogens. , 1982, Cancer research.

[11]  J. P. Andrews,et al.  Early events during liver carcinogenesis involving two carcinogen:protein complexes. , 1981, Cancer research.

[12]  J. P. Andrews,et al.  An early event associated with liver carcinogenesis involving loss of a polypeptide that binds carcinogen. , 1980, Cancer research.

[13]  E. Farber,et al.  The sequential analysis of cancer development. , 1980, Advances in cancer research.

[14]  M. F. Laspia,et al.  Growth characteristics and enzyme activities in a survey of transformation markers in adult rat liver epithelial-like cell cultures. , 1979, Cancer research.