Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Purinergic Signal ; 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38038801

ABSTRACT

Purinergic signaling has been associated with immune defenses against pathogens such as bacteria, protozoa, fungi, and viruses, acting as a sentinel system that signals to the cells when a threat is present. This review focuses on the roles of purinergic signaling and its therapeutic potential for viral infections. In this context, the purinergic system may play potent antiviral roles by boosting interferon signaling. In other cases, though, it can contribute to a hyperinflammatory response and disease severity, resulting in poor outcomes, such as during flu and potentially COVID-19. Lastly, a third situation may occur since viruses are obligatory intracellular parasites that hijack the host cell machinery for their infection and replication. Viruses such as HIV-1 use the purinergic system to favor their infection and persistence within the host cell. Therefore, understanding the particular nuances of purinergic signaling in each viral infection may contribute to designing proper therapeutic strategies to treat viral diseases.

2.
Mol Oncol, v. 13, n.2, p. 290-306, dez. 2019
Article in English | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: bud-2670

ABSTRACT

In malignant transformation, cellular stress-response pathways are dynami-cally mobilized to counterbalance oncogenic activity, keeping cancer cellsviable. Therapeutic disruption of this vulnerable homeostasis might changethe outcome of many human cancers, particularly those for which no effec-tive therapy is available. Here, we report the use of fibroblast growth factor2 (FGF2) to demonstrate that further mitogenic activation disrupts cellularhomeostasis and strongly sensitizes cancer cells to stress-targeted therapeu-tic inhibitors. We show that FGF2 enhanced replication and proteotoxicstresses in a K-Ras-driven murine cancer cell model, and combinations ofFGF2 and proteasome or DNA damage response-checkpoint inhibitorstriggered cell death. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated K-Ras depletion suppressedthe malignant phenotype and prevented these synergic toxicities in thesemurine cells. Moreover, in a panel of human Ewing’s sarcoma family tumorcells, sublethal concentrations of bortezomib (proteasome inhibitor) or VE-821 (ATR inhibitor) induced cell death when combined with FGF2. Sus-tained MAPK-ERK1/2 overactivation induced by FGF2 appears to under-lie these synthetic lethalities, as late pharmacological inhibition of thispathway restored cell homeostasis and prevented these described synergies.Our results highlight how mitotic signaling pathways which are frequentlyoverridden in malignant transformation might be exploited to disrupt therobustness of cancer cells, ultimately sensitizing them to stress-targeted ther-apies. This approach provides a new therapeutic rationale for human can-cers, with important implications for tumors still lacking effectivetreatment, and for those that frequently relapse after treatment with avail-able therapies.

3.
Mol Oncol ; 13(2): p. 290-306, 2019.
Article in English | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: but-ib15829

ABSTRACT

In malignant transformation, cellular stress-response pathways are dynami-cally mobilized to counterbalance oncogenic activity, keeping cancer cellsviable. Therapeutic disruption of this vulnerable homeostasis might changethe outcome of many human cancers, particularly those for which no effec-tive therapy is available. Here, we report the use of fibroblast growth factor2 (FGF2) to demonstrate that further mitogenic activation disrupts cellularhomeostasis and strongly sensitizes cancer cells to stress-targeted therapeu-tic inhibitors. We show that FGF2 enhanced replication and proteotoxicstresses in a K-Ras-driven murine cancer cell model, and combinations ofFGF2 and proteasome or DNA damage response-checkpoint inhibitorstriggered cell death. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated K-Ras depletion suppressedthe malignant phenotype and prevented these synergic toxicities in thesemurine cells. Moreover, in a panel of human Ewing’s sarcoma family tumorcells, sublethal concentrations of bortezomib (proteasome inhibitor) or VE-821 (ATR inhibitor) induced cell death when combined with FGF2. Sus-tained MAPK-ERK1/2 overactivation induced by FGF2 appears to under-lie these synthetic lethalities, as late pharmacological inhibition of thispathway restored cell homeostasis and prevented these described synergies.Our results highlight how mitotic signaling pathways which are frequentlyoverridden in malignant transformation might be exploited to disrupt therobustness of cancer cells, ultimately sensitizing them to stress-targeted ther-apies. This approach provides a new therapeutic rationale for human can-cers, with important implications for tumors still lacking effectivetreatment, and for those that frequently relapse after treatment with avail-able therapies.

4.
J. Biol. Chem. ; 292(34): 14176-14187, 2017.
Article in English | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: but-ib15054

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial oxidation of nutrients is tightly regulated in response to the cellular environment and changes in energy demands. In vitro studies evaluating the mitochondrial capacity of oxidizing different substrates are important for understanding metabolic shifts in physiological adaptations and pathological conditions, but may be influenced by the nutrients present in the culture medium or by the utilization of endogenous stores. One such influence is exemplified by the Crabtree effect (the glucose-mediated inhibition of mitochondrial respiration) as most in vitro experiments are performed in glucose-containing media. Here, using high-resolution respirometry, we evaluated the oxidation of endogenous or exogenous substrates by cell lines harboring different metabolic profiles. We found that a 1-h deprivation of the main energetic nutrients is an appropriate strategy to abolish interference of endogenous or undesirable exogenous substrates with the cellular capacity of oxidizing specific substrates, namely glutamine, pyruvate, glucose, or palmitate, in mitochondria. This approach primed mitochondria to immediately increase their oxygen consumption after the addition of the exogenous nutrients. All starved cells could oxidize exogenous glutamine, whereas the capacity for oxidizing palmitate was limited to human hepatocarcinoma Huh7 cells and to C2C12 mouse myoblasts that differentiated into myotubes. In the presence of exogenous glucose, starvation decreased the Crabtree effect in Huh7 and C2C12 cells and abrogated it in mouse neuroblastoma N2A cells. Interestingly, the fact that the Crabtree effect was observed only for mitochondrial basal respiration but not for the maximum respiratory capacity suggests it is not caused by a direct effect on the electron transport system.

5.
São Paulo; s.n; s.n; 2012. 140 p. tab, graf, ilus.
Thesis in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-846867

ABSTRACT

Um passo limitante no desenvolvimento de fármacos para terapias do câncer está na descoberta de vulnerabilidades específicas de células tumorais que sirvam à identificação de alvos moleculares apropriados à intervenção farmacológica. Esta é a motivação central desta tese, cuja abordagem experimental focaliza a ação oncogênica das proteínas Ras. Amplificação ou mutação ativadora nos proto-oncogenes ras estão entre as alterações genéticas mais frequentes em cânceres. Essas lesões genéticas aparecem na origem etiológica de múltiplas formas de fenótipos malignos. Mas, essas lesões oncogênicas também conferem susceptibilidades letais às células malignamente transformadas frente a determinados agentes que não interferem significativamente nas funções vitais de células normais. Nos últimos anos nosso laboratório vem estudando os mecanismos moleculares da ação antiproliferativa do fator de crescimento FGF2 (Fibroblast Growth Factor2) e do éster de forbol PMA (Phorbol-12-Myristate-13-Acetate) em linhagens de células murinas malignas dependentes de ras oncogênico. Nesta tese investigamos quanto de nossas observações anteriores com células murinas são aplicáveis a células humanas. Nesse sentido focalizamos a linhagem HaCaT de queratinócitos humanos imortalizados e seus subclones malignizados por expressão ectópica de H-RasV12; além disso, numa triagem inicial também examinamos treze linhagens celulares humanas derivadas de tumores naturais portadores de mutação ativadora em H-Ras, N-Ras ou K-Ras. Nossos resultados mostram que os queratinócitos da linhagem parental HaCaT expressam receptores de FGFs e respondem mitogenicamente tanto a FGF2 como a PMA; portanto, ambos FGF2 e PMA são benéficos aos queratinócitos HaCaT. Por outro lado, o FGF2 mostrou-se citotóxico para subclones HaCaT que expressam H-RasV12 induzível, mas sublinhagens HaCaT com expressão constitutiva de H-RasV12 mostraram-se resistentes à ação citotóxica de FGF2. Diferentemente de FGF2, PMA bloqueou a proliferação de sublinhagens clonais HaCaT-H-RasV12 em ambos substrato sólido e suspensão de agarose e, também, reduziu a estratificação dos queratinócitos HaCaT-H-RasV12 em culturas organotípicas. PMA foi citotóxico e não citostático, pois induziu morte apoptótica sem causar arresto em nenhuma fase específica do ciclo celular. Em HaCaT parental, PMA induziu aumento transitório dos níveis intracelulares de espécies reativas de oxigênio (ROS), mas nos queratinócitos HaCaT-H-RasV12, PMA causou aumentos mais altos e persistentes de ROS, o que promove forte estresse oxidativo, provavelmente responsável pela toxidez deste ester de forbol. Entre as treze linhagens celulares humanas malignas com H-Ras, N-Ras ou K-Ras mutados, onze foram vulneráveis à ação citotóxica de PMA; mas apenas uma delas, a linhagem de tumor urotelial UM-UC-3, foi sensível ao efeito anti-proliferativo de FGF2. Em conclusão, células malignas humanas com Ras mutado parecem superar rapidamente uma possível toxidez de FGF2, mas não ultrapassam a toxidez causada por PMA


A challenge in drug development for cancer therapy is the discovering of molecular targets suitable for pharmacological interference. This challenge was the main motivation of the present thesis. Amplification or activating mutation in ras proto-oncogenes are among the most frequent genetic lesions in human cancer. Actually, mutated Ras onco-proteins are in the etiological roots of multiple malignant phenotypes; however these onco-proteins also cause specific lethal vulnerabilities even in robust malignant cells. Recently, our laboratory reported that malignant murine cell lines dependent on oncogenic Ras are prone to toxicity initiated by FGF2 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 2) and PMA (Phorbol-12-Myristate-13-Acetate), which are not harmful to normal cells. This cytotoxicity of FGF2 and PMA very likely follows different molecular mechanisms, which, however, are not yet completely understood. The aim of this thesis was to investigate whether these vulnerabilities found in murine malignant cells were also valid for human malignant cell lines dependent on oncogenic Ras. To this end the experimental approach was focused on the HaCaT cell line of immortalized human keratinocytes and its sublines transformed by H-RasV12 ectopic expression. In addition thirteen human cell lines derived from natural tumor carrying mutated H-Ras, N-Ras or K-Ras oncogenes were also screened. The results showed that HaCaT keratinocytes express FGF receptors and respond mitogenically to both FGF2 and PMA. On the other hand, FGF2 was cytotoxic to HaCaT subclones expressing inducible H-RasV12. But, HaCaT sublines constitutively expressing H-RasV12 were resistant to FGF2 toxicity. However, PMA was toxic to all HaCaT-H-RasV12 sublines, inhibiting proliferation in both solid substrate and agarose suspension cultures and, also reducing stratification in organotypic cultures. Furthermore, in HaCaT-H-RasV12 sublines, but not in the parental HaCaT line, PMA caused a persistently high increase in intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and concomitantly induced apoptosis. Moreover, eleven of the thirteen human tumor cell lines with mutated H-Ras, N-Ras or K-Ras, were growth inhibited by PMA, whereas only one of them was inhibited by FGF2, the urothelial tumor cell line UM-UC-3. In conclusion, human malignant cells driven by Ras oncogenes very likely rapidly overcome FGF2 toxicity, whereas they remain stably vulnerable to PMA cytotoxicity


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Islet Cell , Health Vulnerability , Oxidative Stress/genetics , ras Proteins/analysis , Cytotoxins , Fibroblast Growth Factor 2/analysis , Flow Cytometry/methods , Fluorescent Antibody Technique/methods , Immunoprecipitation/statistics & numerical data , Neoplasms , Phorbol Esters/analysis , Tumor Cells, Cultured , Tumor Stem Cell Assay/instrumentation
6.
Rev. saúde pública ; 42(6): 986-991, dez. 2008. graf, tab
Article in English, Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-496674

ABSTRACT

OBJETIVO: Identificar a presença do vírus dengue em formas larvais de Aedes aegypti e relacionar a presença do vetor com índice pluviométrico e número de casos de dengue. MÉTODOS: Dezoito domicílios foram selecionados aleatoriamente para coleta de ovos em um bairro da cidade de Boa Vista (RR). Foram instaladas duas ovitrampas por domicílio e removidas após uma semana, mensalmente, de novembro de 2006 a maio de 2007. Foram calculados o índice de positividade de ovitrampa e o índice de densidade dos ovos. Após eclosão de 1.422 ovos coletados, foram formados 44 pools de no máximo 30 larvas para teste de presença do vírus dengue por meio de RT-PCR e hemi-nested PCR. O índice de incidência de dengue no período foi correlacionado com a precipitação pluvial. A associação entre essas variáveis e número de ovos coletados foi analisada pelo coeficiente de Pearson. RESULTADOS: Nenhum dos pools apresentou positividade para o vírus dengue, apesar do bairro ter apresentado elevados índices de incidência de dengue no período estudado. A densidade da população de Ae. aegypti aumentou conforme a pluviosidade, mas não apresentou correlação com índices de incidência de casos de dengue...


OBJECTIVE: To detect the presence of dengue virus in larval forms of Aedes aegypti and to associate vector presence with rainfall and incidence of disease. METHODS: Eighteen households were randomly selected for egg collection in a neighborhood of the city of Boa Vista, Roraima, in Northern Brazil. Two oviposition traps were installed per home, and removed after one week. This was repeated on a monthly basis between November 2006 and May 2007. Trap positivity rate and egg density were calculated. Following the eclosion of 1,422 eggs, 44 pools of at least 30 larvae each were formed, which were evaluated for presence of dengue virus using RT-PCR and hemi-nested PCR. Dengue incidence rates in the period were correlated with rainfall rates. The association between these two variables and the number of eggs collected was determined using Pearson correlation. RESULTS: None of the pools tested positive for presence of dengue virus, despite the high incidence of dengue in the neighborhood during the studied period. The density of Ae. aegypti increased with rainfall, but was not correlated with incidence of dengue...


OBJETIVO: Identificar la presencia del virus dengue en forma larvales de Aedes aegypti y relacionar la presencia del vector con índice pluviométrico y número de casos de dengue en el período estudiado. MÉTODOS: Dieciocho domicilios fueron seleccionados al azar para colectar huevos en una urbanización de la ciudad de Boa Vista (Norte de Brasil). Se instalaron dos ovitrampas por domicilio, y se removieron una semana después, mensualmente, de noviembre de 2006 a mayo de 2007. Se calcularon el índice de positividad por ovitrampa y el índice de densidad de huevos. Posterior a la eclosión de 1422 huevos colectados, se formaron 44 pools de máximo 30 larvas para evaluar presencia del virus dengue por medio de RT-PCR y hemi-nested PCR. El índice de incidencia de dengue en el período fue correlacionado con la precipitación pluvial. La asociación entre esas variables y número de huevos colectados fue analizada por el coeficiente de Pearson. RESULTADOS: Ninguno de los pools presentó positividad para el virus dengue, a pesar de que en la urbanización se presentaron elevados índices de incidencia de dengue en el período de estudio. La densidad de la población de Ae. aegypti aumentó conforme a la pluviosidad, pero no presentó correlación con los índices de incidencia de casos de dengue...


Subject(s)
Animals , Aedes/virology , Dengue Virus/isolation & purification , Dengue/epidemiology , Insect Vectors/virology , Rain , Brazil/epidemiology , Dengue/transmission , Incidence , Larva/virology , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Seasons
7.
Rev Saude Publica ; 42(6): 986-91, 2008 Dec.
Article in English, Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19031506

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To detect the presence of dengue virus in larval forms of Aedes aegypti and to associate vector presence with rainfall and incidence of disease. METHODS: Eighteen households were randomly selected for egg collection in a neighborhood of the city of Boa Vista, Roraima, in Northern Brazil. Two oviposition traps were installed per home, and removed after one week. This was repeated on a monthly basis between November 2006 and May 2007. Trap positivity rate and egg density were calculated. Following the eclosion of 1,422 eggs, 44 pools of at least 30 larvae each were formed, which were evaluated for presence of dengue virus using RT-PCR and hemi-nested PCR. Dengue incidence rates in the period were correlated with rainfall rates. The association between these two variables and the number of eggs collected was determined using Pearson correlation. RESULTS: None of the pools tested positive for presence of dengue virus, despite the high incidence of dengue in the neighborhood during the studied period. The density of Ae. aegypti increased with rainfall, but was not correlated with incidence of dengue. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that transovarial transmission of dengue virus in mosquitoes occurs at a very low frequency, and therefore virus persistence in urban settings may not depend on such transmission. The mosquito population increased during the rainy season due to increased formation of breeding sites; the lack of correlation with incidence of dengue may be due to underestimation of incidence data during epidemics.


Subject(s)
Aedes/virology , Dengue Virus/isolation & purification , Dengue/epidemiology , Insect Vectors/virology , Rain , Animals , Brazil/epidemiology , Dengue/transmission , Incidence , Larva/virology , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Seasons
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...