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171.
Hee Kyoung Kang Jung Han Suh Jung Jin Lee Sun Hee Yoon Jin Won Hyun Seong Won Choi 《Free radical research》2013,47(7):773-779
The present study was undertaken to examine the effect of l-ascorbic acid (LAA) on the growth of HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cells, besides induction of apoptosis. LAA (≥10-4?M) was found to markedly inhibit the proliferation of HL-60 in liquid culture and clonogenicity in semisolid culture. Moreover, LAA-treated HL-60 showed activity to produce chemiluminescence and expressed CD 66b cell surface antigens, indicating that LAA induces the differentiation of HL-60 mainly into granulocytes. The results are supported by morphological changes of LAA-treated HL-60 into segmented neutrophils. Therefore, the inhibitory effect of LAA on the growth of HL-60 cells seems to arise from the induction of differentiation. To assess the potential role of LAA, cells were exposed to oxygen radical scavengers in the absence or presence of LAA. Catalase abolished and superoxide dismutase promoted LAA-induced differentiation of HL-60. Thus, H2O2 produced as a result of LAA treatment seems to play a major role in induction of HL-60 differentiation. 相似文献
172.
Jin Sil Chung Seung Baek Lee Seon Ho Park Sung Tae Kang Ah Ram Na Tong-Shin Chang 《Free radical research》2013,47(8):729-737
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) steady-state levels are required for entry into the S phase of the cell cycle in normal cells, as well as in tumour cells. However, the contribution of mitochondrial ROS to normal cell proliferation has not been well investigated thus far. A previous report showed that Romo1 was responsible for the high ROS levels in tumour cells. Here, we show that endogenous ROS generated by Romo1 are indispensable for cell cycle transition from G1 to S phase in normal WI-38 human lung fibroblasts. The ROS level in these cells was down-regulated by Romo1 knockdown, resulting in cell cycle arrest in the G1 phase. This arrest was associated with an increase in the level of p27Kip1. These results demonstrate that mitochondrial ROS generated by Romo1 expression is required for normal cell proliferation and it is suggested that Romo1 plays an important role in redox signalling during normal cell proliferation. 相似文献
173.
Heat shock may increase oxidative stress due to increased production of reactive oxygen species and/or the promotion of cellular oxidation events. Mitochondrial NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDPm) produces NADPH, an essential reducing equivalent for the antioxidant system. The protective role of IDPm against heat shock in HEK293 cells, an embryonic kidney cell line, was investigated in control and cells transfected with the cDNA for IDPm, where IDPm activity was 6–7 fold higher than that in the control cells carrying the vector alone. Upon exposure to heat shock, the viability was lower and the protein oxidation, lipid peroxidation and oxidative DNA damage were higher in control cells as compared to HEK293 cells in which IDPm was over-expressed. We also observed the significant difference in the cellular redox status reflected by the endogenous production of reactive oxygen species, NADPH pool and GSH recycling between two cells. The results suggest that IDPm plays an important role as an antioxidant defense enzyme in cellular defense against heat shock through the removal of reactive oxygen species. 相似文献
174.
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176.
Jae-Jin Lee Hyun Ji Lee Gi Seon Jang Ja Myoung Yu Ji Yoon Cha Su Jeong Kim Eun Bit Lee Myung Kyum Kim 《Journal of microbiology (Seoul, Korea)》2013,51(3):305-311
Strain DY59T, a Gram-positive non-motile bacterium, was isolated from soil in South Korea, and was characterized to determine its taxonomic position. Phylogenetic analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain DY59T revealed that the strain DY59T belonged to the family Deinococcaceae in the class Deinococci. The highest degree of sequence similarities of strain DY59T were found with Deinococcus radiopugnans KACC 11999T (99.0%), Deinococcus marmoris KACC 12218T (97.9%), Deinococcus saxicola KACC 12240T (97.0%), Deinococcus aerolatus KACC 12745T (96.2%), and Deinococcus frigens KACC 12220T (96.1%). Chemotaxonomic data revealed that the predominant fatty acids were iso-C15:0 (19.0%), C16:1 ω7c (17.7%), C15:1 ω6c (12.6%), iso-C17:0 (10.3%), and iso-C17:1 ω9c (10.3%). A complex polar lipid profile consisted of a major unknown phosphoglycolipid. The predominant respiratory quinone is MK-8. The cell wall peptidoglycan contained D-alanine, L-glutamic acid, glycine, and L-ornithine (di-amino acid). The novel strain showed resistance to gamma radiation, with a D10 value (i.e. the dose required to reduce the bacterial population by 10-fold) in excess of 5 kGy. Based on the phylogenetic, chemotaxonomic, and phenotypic data, strain DY59T (=KCTC 33033T =JCM 18581T) should be classified as a type strain of a novel species, for which the name Deinococcus swuensis sp. nov. is proposed. 相似文献
177.
Byoung-Shik Shim Jung-ah Choi Ho-Hyun Song Sung-Moo Park In Su Cheon Ji-Eun Jang Sun Je Woo Chung Hwan Cho Min-Suk Song Hyemi Kim Kyung Joo Song Jae Myun Lee Suhng Wook Kim Dae Sub Song Young Ki Choi Jae-Ouk Kim Huan Huu Nguyen Dong Wook Kim Young Yil Bahk Cheol-Heui Yun Man Ki Song 《Journal of microbiology (Seoul, Korea)》2013,51(1):130-135
Influenza viruses are respiratory pathogens that continue to pose a significantly high risk of morbidity and mortality of humans worldwide. Vaccination is one of the most effective strategies for minimizing damages by influenza outbreaks. In addition, rapid development and production of efficient vaccine with convenient administration is required in case of influenza pandemic. In this study, we generated recombinant influenza virus hemagglutinin protein 1 (sHA1) of 2009 pandemic influenza virus as a vaccine candidate using a well-established bacterial expression system and administered it into mice via sublingual (s.l.) route. We found that s.l. immunization with the recombinant sHA1 plus cholera toxin (CT) induced mucosal antibodies as well as systemic antibodies including neutralizing Abs and provided complete protection against infection with pandemic influenza virus A/CA/04/09 (H1N1) in mice. Indeed, the protection efficacy was comparable with that induced by intramuscular (i.m.) immunization route utilized as general administration route of influenza vaccine. These results suggest that s.l. vaccination with the recombinant non-glycosylated HA1 protein offers an alternative strategy to control influenza outbreaks including pandemics. 相似文献
178.
Seung Hyun Kim Sin-Duk Jang Ki Yong Lee Sang Hyun Sung 《Journal of enzyme inhibition and medicinal chemistry》2013,28(1):230-233
A methanolic extract of dried leaves of Polygala japonica Houtt (Polygalaceae) significantly attenuated nitric oxide production in lipopolysaccharide-simulated BV2 microglia. Five anthraquinones chrysophanol (1), emodin (2), aloe-emodin (3), emodin 8-O-β-D-glucopyranoside (4) and trihydroxy anthraquinone (5), and four flavonoids kaempferol (6), chrysoeriol (7), kaempferol 3-gentiobioside (8) and isorhamnetin (9) were isolated from the methanolic extract using bioactivity-guided fractionation. Among them, compounds 1–4, 6 and 7 showed significant inhibitory effect on lipopolysaccharide-induced nitric oxide production in BV2 microglia at the concentrations ranging from 1.0 to 100.0 μM. 相似文献
179.
Moon Woo Chun Sung Pil Choi Myong Jung Kim Chol Joon Bae Hyung Ryong Moon Hee-Doo Kim 《Nucleosides, nucleotides & nucleic acids》2013,32(4-5):615-616
Abstract Novel 1,3-oxathiolanyl pyrimidine nucleosides with 5-hydroxymethyl substituent were synthesized starting from d-mannose and evaluated for antiviral activities against HIV-1, HSV type 1,2 and HCMV. 相似文献
180.
He Wen Hye-ji Yang Yong Jin An Joon Mee Kim Dae Hyun Lee Xing Jin Sung-woo Park Kyung-Jin Min Sunghyouk Park 《Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP》2013,12(3):575-586
Dietary restriction (DR) has many beneficial effects, but the detailed metabolic mechanism remains largely unresolved. As diet is essentially related to metabolism, we investigated the metabolite profiles of urines from control and DR animals using NMR and LC/MS metabolomic approaches. Multivariate analysis presented distinctive metabolic profiles and marker signals from glucuronide and glycine conjugation pathways in the DR group. Broad profiling of the urine phase II metabolites with neutral loss scanning showed that levels of glucuronide and glycine conjugation metabolites were generally higher in the DR group. The up-regulation of phase II detoxification in the DR group was confirmed by mRNA and protein expression levels of uridinediphospho-glucuronosyltransferase and glycine-N-acyltransferase in actual liver tissues. Histopathology and serum biochemistry showed that DR was correlated with the beneficial effects of low levels of serum alanine transaminase and glycogen granules in liver. In addition, the Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 signaling pathway was shown to be up-regulated, providing a mechanistic clue regarding the enhanced phase II detoxification in liver tissue. Taken together, our metabolomic and biochemical studies provide a possible metabolic perspective for understanding the complex mechanism underlying the beneficial effects of DR.It has been known for more than 70 years that dietary restriction (DR)1 can extend the life span and delay the onset of age-related diseases, based on an early rodent study showing such effects (1). However, not until the 1980s was DR recognized as a good model for studying the mechanism of or inhibitory measures for aging (2). So far, extensive studies employing model organisms such as yeasts, nematodes, fruit flies, and rodents have shown that DR has beneficial effects in most of the species studied (for a review, see Ref. 3). Most notably, a recent 20-year-long study showed that monkeys, the species closest to humans, also benefit from DR similarly (4). Although there has not been (or could not have been) a systematic study on the effects of DR on the human life span, several longitudinal studies strongly suggest that changes in dietary intake can affect the life span and/or disease-associated marker values greatly (5–7).This inverse correlation between dietary intake and long-term health strongly indicates that DR''s effects should involve metabolism, and that DR elicits the reorganization of metabolic pathways. It also seems quite natural that something we eat should affect the body''s metabolism. Despite this seemingly straightforward relationship between diet and metabolism, the mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of DR are anything but simple. Intensive efforts, spanning decades, to understand the mechanisms of DR have identified several genes that might mediate the effects of DR, such as mTOR, IGF-1, AMPK, and SIRT1 (for a review, see Ref. 8). Still, most of them are involved in early nutrient-sensing steps, and specific metabolic pathways, especially those at the final steps actually responsible for the effects of DR, are largely unknown.This might be at least partially due to the fact that previous studies have focused mostly on genomic or proteomic changes induced by DR, instead of looking at changes in metabolism or metabolites directly. Metabolomics, which has gained much interest in recent years (9–11), might be a good alternative for addressing the mechanistic uncertainty of DR''s effects, with the direct profiling of metabolic changes elicited by environmental factors. In contrast to genomics or proteomics, which often employ DNA or proteins extracted from particular tissues, metabolomics studies mostly employ body fluids (i.e. urine or blood), which can reflect the metabolic status of multiple organs, enabling investigations at a more systemic level. In particular, urine has been used extensively to study the mechanism of external stimuli (i.e. drugs or toxic insults) at most major target organs, such as the lung, kidney, liver, or heart (12–18). Still, metabolomics studies of DR effects have been very limited. A few previous ones reported the changes in phenomenological urine metabolic markers with DR, without identification and/or validation of specific metabolic pathways reflected at the actual tissue or enzyme level (19, 20). Therefore, those studies fell short of providing a mechanistic perspective on DR''s effects. In addition, they employed either NMR or LC/MS approaches without validation across the two analytical platforms.Among the metabolic pathways that can directly affect the integrity of multiple organs, and hence long-term health, are phase II detoxification pathways (21). Typically, lipophilic endo/xenobiotics are metabolized first by a phase I system, such as cytochrome P450, which modifies the compounds so that they have hydrophilic functional groups for increased solubility. In many cases, though, these modifications might increase the reactivity of the compounds, leading to cellular damage. The phase II detoxification systems involve conjugation reactions that attach charged hydrophilic molecular moieties to reactive metabolites, thus facilitating the elimination of the harmful metabolites from body, ultimately reducing their toxicity (22). These systems are thus especially important in protecting cellular macromolecules, such as DNA and proteins, from reactive electrophilic or nucleophilic metabolites. The enzymes involved in these processes include glutathione-S-transferase (GST), sulfotransferase, glycine-N-acyltransferase (GLYAT), and uridinediphospho-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT), with the last enzyme being the most prevalent (23). The beneficial effects of phase II reactions have been particularly studied in relation to the mechanism of healthy dietary ingredients. It is well believed that many such foods can prevent cancers (hence the term “chemoprevention”) by inducing phase II detoxification systems (24–26). Although DR also substantially reduces the incidence of cancers, the exact mechanism remains elusive.Here, we employed multi-platform metabolomics to obtain metabolic perspectives on the beneficial effects of DR on rats. Our results about urine metabolomics markers suggest that DR enhances the phase II detoxification pathway, which was confirmed by means of conjugation metabolite profiling and changes in mRNA/protein expression levels of phase II enzymes in actual liver tissues. A possible molecular mechanism was also addressed through the exploration of Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf-2) pathway activation upon DR. We believe the current study provides new metabolic insights into DR''s beneficial effects, as well as a workflow for studying DR''s effects from a metabolic perspective. 相似文献