Abstract
The effects of both mechanical trauma and regeneration on the growth of intraportally injected tumor in the rat liver were investigated using two-thirds partial hepatectomy (PH). Tumor grew at the excision scar when PH was performed less than 2 days before tumor injection (34/34 animals). However, when the PH was performed 4-7 days before injection, tumor developed within the regenerating lobe, but not at the scar (50/51). Injecting the same cell dose into rats with intact livers caused few tumors to develop in 12/30 animals. Intraportally injected 51Cr-labelled tumor cells distributed uniformly in the liver irrespective of the time after PH. Patterns of tumor take seen at different times after PH were not due to selective trapping of the injected cells. Liver extracts showed that epidermal growth factor-like activity was unaltered by PH, while heparin-binding growth factor activity peaked at 2 days post-PH, before the incidence of tumor growth in the parenchyma increased. We observed two peaks of DNA synthesis at days 1 and 4 post-PH by pulse labeling with [125I]deoxyuridine and bromodeoxyuridine. Bromodeoxyuridine immunohistochemistry showed the first peak to be confined to hepatocytes. The second peak involved non-hepatocytes and coincided with the beginning of enhanced tumor take in the regenerating lobe.
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