Abstract

Silver stainability of hepatocytes as an expression of nucleolar activity was studied in vivo during rat hepatocarcinogenesis. Male Wistar rats were injected with one dose of diethylnitrosamine (200 mg/kg body weight dissolved in 0.9% NaCl), followed by a selection procedure with a short exposure to 2-acetylaminofluorene in combination with a proliferative stimulus, such as the administration of CCl 4. Finally, after 1 week of a normal diet, some of the rats were treated with phenobarbital. After enzymatic isolation, the hepatocytes were silver stained; the estimation of nucleolar activity was determined by a cytomorphologic analysis of the silver-stained nuclei. It was demonstrated that during the first steps of hepatocarcinogenesis, both diethylnitrosamine, as initiator, and phenobarbital, as promotor, induce modifications of the nucleolar morphology in silver-stained hepatocytes.

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