360 research outputs found

    Liposomal formulations of antitumor drugs. II. effect of lipid compositions on membrane interactions of europium coordination complexes

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    Currently there is a growing interest in screening of new drugs, capable of destroying cancer cells effectively, without damaging health tissues. In this context the potential of liposomes as a drug carrier system is extensively investigated [1-3]. Liposomes are nanosize particles in which lipid bilayer encloses an aqueous internal compartment. Size, charge and surface properties of liposomes can be easily changed simply by adding new ingredients to the lipid mixture before liposome preparation or by variation of preparation techniques. Another important feature is that lipid vesicles can entrap both hydrophilic and hydrophobic pharmaceutical agents. Liposome delivery systems can enhance drug solubility, reduce toxicity associated with free anticancer drugs and improve stability of the drug by protecting the compound from chemical degradation or transformation. However, the therapeutic and toxic effects of drug are strongly determined by the degree or efficiency of its loading into the liposomes. For this reason, while using liposomes as delivery systems for hydrophobic drugs, it is necessary to know the character of a drug effect on the structure and physicochemical properties of a lipid bilayer. The aim of this work was to investigate the effect of lipid composition on membrane interactions of europium coordination complexes, V3 and V4, the potential antineoplastic drugs. Liposomes were formed by egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (PC) and its mixture with cardiolipin (CL) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). The membrane-partitioning properties of the investigated drugs were evaluated using the equilibrium dialysis technique in combination with absorption spectroscopy. To gain insight into the drug influence on physical parameters and molecular organization of lipid bilayer, two fluorescent probes have been employed, viz. pyrene and 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). It was found that inclusion of anionic lipid cardiolipin and cationic detergent CTAB into PC bilayer gives rise to decrease of the drugs partition coefficients. The drug incorporation into liposomal membrane is accompanied by the alterations of pyrene spectral parameters and DPH anisotropy. The observed effects suggest that the influence of europium compounds on bilayer structural state can be modulated by CL and CTAB

    Liposomal formulations of antitumor DRUGS. I. cholesterol effect on membrane interactions of europium coordination complexes

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    Among a wide variety of drug nanocarriers developed to date, liposome-based delivery systems are particularly attractive due to their advantageous features such as biocompatibility, complete biodegradability, low toxicity, ability to carry both hydrophilic and lipophilic payloads and protect them from chemical degradation and transformation, increased therapeutic index of a drug, improved pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles compared to free drugs, reduced side effects, etc. The efficiency of drug encapsulation is largely determined by its membrane-partitioning properties as well as physicochemical characteristics of the lipid vesicles. In the present study we concentrated our efforts on the pre-formulation studies of the two synthesized Eu(III) coordination complexes, V3 and V4, the potential anticancer drugs. More specifically, our goal was twofold: i) to characterize the membrane partition properties of these complexes, and ii) to assess how the lipid-associating ability of V3 and V4 depends on membrane structural state being varied by introducing the different amounts of cholesterol (Chol) into phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipid vesicles. To achieve this goal, several fluorescent probes including pyrene, 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH), and 4-p-(dimethylaminostyryl)-1-dodecylpyridinium (DSP-12) have been employed. Partition coefficients of lanthanides determined using the equilibrium dialysis technique proved to depend on the amount of Chol content. Formation of drug-lipid complexes was found to affect pyrene excimerization and DSP-12 spectral properties but exerted no influence on pyrene vibronic structure and DPH anisotropy. Membrane composition was shown to have an impact on the spectral responses of the probes in drug-lipid systems. This finding was interpreted as arising from the sterol condensing effect on the structural state of the lipid bilayer

    Transcriptomic footprints disclose specificity of reactive oxygen species signaling in Arabidopsis

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    Reactive oxygen species ( ROS) are key players in the regulation of plant development, stress responses, and programmed cell death. Previous studies indicated that depending on the type of ROS ( hydrogen peroxide, superoxide, or singlet oxygen) or its subcellular production site ( plastidic, cytosolic, peroxisomal, or apoplastic), a different physiological, biochemical, and molecular response is provoked. We used transcriptome data generated from ROS-related microarray experiments to assess the specificity of ROS-driven transcript expression. Data sets obtained by exogenous application of oxidative stress-causing agents ( methyl viologen, Alternaria alternata toxin, 3-aminotriazole, and ozone) and from a mutant ( fluorescent) and transgenic plants, in which the activity of an individual antioxidant enzyme was perturbed ( catalase, cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase, and copper/zinc superoxide dismutase), were compared. In total, the abundance of nearly 26,000 transcripts of Arabidopsis ( Arabidopsis thaliana) was monitored in response to different ROS. Overall, 8,056, 5,312, and 3,925 transcripts showed at least a 3-, 4-, or 5- fold change in expression, respectively. In addition to marker transcripts that were specifically regulated by hydrogen peroxide, superoxide, or singlet oxygen, several transcripts were identified as general oxidative stress response markers because their steady-state levels were at least 5- fold elevated in most experiments. We also assessed the expression characteristics of all annotated transcription factors and inferred new candidate regulatory transcripts that could be responsible for orchestrating the specific transcriptomic signatures triggered by different ROS. Our analysis provides a framework that will assist future efforts to address the impact of ROS signals within environmental stress conditions and elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the oxidative stress response in plants

    An extensive microarray analysis of AAL-toxin-induced cell death in Arabidopsis thaliana brings new insights into the complexity of programmed cell death in plants

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    A T-DNA knockout of the Arabidopsis homologue of the tomato disease resistance gene Asc was obtained. The asc gene renders plants sensitive to programmed cell death (PCD) triggered by the fungal AAL toxin. To obtain more insights into the nature of AAL-toxin-induced cell death and to identify genes of potential importance for PCD, we carried out transcription profiling of AAL-toxin-induced cell death in this knockout with an oligonucleotide array representing 21,500 Arabidopsis genes. Genes responsive to reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ethylene were among the earliest to be upregulated, suggesting that an oxidative burst and production of ethylene played a role in the activation of the cell death. This notion was corroborated by induction of several genes encoding ROS-generating proteins, including a respiratory burst oxidase and germin oxalate oxidase. Cytochemical studies confirmed the oxidative burst and, in addition, showed synthesis of callose, a feature of the hypersensitive response. A diverse group of transcription factors was also induced. These events were followed by repression of most of the auxin-regulated genes known to be involved in growth and developmental responses. All photosynthesis-related genes were repressed. Blocking the synthesis of ethylene or NO significantly compromised cell death. In addition, we identified a heterogeneous group of early-induced genes, some of them never before associated with PCD. The group of early-induced genes included a number of proteases that were previously implicated in developmentally regulated types of PCD, suggesting a more principal role for these proteases in the PCD process. These findings provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms of plant PCD

    2,3-Dimethylbenzoxazolium Methosulfate

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    An economically benign solvent-free approach to synthesise 2, 3-dimethylbenzoxazolium methosulfate is reported in the present work. The title compound is derived from 2-methylbenzoxazole reacting with a slight excess of dimethylsulfate, at room temperature. The reaction proceeds via an intrinsic exothermic reaction, and the benzoxazolium salt crystallized after a short time into a white crystalline form. The product was filtered off and washed with acetone and diethyl ether to provide the desired product in 89% yield. The target compound was evaluated by ESI/MS analysis

    Cyanine dyes derived inhibition of insulin fibrillization

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    The potential of novel cyanine dyes to inhibit the insulin amyloid formation was evaluated using thioflavin T fluorescence assay, quantum-chemical calculations, molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulations. According to the ability to suppress the insulin fibrillization under physiological conditions the examined compounds were found to follow the order: trimethines > pentamethines > monomethines > heptamethines. Of these, the trimethines 3-3 and 3-5, and pentamethines 5-3 and 5-9 almost completely prevented the protein aggregation by retarding both nucleation (except 3-3) and elongation processes. The quantum-chemical calculations revealed a complex relationship between the dye structure and its inhibitory effects. The molecular docking studies showed that most cyanines bind specifically to the L17 ladder of the B chain, located at the dry steric zipper of the insulin fibril protofilament, and form the stable complexes with the helices of the insulin monomer. The molecular dynamics simulations provided evidence for the increase of insulin helicity in the presence of cyanines. Collectively, the presented findings highlight two possible mechanisms by which cyanines can inhibit the insulin fibrillization: i) stabilization of the native protein structure followed by the retardation of the protein nucleation (all dyes); and ii) blocking the lateral extension of beta-sheets via the dye-protein stacking interactions (3-3, 3-5, 5-3, 5-9). Overall, the obtained results may prove of importance for the design of small molecules capable of preventing amyloid fibril formation by insulin and other proteins. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Peer reviewe

    NOVEL FLUORESCENT NEAR-INFRARED AGENT FOR BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS

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    Squaraines represent a class of organic dyes operating in red and near-infrared regions. Due to their unique optical characteristics, such as high extinction coefficients, reduced background fluorescence and light scattering, photostability, these fluorophores attract ever-growing attention as prospective bioimaging agents. The present contribution overviews the spectral properties and some biological applications of the novel squaraine dye SQ-1. This probe was found to possess very high lipid-associating ability manifesting itself in a sharp increase of its emission. Binding of SQ-1 to the lipid bilayers containing zwitterionic and anionic lipids was found to be controlled mainly by hydrophobic interactions. Analysis of SQ-1 spectral behavior in the model membrane systems containing heme proteins revealed the dye sensitivity to the reactive oxygen species. This effect was supposed to originate from the reaction between lipid radicals and SQ-1 occuring at the squaric moiety or in its vicinity. Resonance energy transfer studies highlight the applicability of SQ-1 to structural characterization of amyloid fibrils

    Novel environmentally benign procedures for the synthesis of styryl dyes

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    A series of styrylpyridinium, styrylquinolinium and styrylbenzothiazolium dyes have been synthesized by novel environmentally benign procedures. The condensation of 4-methylpyridinium methosulphate, 2- or 4-methylquinolinium methosulphate or 2-methylbenzothiazolium methosulphate with aromatic aldehydes was performed under solvent-free conditions or microwave irradiation in the presence of different basic or acidic reagents. The chemical structures of the derived styrylcyanine dyes were confirmed by 1H NMR and UV–vis spectroscopies and elemental analysis

    Oxidative stress and antioxidative systems: recipes for successful data collection and interpretation

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    Oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species (ROS) are common to many fundamental responses of plants. Enormous and ever-growing interest has focused on this research area, leading to an extensive literature that documents the tremendous progress made in recent years. As in other areas of plant biology, advances have been greatly facilitated by developments in genomics-dependent technologies and the application of interdisciplinary techniques that generate information at multiple levels. At the same time, advances in understanding ROS are fundamentally reliant on the use of biochemical and cell biology techniques that are specific to the study of oxidative stress. It is therefore timely to revisit these approaches with the aim of providing a guide to convenient methods and assisting interested researchers in avoiding potential pitfalls. Our critical overview of currently popular methodologies includes a detailed discussion of approaches used to generate oxidative stress, measurements of ROS themselves, determination of major antioxidant metabolites, assays of antioxidative enzymes, and marker transcripts for oxidative stress. We consider the applicability of metabolomics, proteomics, and transcriptomics approaches, and discuss markers such as damage to DNA and RNA. Our discussion of current methodologies is firmly anchored to future technological developments within this popular research field
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