Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice

Thesis (BTech (Biomedical Technology))--Cape Technikon, 1992. === The steady state in a tumour rapidly changes with its growth and the subsequent deteriorating blood and nutrient supply. This adaptation in the steady state of the tumour is shown in the increased lactate dehydrogenase and acid phos...

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Main Author: De Villiers, Neil Heinrich
Language:en
Published: Cape Technikon 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2244
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-cput-oai-localhost-20.500.11838-22442018-05-28T05:09:51Z Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice De Villiers, Neil Heinrich Tumors in animals Animal experimentation Tumors -- Experiments Tumors -- Growth Medical technology Thesis (BTech (Biomedical Technology))--Cape Technikon, 1992. The steady state in a tumour rapidly changes with its growth and the subsequent deteriorating blood and nutrient supply. This adaptation in the steady state of the tumour is shown in the increased lactate dehydrogenase and acid phosphatase activity in the tumour during it's growth. These alterations in the tumour metabolism places an increased burden on the body to supply nutrient and to discard the waste products of the tumour. This is demonstrated at the macroscopic level by the decreasing body weight and food intake when the tumour burden increases, and also at the metabolic levels by the responses of certain glycolytic and Cori cycle enzymes. Furthermore three distinct stages were observed in the Cori cycle response to the influence of the tumour namely, a silent or preclinical stage, a hypermetabolic stage and a hypo metabolic stage. Although the decreasing body weight cannot be directly linked to the process of gluconeogenesis, the onset of anorexia appeared to coincide with the end of the hypermetabolic stage and the beginning of the hypometabolic stage in gluconeogenesis. This clearly shows that the body's steady state is adversely affected by the presence of the tumour and that the conditions at the metabolic level seem to cause the anorexia. Furthermore, it is well known that the success of cancer therapies depends entirely on the effectiveness ofthe modality to kill the tumour cell and on the ability' of the host to absorb the damage caused by the modality without being destroyed in the process itself. The second part of this study demonstrates the radioprotective effects of ATP at all levels. It is clear from this work that ATP had a bigger influence in protecting the normal tissue than it had on the tumour tissue. This was demonstrated by the response of acid phosphatase (AP) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PDH) in the tumour and testis. Furthermore, it would seem that ATP has a multifactorial interaction with the cell, two possible mechanisms of protection are indicated by these results. The first of these interactions is through the receptors of the cell to stimulate enhanced glycolysis, for higher energy production and thus repair. The second possibility is the interaction of ATP with the receptor of the cell to inhibit the production of free radicals and thus damage, as demonstrated by the response of G-6-PDH and AP. 2016-06-13T07:51:01Z 2016-09-15T09:28:39Z 2016-06-13T07:51:01Z 2016-09-15T09:28:39Z 1992 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2244 en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/za/ Cape Technikon
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Tumors in animals
Animal experimentation
Tumors -- Experiments
Tumors -- Growth
Medical technology
spellingShingle Tumors in animals
Animal experimentation
Tumors -- Experiments
Tumors -- Growth
Medical technology
De Villiers, Neil Heinrich
Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
description Thesis (BTech (Biomedical Technology))--Cape Technikon, 1992. === The steady state in a tumour rapidly changes with its growth and the subsequent deteriorating blood and nutrient supply. This adaptation in the steady state of the tumour is shown in the increased lactate dehydrogenase and acid phosphatase activity in the tumour during it's growth. These alterations in the tumour metabolism places an increased burden on the body to supply nutrient and to discard the waste products of the tumour. This is demonstrated at the macroscopic level by the decreasing body weight and food intake when the tumour burden increases, and also at the metabolic levels by the responses of certain glycolytic and Cori cycle enzymes. Furthermore three distinct stages were observed in the Cori cycle response to the influence of the tumour namely, a silent or preclinical stage, a hypermetabolic stage and a hypo metabolic stage. Although the decreasing body weight cannot be directly linked to the process of gluconeogenesis, the onset of anorexia appeared to coincide with the end of the hypermetabolic stage and the beginning of the hypometabolic stage in gluconeogenesis. This clearly shows that the body's steady state is adversely affected by the presence of the tumour and that the conditions at the metabolic level seem to cause the anorexia. Furthermore, it is well known that the success of cancer therapies depends entirely on the effectiveness ofthe modality to kill the tumour cell and on the ability' of the host to absorb the damage caused by the modality without being destroyed in the process itself. The second part of this study demonstrates the radioprotective effects of ATP at all levels. It is clear from this work that ATP had a bigger influence in protecting the normal tissue than it had on the tumour tissue. This was demonstrated by the response of acid phosphatase (AP) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PDH) in the tumour and testis. Furthermore, it would seem that ATP has a multifactorial interaction with the cell, two possible mechanisms of protection are indicated by these results. The first of these interactions is through the receptors of the cell to stimulate enhanced glycolysis, for higher energy production and thus repair. The second possibility is the interaction of ATP with the receptor of the cell to inhibit the production of free radicals and thus damage, as demonstrated by the response of G-6-PDH and AP.
author De Villiers, Neil Heinrich
author_facet De Villiers, Neil Heinrich
author_sort De Villiers, Neil Heinrich
title Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
title_short Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
title_full Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
title_fullStr Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
title_full_unstemmed Tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in BALB/c and CBA mice
title_sort tumour metabolism and radioprotection of normal tissue in balb/c and cba mice
publisher Cape Technikon
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2244
work_keys_str_mv AT devilliersneilheinrich tumourmetabolismandradioprotectionofnormaltissueinbalbcandcbamice
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