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Natalia Nekhotiaeva

Bio: Natalia Nekhotiaeva is an academic researcher from Karolinska Institutet. The author has contributed to research in topics: Peptide nucleic acid & Signal peptide. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 446 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present results show that the antisense peptide-PNAs approach can be used to study gene function and requirement in this important pathogen, and further development is needed to raise the antibacterial potential of PNAs.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two cell‐penetrating peptides, TP10 and pVEC, were found to enter a range of bacteria and fungi and can enter both mammalian and microbial cells and preferentially permeabilize and kill microbes.
Abstract: Antimicrobial drug action is limited by both microbial and host cell membranes. Microbes stringently exclude the entry of most drugs, and mammalian membranes limit drug distribution and access to intracellular pathogens. Recently, cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been developed as carriers to improve mammalian cell uptake. Given that CPPs are cationic and often amphipathic, similar to membrane active antimicrobial peptides, it may be possible to use CPP activity to improve drug delivery to microbes. Here, two CPPs, TP10 and pVEC, were found to enter a range of bacteria and fungi. The uptake route involves rapid surface accumulation within minutes followed by cell entry. TP10 inhibited Candida albicans and Staphylococcus aureus growth, and pVEC inhibited Mycobacterium smegmatis growth at low micromolar doses, below the levels that harmed human HeLa cells. Therefore, although TP10 and pVEC entered all cell types tested, they preferentially damage microbes, and this effect was sufficient to clear HeLa cell cultures from noninvasive S. aureus infection. Also, conversion of the cytotoxicity indicator dye SYTOX Green showed that TP10 causes rapid and lethal permeabilization of S. aureus and pVEC permeabilizes M. smegmatis, but not HeLa cells. Therefore, TP10 and pVEC can enter both mammalian and microbial cells and preferentially permeabilize and kill microbes.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that antisense peptide-PNAs can efficiently and specifically inhibit both reporter and endogenous essential genes in mycobacteria.
Abstract: Antisense agents that inhibit genes at the mRNA level are attractive tools for genome-wide studies and drug target validation. The approach may be particularly well suited to studies of bacteria that

50 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interactions between mRNA- and protein-level inhibitors with the same genetic target can be synergistic and may provide a strategy to improve antimicrobial efficacy, facilitate drug mechanism of action studies and aid the search for new antimicrobials.
Abstract: BACKGROUND The few available distinct classes of antimicrobials limits the scope for single and combination drug treatment of resistant infections. OBJECTIVE To evaluate antimicrobial effectiveness from combinations of protein-specific drugs and mRNA-specific antisense inhibitors. METHODS Interactions between conventional antimicrobial drugs and mRNA-specific translation inhibiting antisense peptide nucleic acids were assessed in Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus cultures using pairwise combinations in a chequerboard arrangement. Fractional inhibitory concentration indices (FICIs) were calculated and grouped according to the functional relationship between the inhibitor targets. Antisense specificity controls included different antisense sequences targeting the same mRNA, as well as biochemical quantification of active protein expressed from the essential fabI gene and from the lacZ reporter gene after single and combined inhibitor treatment. RESULTS FICIs were higher for inhibitor combinations with unrelated targets than for combinations with functionally related targets. Inhibitor combinations with shared genetic targets displayed the lowest FICIs, with several qualifying for the conservative definition of antimicrobial synergy (FICI < or = 0.5). Furthermore, low FICIs arise as the hyperbolic dose-response curves for each separate inhibitor are maintained in combination. CONCLUSION Interactions between mRNA- and protein-level inhibitors with the same genetic target can be synergistic and may provide a strategy to improve antimicrobial efficacy, facilitate drug mechanism of action studies and aid the search for new antimicrobials.

41 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Carrier peptides may improve delivery of certain large molecular mass molecules into microorganisms for research and therapeutic applications by penetrating or translocate across cell membranes.
Abstract: Stringent microbial cell barriers limit the application of many substances in research and therapeutics. Carrier peptides that penetrate or translocate across cell membranes may help overcome this problem. To assess peptide-mediated delivery into two yeast and three bacterial species, a range of cell penetrating and signal peptide sequences were fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP), expressed in Escherichia coli, partially purified and incubated with growing cells. Fluorescence microscopy indicated several peptides that mediated delivery. In particular, VLTNENPFSDP efficiently delivered GFP into Candida albicans and Staphylococcus aureus, while YKKSNNPFSD was most efficient for Bacillus subtilis and CFFKDEL for Escherichia coli. Carrier peptides may improve delivery of certain large molecular mass molecules into microorganisms for research and therapeutic applications.

35 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review focused on uptake mechanisms used by CPPs for membrane translocation and certain experimental factors that affect the mechanism(s) are given.
Abstract: Recently, much attention has been given to the problem of drug delivery through the cell-membrane in order to treat and manage several diseases. The discovery of cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) represents a major breakthrough for the transport of large-cargo molecules that may be useful in clinical applications. CPPs are rich in basic amino acids such as arginine and lysine and are able to translocate over membranes and gain access to the cell interior. They can deliver large-cargo molecules, such as oligonucleotides, into cells. Endocytosis and direct penetration have been suggested as the two major uptake mechanisms, a subject still under debate. Unresolved questions include the detailed molecular uptake mechanism(s), reasons for cell toxicity, and the delivery efficiency of CPPs for different cargoes. Here, we give a review focused on uptake mechanisms used by CPPs for membrane translocation and certain experimental factors that affect the mechanism(s).

849 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cell-penetrating peptides are short peptides of less than 30 amino acids that are able to penetrate cell membranes and translocate different cargoes into cells, whose properties make them potential drug delivery agents, of interest for future use.

798 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Feb 2014-ACS Nano
TL;DR: The intrinsic property of cell-penetrating peptides to deliver therapeutic molecules to cells and tissues in a nontoxic manner has indicated that they may be potential components of future drugs and disease diagnostic agents.
Abstract: The intrinsic property of cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) to deliver therapeutic molecules (nucleic acids, drugs, imaging agents) to cells and tissues in a nontoxic manner has indicated that they may be potential components of future drugs and disease diagnostic agents. These versatile peptides are simple to synthesize, functionalize, and characterize yet are able to deliver covalently or noncovalently conjugated bioactive cargos (from small chemical drugs to large plasmid DNA) inside cells, primarily via endocytosis, in order to obtain high levels of gene expression, gene silencing, or tumor targeting. Typically, CPPs are often passive and nonselective yet must be functionalized or chemically modified to create effective delivery vectors that succeed in targeting specific cells or tissues. Furthermore, the design of clinically effective systemic delivery systems requires the same amount of attention to detail in both design of the delivered cargo and the cell-penetrating peptide used to deliver it.

751 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An extensive investigation of the published literature on drug combinations for which the combination effect has been evaluated by rigorous analysis methods and for which relevant molecular interaction profiles of the drugs involved are available reveals general and specific modes of action.
Abstract: Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying synergistic, potentiative and antagonistic effects of drug combinations could facilitate the discovery of novel efficacious combinations and multi-targeted agents. In this article, we describe an extensive investigation of the published literature on drug combinations for which the combination effect has been evaluated by rigorous analysis methods and for which relevant molecular interaction profiles of the drugs involved are available. Analysis of the 117 drug combinations identified reveals general and specific modes of action, and highlights the potential value of molecular interaction profiles in the discovery of novel multicomponent therapies.

720 citations

01 Jan 1977
TL;DR: All aspects of microbiology, including virology, are covered.
Abstract: All aspects of microbiology, including virology, are covered. Areas of special interest include: physiology, biochemistry and genetics (including molecular biology and 'omic' studies); biotechnology and synthetic biology; pathogenicity (including medical, veterinary and plant pathogens particularly those relating to food security); environmental microbiology (including ecophysiology, ecogenomics and meta-omic studies); virology; food microbiology (from food production and spoilage to food-borne pathogens); taxonomy and systematics (including publication of novel species and taxonomic reclassifications), and professional development (including education, training, CPD, research assessment frameworks, research metrics, best-practice and history of microbiology).

491 citations