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Showing papers by "Ivanka Markovic published in 2020"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of autophagy, a controlled lysosomal degradation of cellular macromolecules and organelles, in glutamate excitotoxicity during nutrient deprivation in vitro was investigated.
Abstract: We investigated the role of autophagy, a controlled lysosomal degradation of cellular macromolecules and organelles, in glutamate excitotoxicity during nutrient deprivation in vitro. The incubation in low-glucose serum/amino acid-free cell culture medium synergized with glutamate in increasing AMP/ATP ratio and causing excitotoxic necrosis in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. Glutamate suppressed starvation-triggered autophagy, as confirmed by diminished intracellular acidification, lower LC3 punctuation and LC3-I conversion to autophagosome-associated LC3-II, reduced expression of proautophagic beclin-1 and ATG5, increase of the selective autophagic target NBR1, and decreased number of autophagic vesicles. Similar results were observed in PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells. Both glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity and autophagy inhibition in starved SH-SY5Y cells were reverted by NMDA antagonist memantine and mimicked by NMDA agonists D-aspartate and ibotenate. Glutamate reduced starvation-triggered phosphorylation of the energy sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) without affecting the activity of mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, a major negative regulator of autophagy. This was associated with reduced mRNA levels of autophagy transcriptional activators (FOXO3, ATF4) and molecules involved in autophagy initiation (ULK1, ATG13, FIP200), autophagosome nucleation/elongation (ATG14, beclin-1, ATG5), and autophagic cargo delivery to autophagosomes (SQSTM1). Glutamate-mediated transcriptional repression of autophagy was alleviated by overexpression of constitutively active AMPK. Genetic or pharmacological AMPK activation by AMPK overexpression or metformin, as well as genetic or pharmacological autophagy induction by TFEB overexpression or lithium chloride, reduced the sensitivity of nutrient-deprived SH-SY5Y cells to glutamate excitotoxicity. These data indicate that transcriptional inhibition of AMPK-dependent cytoprotective autophagy is involved in glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity during nutrient deprivation in vitro.

20 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Metal complexes with diamine ligands are promising candidates for efficient and more selective alternatives to conventional platinum-based chemotherapeutics and further research is required to reveal the chemico-physical properties and molecular mechanisms underlying their biological activity.
Abstract: Background The discovery of cisplatin and the subsequent research revealed the importance of dinitrogen-containing moiety for the anticancer action of metal complexes. Moreover, certain diamine ligands alone display cytotoxicity that contributes to the overall activity of corresponding complexes. Objective To summarize the current knowledge on the anticancer efficacy, selectivity, and the mechanisms of action of metal complexes with various types of diamine ligands. Methods The contribution of aliphatic acyclic, aliphatic cyclic, and aromatic diamine ligands to the anticancer activity and selectivity/toxicity of metal complexes with different metal ions were analyzed by comparison with organic ligand alone and/or conventional platinum-based chemotherapeutics. Results The aliphatic acyclic diamine ligands are present mostly in complexes with platinum. Aliphatic cyclic diamines are part of Pt(II), Ru(II) and Au(III) complexes, while aromatic diamine ligands are found in Pt(II), Ru(II), Pd(II) and Ir(III) complexes. The type and oxidation state of metal ions greatly influences the cytotoxicity of metal complexes with aliphatic acyclic diamine ligands. Lipophilicity of organic ligands, dependent on alkyl-side chain length and structure, determines their cellular uptake, with edda and eddp/eddip ligands being most useful in this regard. Aliphatic cyclic diamine ligands improved the activity/toxicity ratio of oxaliplatin-type complexes. The complexes with aromatic diamine ligands remain unexplored regarding their anticancer mechanism. The investigated complexes mainly caused apoptotic or necrotic cell death. Conclusion Metal complexes with diamine ligands are promising candidates for efficient and more selective alternatives to conventional platinum-based chemotherapeutics. Further research is required to reveal the chemico-physical properties and molecular mechanisms underlying their biological activity.

12 citations