Importance of and Approaches to Quantification of Hepatocyte Apoptosis
Open Access
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Toxicologic Pathology
- Vol. 24 (1) , 24-35
- https://doi.org/10.1177/019262339602400105
Abstract
Abnormal regulation of the life cycle of cells is a key feature of neoplasia. The net increase and growth of initiated cells, preneoplastic lesions, and tumors is highly dependent on rates of both cell proliferation and cell death. Studies of mechanisms involved in regulation of cell death and the development of methods to detect dying and dead cells thus appear to be as important as measurements of cell proliferation in understanding the growth of both normal, preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions. This article describes apoptosis in the mouse liver and its potential role in liver carcinogenesis. Quantitation of hepatocyte apoptosis is a emerging and evolving research area that will require evaluations as thoroughly as those performed with cell proliferation in order to understand all the variables that might influence its occurrence, measurement, and interpretations. Utilizing available data, various methodologies for identifying hepatocyte apoptosis are presented and compared, Aspects important for the quantitation of apoptosis in liver are emphasized. Accurate quantitation of apoptosis, in conjunction with proliferation measurements, is critical for investigations of the mechanisms of chemically induced carcinogenesis and the development of assays for growth alterations and can be applied to biologically based cancer models.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Review : Apoptosis: regulation and relevance to toxicologyHuman & Experimental Toxicology, 1995
- TheBCL-2gene familySeminars in Cancer Biology, 1995
- Survival factors, intracellular signal transduction, and the activation of endonucleases in apoptosisSeminars in Cancer Biology, 1995
- Induction of apoptosis by tumor suppressor genes and oncogenesSeminars in Cancer Biology, 1995
- Cell death in health and disease: the biology and regulation of apoptosisSeminars in Cancer Biology, 1995
- In situ end‐labelling detects DNA strand breaks in apoptosis and other physiological and pathological statesThe Journal of Pathology, 1993
- Features of apoptotic cells measured by flow cytometryCytometry, 1992
- Determination of the length of the histological stages of apoptosis in normal liver and in altered hepatic foci of ratsCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1990
- Hepatic processing of transforming growth factor beta in the rat. Uptake, metabolism, and biliary excretion.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1987
- Quantitative histological and histochemical studies on the occurrence and stages of controlled cell death (apoptosis) during regression of rat liver hyperplasiaVirchows Archiv B Cell Pathology Including Molecular Pathology, 1986