XB-ART-29246
Dev Biol
1985 Apr 01;1082:332-40.
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Estrogen-dependent DNA synthesis and parenchymal cell proliferation in the liver of adult male Xenopus frogs.
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Estradiol-17 beta treatment of adult male Xenopus laevis induces liver parenchymal cells to synthesize DNA and proliferate. DNA synthesis begins 3 to 4 days after estrogen treatment and continues for approximately 10 days. Over this 2-week period, the total number of liver parenchymal cells increases fourfold, the wet weight of the liver remains constant, and there is a 50% reduction in cell volume. The elevated number of cells persists for several months and then returns to the control value. The extent of proliferation is hormone dose dependent. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrate that as a result of hormone treatment a minority of the parenchymal cells in the initial population enter the cell cycle, and via repeated divisions become the majority (79%) of the population by Day 14. The implications of this phenomenon for estrogen-induced liver cell differentiation and vitellogenin gene function are discussed.
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