17 results on '"Semkova S"'
Search Results
2. The General Principle of the Warburg Effect as a Possible Approach for Cancer Immunotherapy: The Regulatory Effect of Plant Extracts Could Change the Game.
- Author
-
Ivanova D, Semkova S, Grigorov B, Tzanova M, Georgieva A, Danchev D, Nikolova B, and Yaneva Z
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Glycolysis drug effects, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondria drug effects, Macrophages drug effects, Macrophages metabolism, Macrophages immunology, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms metabolism, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Plant Extracts therapeutic use, Plant Extracts chemistry, Warburg Effect, Oncologic drug effects, Immunotherapy methods, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors metabolism
- Abstract
The interpretation of the biochemistry of immune metabolism could be considered an attractive scientific field of biomedicine research. In this review, the role of glycolysis in macrophage polarization is discussed together with mitochondrial metabolism in cancer cells. In the first part, the focus is on the Warburg effect and redox metabolism during macrophage polarization, cancer development, and management of the immune response by the cancer cells. The second part addresses the possibility of impacts on the Warburg effect through targeting peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs). This could be an activator of native immune responses. Because of the reported serious adverse effects of using synthetic ligands for PPARs in combination with chemotherapeutics, searches for less toxic and more active PPAR inhibitors, as well as blocking undesirable cellular PPAR-dependent processes, are in progress. On the other hand, recent research in modern immunotherapy has focused on the search for gentle immune-modulating natural compounds with harmless synergistic chemotherapeutic efficacy that can be used as an adjuvant. It is a well-known fact that the plant kingdom is a source of important therapeutic agents with multifaceted effectiveness. One of these is the known association with PPAR activities. In this regard, the secondary metabolites extracted from plants could change the game.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Water-Soluble Alkali Lignin as a Natural Radical Scavenger and Anticancer Alternative.
- Author
-
Ivanova D, Nikolova G, Karamalakova Y, Semkova S, Marutsova V, and Yaneva Z
- Subjects
- Animals, Antioxidants pharmacology, Alkalies, Biomass, Fishes, Lignin pharmacology, Colonic Neoplasms
- Abstract
Several phytochemicals, which display antioxidant activity and inhibit cancer cell phenotypes, could be used for cancer treatment and prevention. Lignin, as a part of plant biomass, is the second most abundant natural biopolymer worldwide, and represents approximately 30% of the total organic carbon content of the biosphere. Historically, lignin-based products have been viewed as waste materials of limited industrial usefulness, but modern technologies highlight the applicability of lignin in a variety of industrial branches, including biomedicine. The aims of our preliminary study were to compare the antioxidant properties of water-soluble alkali lignin solutions, before and after UV-B irradiation, as well as to clarify their effect on colon cancer cell viability (Colon 26), applied at low (tolerable) concentrations. The results showed a high antioxidant capacity of lignin solutions, compared to a water-soluble control antioxidant standard (Trolox) and remarkable radical scavenging activity was observed after their UV-B irradiation. Diminishment of cell viability as well as inhibition of the proliferative activity of the colon cancer cell line with an increase in alkali lignin concentrations were observed. Our results confirmed that, due to its biodegradable and biocompatible nature, lignin could be a potential agent for cancer therapy, especially in nanomedicine as a drug delivery system., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Redox-Cycling "Mitocans" as Effective New Developments in Anticancer Therapy.
- Author
-
Bakalova R, Lazarova D, Sumiyoshi A, Shibata S, Zhelev Z, Nikolova B, Semkova S, Vlaykova T, Aoki I, and Higashi T
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Oxidation-Reduction, Ascorbic Acid metabolism, Quinones metabolism, Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Superoxides metabolism, Neoplasms metabolism
- Abstract
Our study proposes a pharmacological strategy to target cancerous mitochondria via redox-cycling "mitocans" such as quinone/ascorbate (Q/A) redox-pairs, which makes cancer cells fragile and sensitive without adverse effects on normal cells and tissues. Eleven Q/A redox-pairs were tested on cultured cells and cancer-bearing mice. The following parameters were analyzed: cell proliferation/viability, mitochondrial superoxide, steady-state ATP, tissue redox-state, tumor-associated NADH oxidase (tNOX) expression, tumor growth, and survival. Q/A redox-pairs containing unprenylated quinones exhibited strong dose-dependent antiproliferative and cytotoxic effects on cancer cells, accompanied by overproduction of mitochondrial superoxide and accelerated ATP depletion. In normal cells, the same redox-pairs did not significantly affect the viability and energy homeostasis, but induced mild mitochondrial oxidative stress, which is well tolerated. Benzoquinone/ascorbate redox-pairs were more effective than naphthoquinone/ascorbate, with coenzyme Q0/ascorbate exhibiting the most pronounced anticancer effects in vitro and in vivo. Targeted anticancer effects of Q/A redox-pairs and their tolerance to normal cells and tissues are attributed to: (i) downregulation of quinone prenylation in cancer, leading to increased mitochondrial production of semiquinone and, consequently, superoxide; (ii) specific and accelerated redox-cycling of unprenylated quinones and ascorbate mainly in the impaired cancerous mitochondria due to their redox imbalance; and (iii) downregulation of tNOX.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Newly Synthesized Lignin Microparticles as Bioinspired Oral Drug-Delivery Vehicles: Flavonoid-Carrier Potential and In Vitro Radical-Scavenging Activity.
- Author
-
Ivanova D, Toneva M, Simeonov E, Nikolova B, Semkova S, Antov G, and Yaneva Z
- Abstract
The aim of the present study was to synthesize lignin microparticles, to evaluate their physicochemical, spectral, morphological and structural characteristics, to examine their encapsulation and in vitro release potential and behaviour towards the flavonoid morin in simulated physiological medium and to assess the in vitro radical-scavenging potential of the morin-loaded lignin microcarrier systems. The physicochemical, structural and morphological characteristics of alkali lignin, lignin particles (LP) and morin-encapsulated lignin microparticles (LMP) were determined based on particle size distribution, SEM, UV/Vis spectrophotometric, FTIR and potentiometric titration analyses. The encapsulation efficiency of LMP was 98.1%. The FTIR analyses proved that morin was successfully encapsulated in the LP without unexpected chemical reactions between the flavonoid and the heteropolymer. The in vitro release performance of the microcarrier system was successfully mathematically described by Korsmeyer-Peppas and the sigmoidal models outlining the general role of diffusion during the initial stages of the in vitro release process in simulated gastric fluid (SGF), and the predominant contribution of biopolymer relaxation and erosion was determined in simulated intestinal medium (SIF). The higher radical-scavenging potential of LMP, as compared to that of LP, was proven via DPPH and ABTS assays. The synthesis of lignin microcarriers not only provides a facile approach for the utilization of the heteropolymer but also determines its potential for the design of drug-delivery matrices.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Redox-mediated Anticancer Activity of Anti-parasitic Drug Fenbendazole in Triple-negative Breast Cancer Cells.
- Author
-
Semkova S, Nikolova B, Tsoneva I, Antov G, Ivanova D, Angelov A, Zhelev Z, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Fenbendazole pharmacology, Epithelial Cells, MCF-7 Cells, Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Adenocarcinoma
- Abstract
Background/aim: An increasing number of studies are reporting anticancer activity of widely used antiparasitic drugs and particularly benzimidazoles. Fenbendazole is considered safe and tolerable in most animal species at the effective doses as an anthelmintic. Little is known about the redox-modulating properties of fenbendazole and the molecular mechanisms of its antiproliferative effects. Our study aimed to investigate the possibility of selective redox-mediated treatment of triple-negative breast cancer cells by fenbendazole without affecting the viability and redox status of normal breast epithelial cells., Materials and Methods: The experiments were performed on three cell lines: normal breast epithelial cells (MCF-10A) and cancer breast epithelial cells (MCF7 - luminal adenocarcinoma, low metastatic; MDA-MB-231 - triple-negative adenocarcinoma, highly metastatic). Cells were treated with fenbendazole for 48-h and three parameters were analyzed using conventional assays: cell viability and proliferation, level of intracellular superoxide, and level of hydroperoxides., Results: The data demonstrated that MDA-MB-231 cells were more vulnerable to fenbendazole-induced oxidative stress than MCF-7 cells. In normal breast epithelial cells MCF-10A, fenbendazole significantly suppressed oxidative stress compared to untreated controls. These data correlate with the effect of fenbendazole on cell viability and the IC
50 values, which is indirect evidence of the potential targeting anticancer effect of the drug, especially in MDA-MB-231 cells., Conclusion: The difference in the levels of oxidative stress induced by fenbendazole in MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 indicates that the two types of breast cancer respond to the drug through different redox-related mechanisms., (Copyright © 2023 International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Docosahexaenoic Acid Potentiates the Anticancer Effect of the Menadione/Ascorbate Redox Couple by Increasing Mitochondrial Superoxide and Accelerating ATP Depletion.
- Author
-
Ivanova D, Semkova S, Yaneva Z, Nikolova B, Zhelev Z, Bakalova R, and Aoki I
- Subjects
- Humans, Docosahexaenoic Acids pharmacology, Mitochondria, Oxidation-Reduction, Ascorbic Acid pharmacology, Adenosine Triphosphate, Vitamin K 3 pharmacology, Superoxides
- Abstract
Background/aim: Mitochondria-targeted anticancer drugs ("mitocans") of natural origin are attractive candidates as adjuvants in cancer therapy. The redox couple menadione/ascorbate (M/A), which belongs to the "mitocans" family, induces selective oxidative stress in cancerous mitochondria and cells, respectively. DHA has also been found to regulate the mevalonate pathway, which is closely related to the prenylation of the cytotoxic menadione to the non-cytotoxic menaquinone. The aim of this study was to elucidate the ability of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) to potentiate the anticancer effect of M/A by increasing ROS production, as well as affecting steady-state ATP levels in cancer cells., Materials and Methods: The experiments were performed on leukemic lymphocyte Jurkat. Cells were treated with DHA, M/A, and their combination (M/A/DHA) and four parameters were examined using the following assays: cell viability and proliferation, steady-state ATP, mitochondrial superoxide, intracellular hydroperoxides. Three independent experiments with two or six parallel measurements were performed for each parameter., Results: The triple combination M/A/DHA was characterized by much higher antiproliferative activity and cytotoxicity than M/A and DHA administered alone. DHA significantly accelerated M/A-induced ATP depletion in cells, which was accompanied by an additional increase in mitochondrial superoxide compared to cells treated with M/A or DHA alone., Conclusion: DHA significantly enhanced M/A-induced cytotoxicity in leukemic lymphocytes by inducing severe mitochondrial oxidative stress and accelerated ATP depletion. Selective DHA-mediated suppression of cholesterol synthesis in cancer cells (involved in the prenylation of cytotoxic menadione to the less cytotoxic phylloquinone), as well as DHA-mediated inhibition of superoxide dismutase are suggested to underlie the potentiation of the anticancer effect of M/A., (Copyright © 2023 International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Electroporation, electrochemotherapy and electro-assisted drug delivery in cancer. A state-of-the-art review.
- Author
-
Tsoneva I, Semkova S, Bakalova R, Zhelev Z, Nuss P, Staneva G, and Nikolova B
- Subjects
- Drug Delivery Systems, Electroporation methods, Humans, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Electrochemotherapy methods, Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
This review focuses on electrochemotherapy that consists in the delivery of anti-cancer drugs using high-voltage electrical pulses. Technical issues, choice of drugs, and protocol of drug delivery are still under investigation and no consensus has been achieved yet. The different aspects of electrochemotherapy are discussed in the present paper. It includes interrogations about the choice of the preferred anti-cancer drug and dose to be delivered on the solid tumors. Another promising area is related to the electro-assisted release of nanoparticles (quantum dots) in xenografted solid tumors. Molecular mechanisms of enhanced drug delivery are discussed in terms of high cholesterol level and large fraction of lipid rafts in cancer cells. Electrochemotherapy is a paradigmatic example of cooperation between physicists, biophysicists, chemists, technicians, manufacturers, biologists, clinicians, and patients to improve a very promising treatment delivery in line with the conception of personalized medicine., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Quantum Sensors To Track Total Redox-Status and Oxidative Stress in Cells and Tissues Using Electron-Paramagnetic Resonance, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, and Optical Imaging.
- Author
-
Lazarova D, Semkova S, Zlateva G, Tatsuya H, Aoki I, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Animals, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mice, Optical Imaging, Oxidation-Reduction, Electrons, Oxidative Stress
- Abstract
Total redox capacity (TRC) and oxidative stress (OxiStress) of biological objects (such as cells, tissues, and body fluids) are some of the most frequently analyzed parameters in life science. Development of highly sensitive molecular probes and analytical methods for detection of these parameters is a rapidly growing sector of BioTech's R&D industry. The aim of the present study was to develop quantum sensors for tracking the TRC and/or OxiStress in living biological objects using electron-paramagnetic resonance (EPR), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and optical imaging. We describe a two-set sensor system: (i) TRC sensor QD@CD-TEMPO and (ii) OxiStress sensor QD@CD-TEMPOH. Both redox sensors are composed of small-size quantum dots (QDs), coated with multinitroxide-functionalized cyclodextrin (paramagnetic CD-TEMPO or diamagnetic CD-TEMPOH) conjugated with triphenylphosphonium (TPP) groups. The TPP groups were added to achieve intracellular delivery and mitochondrial localization. Nitroxide residues interact simultaneously with various oxidizers and reducers, and the sensors are transformed from the paramagnetic radical form (QD@CD-TEMPO) into diamagnetic hydroxylamine form (QD@CD-TEMPOH) and vice-versa, because of nitroxide redox-cycling. These chemical transformations are accompanied by characteristic dynamics of their contrast features because of quenching of QD fluorescence by nitroxide radicals. The TRC sensor was applied for EPR analysis of cellular redox-status in vitro on isolated cells with different proliferative indexes, as well as for noninvasive MRI of redox imbalance and severe oxidative stress in vivo on mice with renal dysfunction.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Selective Targeting of Cancerous Mitochondria and Suppression of Tumor Growth Using Redox-Active Treatment Adjuvant.
- Author
-
Bakalova R, Semkova S, Ivanova D, Zhelev Z, Miller T, Takeshima T, Shibata S, Lazarova D, Aoki I, and Higashi T
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Ascorbic Acid administration & dosage, Ascorbic Acid chemistry, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Female, Humans, Jurkat Cells, MCF-7 Cells, Melanoma, Experimental drug therapy, Melanoma, Experimental metabolism, Melanoma, Experimental pathology, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondria pathology, Neoplasms metabolism, Neoplasms pathology, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Vitamin K 3 administration & dosage, Vitamin K 3 chemistry, Vitamins administration & dosage, Vitamins chemistry, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols pharmacology, Mitochondria drug effects, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Redox-active substances and their combinations, such as of quinone/ascorbate and in particular menadione/ascorbate (M/A; also named Apatone®), attract attention with their unusual ability to kill cancer cells without affecting the viability of normal cells as well as with the synergistic anticancer effect of both molecules. So far, the primary mechanism of M/A-mediated anticancer effects has not been linked to the mitochondria. The aim of our study was to clarify whether this "combination drug" affects mitochondrial functionality specifically in cancer cells. Studies were conducted on cancer cells (Jurkat, Colon26, and MCF7) and normal cells (normal lymphocytes, FHC, and MCF10A), treated with different concentrations of menadione, ascorbate, and/or their combination (2/200, 3/300, 5/500, 10/1000, and 20/2000 μ M/ μ M of M/A). M/A exhibited highly specific and synergistic suppression on cancer cell growth but without adversely affecting the viability of normal cells at pharmacologically attainable concentrations. In M/A-treated cancer cells, the cytostatic/cytotoxic effect is accompanied by (i) extremely high production of mitochondrial superoxide (up to 15-fold over the control level), (ii) a significant decrease of mitochondrial membrane potential, (iii) a decrease of the steady-state levels of ATP, succinate, NADH, and NAD
+ , and (iv) a decreased expression of programed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1)-one of the major immune checkpoints. These effects were dose dependent. The inhibition of NQO1 by dicoumarol increased mitochondrial superoxide and sensitized cancer cells to M/A. In normal cells, M/A induced relatively low and dose-independent increase of mitochondrial superoxide and mild oxidative stress, which seems to be well tolerated. These data suggest that all anticancer effects of M/A result from a specific mechanism, tightly connected to the mitochondria of cancer cells. At low/tolerable doses of M/A (1/100-3/300 μ M/ μ M) attainable in cancer by oral and parenteral administration, M/A sensitized cancer cells to conventional anticancer drugs, exhibiting synergistic or additive cytotoxicity accompanied by impressive induction of apoptosis. Combinations of M/A with 13 anticancer drugs were investigated (ABT-737, barasertib, bleomycin, BEZ-235, bortezomib, cisplatin, everolimus, lomustine, lonafarnib, MG-132, MLN-2238, palbociclib, and PI-103). Low/tolerable doses of M/A did not induce irreversible cytotoxicity in cancer cells but did cause irreversible metabolic changes, including: (i) a decrease of succinate and NADH, (ii) depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane, and (iii) overproduction of superoxide in the mitochondria of cancer cells only. In addition, M/A suppressed tumor growth in vivo after oral administration in mice with melanoma and the drug downregulated PD-L1 in melanoma cells. Experimental data suggest a great potential for beneficial anticancer effects of M/A through increasing the sensitivity of cancer cells to conventional anticancer therapy, as well as to the immune system, while sparing normal cells. We hypothesize that M/A-mediated anticancer effects are triggered by redox cycling of both substances, specifically within dysfunctional mitochondria. M/A may also have a beneficial effect on the immune system, making cancer cells "visible" and more vulnerable to the native immune response., Competing Interests: No potential conflicts of interest are disclosed., (Copyright © 2020 Rumiana Bakalova et al.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Redox-related Molecular Mechanism of Sensitizing Colon Cancer Cells to Camptothecin Analog SN38.
- Author
-
Nikolova B, Semkova S, Tsoneva I, Stoyanova E, Lefterov P, Lazarova D, Zhelev Z, Aoki I, Higashi T, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival drug effects, Colonic Neoplasms metabolism, Colonic Neoplasms pathology, DNA Damage drug effects, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm genetics, Drug Synergism, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Glutathione metabolism, Humans, Models, Biological, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic pharmacology, Camptothecin analogs & derivatives, Camptothecin pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm drug effects, Oxidation-Reduction
- Abstract
Background/aim: The aim of this study was to elucidate the possibility of sensitizing colon cancer cells to the chemotherapeutic drug SN38 and investigate its mechanism of action after combined treatment with electroporation (EP)., Materials and Methods: Cells were treated with SN38, EP and their combination for 24/48 h. The cell viability, actin cytoskeleton integrity, mitochondrial superoxide, hydroperoxides, total glutathione, phosphatidyl serine expression, DNA damages and expression of membrane ABC transporters were analyzed using conventional analytical tests., Results: The combination of EP and SN38 affected cell viability and cytoskeleton integrity. This effect was accompanied by: (i) high production of intracellular superoxide and hydroperoxides and depletion of glutathione; (ii) increased DNA damage and apoptotic/ferroptotic cell death; (iii) changes in the expression of membrane ABC transporters - up-regulation of SLCO1B1 and retention of SN38 in the cells., Conclusion: The anticancer effect of the combined treatment of SN38 and EP is related to changes in the redox-homeostasis of cancer cells, leading to cell death via apoptosis and/or ferroptosis. Thus, electroporation has a potential to increase the sensitivity of cancer cells to conventional anticancer therapy with SN38., (Copyright© 2020, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Menadione/Ascorbate Induces Overproduction of Mitochondrial Superoxide and Impairs Mitochondrial Function in Cancer: Comparative Study on Cancer and Normal Cells of the Same Origin.
- Author
-
Semkova S, Zhelev Z, Miller T, Sugaya K, Aoki I, Higashi T, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols pharmacology, Antioxidants pharmacology, Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Humans, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Mitochondria pathology, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms pathology, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Superoxide Dismutase genetics, Superoxides metabolism, Ascorbic Acid pharmacology, Mitochondria drug effects, Neoplasms drug therapy, Vitamin K 3 pharmacology
- Abstract
Background/aim: The menadione/ascorbate (M/A) combination has attracted attention due to the unusual ability of pro-vitamin/vitamin combination to kill cancer cells without affecting the viability of normal cells. The aim of this study was to elucidate the role of M/A in targeting cancerous mitochondria., Materials and Methods: Several cancer and normal cell lines of the same origin were used. Cells were treated with different concentrations of M/A for 24 h. The cell viability, mitochondrial superoxide, mitochondrial membrane potential, and succinate were analyzed using conventional analytical tests., Results: M/A exhibited a highly specific suppression on cancer cell growth and viability, without adversely affecting the viability of normal cells at concentrations attainable by oral or parenteral administration in vivo. This effect was accompanied by: (i) an extremely high production of mitochondrial superoxide in cancer cells, but not in normal cells; (ii) a significant dose-dependent depolarization of mitochondrial membrane and depletion of oncometabolite succinate in cancer cells., Conclusion: The anticancer effect of M/A is related to the induction of severe mitochondrial oxidative stress in cancer cells only. Thus, M/A has a potential to increase the sensitivity and vulnerability of cancer cells to conventional anticancer therapy and immune system., (Copyright© 2020, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Bacterial Natural Disaccharide (Trehalose Tetraester): Molecular Modeling and in Vitro Study of Anticancer Activity on Breast Cancer Cells.
- Author
-
Nikolova B, Antov G, Semkova S, Tsoneva I, Christova N, Nacheva L, Kardaleva P, Angelova S, Stoineva I, Ivanova J, Vasileva I, and Kabaivanova L
- Abstract
Isolation and characterization of new biologically active substances affecting cancer cells is an important issue of fundamental research in biomedicine. Trehalose lipid was isolated from Rhodococcus wratislav i ensis strain and purified by liquid chromatography. The effect of trehalose lipid on cell viability and migration, together with colony forming assays, were performed on two breast cancer (MCF7-low metastatic; MDA-MB231-high metastatic) and one "normal" (MCF10A) cell lines. Molecular modeling that details the structure of the neutral and anionic form (more stable at physiological pH) of the tetraester was carried out. The tentative sizes of the hydrophilic (7.5 Å) and hydrophobic (12.5 Å) portions of the molecule were also determined. Thus, the used trehalose lipid is supposed to interact as a single molecule. The changes in morphology, adhesion, viability, migration, and the possibility of forming colonies in cancer cell lines induced after treatment with trehalose lipid were found to be dose and time dependent. Based on the theoretical calculations, a possible mechanism of action and membrane asymmetry between outer and inner monolayers of the bilayer resulting in endosome formation were suggested. Initial data suggest a mechanism of antitumor activity of the purified trehalose lipid and its potential for biomedical application., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Characterization and potential antitumor effect of a heteropolysaccharide produced by the red alga Porphyridium sordidum .
- Author
-
Nikolova B, Semkova S, Tsoneva I, Antov G, Ivanova J, Vasileva I, Kardaleva P, Stoineva I, Christova N, Nacheva L, and Kabaivanova L
- Abstract
Taking into account the rising trend of the incidence of cancers of various organs, effective therapies are urgently needed to control human malignancies. However, almost all chemotherapy drugs currently on the market cause serious side effects. Fortunately, several studies have shown that some non-toxic biological macromolecules, including algal polysaccharides, possess anti-cancer activities or can increase the efficacy of conventional chemotherapy drugs. Polysaccharides are characteristic secondary metabolites of many algae. The efficacy of polysaccharides on the normal and cancer cells is not well investigated, but our investigations proved a cell specific effect of a newly isolated extracellular polysaccharide from the red microalga Porphyridium sordidum . The investigated substance was composed of xylose:glucose and galactose:manose:rhamnose in a molar ratio of 1:0.52:0.44:0.31. Reversible electroporation has been exploited to increase the transport through the plasma membrane into the tested breast cancer tumor cells MCF-7 and MDA-MB231. Application of 75 µg/mL polysaccharide in combination with 200 V/cm electroporation induced 40% decrease in viability of MDA-MB231 cells and changes in cell morphology while control cells (MCF10A) remained with normal morphology and kept vitality., Competing Interests: The authors have declared no conflict of interest., (© 2019 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Resveratrol Modulates the Redox-status and Cytotoxicity of Anticancer Drugs by Sensitizing Leukemic Lymphocytes and Protecting Normal Lymphocytes.
- Author
-
Ivanova D, Zhelev Z, Semkova S, Aoki I, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Cells, Cultured, Humans, Leukemia drug therapy, Lymphocytes metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Leukemia metabolism, Lymphocytes drug effects, Protective Agents pharmacology, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Resveratrol pharmacology
- Abstract
Background/aim: The study is directed to the effect of resveratrol on the redox-status and viability of leukemic and normal lymphocytes, as well as its ability to sensitize leukemic lymphocytes to anticancer drugs., Materials and Methods: Cytotoxicity was analyzed by trypan blue staining, apoptosis - by Annexin V test, and oxidative stress - by the intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and protein-carbonyl products., Results: Incubation of resveratrol in combination with the majority of anticancer drugs resulted in higher toxicity than resveratrol or drug alone. In the case of leukemic lymphocytes treated with barasertib and everolimus in the presence of resveratrol, synergistic cytotoxicity was accompanied by strong induction of apoptosis, increased levels of hydroperoxides and insignificant changes in protein-carbonyl products. None of these parameters changed in normal lymphocytes., Conclusion: Resveratrol is a promising supplementary compound for anticancer therapy, that may allow reduction of the therapeutic doses of barasertib and everolimus, minimizing their side-effects., (Copyright© 2019, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. "Redox Imaging" to Distinguish Cells with Different Proliferative Indexes: Superoxide, Hydroperoxides, and Their Ratio as Potential Biomarkers.
- Author
-
Zhelev Z, Georgieva E, Lazarova D, Semkova S, Aoki I, Gulubova M, Higashi T, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Antioxidants metabolism, Cell Line, Cell Proliferation, Cyclic N-Oxides metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Humans, Leukemia metabolism, Lymphocytes metabolism, Nitrogen Oxides chemistry, Nitrogen Oxides metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, Biomarkers metabolism, Hydrogen Peroxide metabolism, Superoxides metabolism
- Abstract
The present study was directed to the development of EPR methodology for distinguishing cells with different proliferative activities, using "redox imaging." Three nitroxide radicals were used as redox sensors: (a) mito-TEMPO-cell-penetrating and localized mainly in the mitochondria; (b) methoxy-TEMPO-cell-penetrating and randomly distributed between the cytoplasm and the intracellular organelles; and (c) carboxy-PROXYL-nonpenetrating in living cells and evenly distributed in the extracellular environment. The experiments were conducted on eleven cell lines with different proliferative activities and oxidative capacities, confirmed by conventional analytical tests. The data suggest that cancer cells and noncancer cells are characterized by a completely different redox status. This can be analyzed by EPR spectroscopy using mito-TEMPO and methoxy-TEMPO, but not carboxy-PROXYL. The correlation analysis shows that the EPR signal intensity of mito-TEMPO in cell suspensions is closely related to the superoxide level. The described methodology allows the detection of overproduction of superoxide in living cells and their identification based on the intracellular redox status. The experimental data provide evidences about the role of superoxide and hydroperoxides in cell proliferation and malignancy.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Loading Efficiency of Polymersomes with Contrast Agents and their Intracellular Delivery: Quantum Dots Versus Organic Dyes.
- Author
-
Semkova S, Nikolova B, Zhelev Z, Tsoneva I, Zlateva G, Aoki I, and Bakalova R
- Subjects
- Chitosan administration & dosage, Chitosan chemistry, Contrast Media pharmacokinetics, Dextrans administration & dosage, Dextrans chemistry, Drug Delivery Systems, Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate administration & dosage, Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate analogs & derivatives, Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Microscopy, Confocal, Nanoparticles administration & dosage, Nanoparticles chemistry, Contrast Media administration & dosage, Contrast Media chemistry, Fluorescent Dyes administration & dosage, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry, Quantum Dots administration & dosage, Quantum Dots chemistry
- Abstract
Background/aim: Contrast nanocarriers as drug-delivery systems, capable of selective delivery to cancer cells and solid tumors, are essential for the development of new diagnostic and therapeutic (theranostic) strategies. The present study aimed to investigate the loading efficiency of chitosan-based polymersomes with fluorescent contrast substances [quantum dots (QDs) and conventional organic dyes] and the possibility to control their release from the polymer matrix into cells by chemical modifications and electroporation., Materials and Methods: All investigated fluorophores were retained within the polymer globule via electrostatic and hydrophilic-hydrophobic interactions, without conjugation with the polymer. The fluorophore-loaded polymersomes were characterized by dynamic light scattering, zeta-potential titration, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The release of fluorophore from the polymersomes, passively or after electroporation, was detected by 5-step spin-ultrafiltration, combined with fluorescence spectroscopy of the upper phase (supernatant) of the filter unit. Passive intracellular delivery of the nanoparticles to HeLa cells was detected by fluorescence confocal microscopy., Results: The QDs were retained tightly and continuously in the polymer matrix, while the organic fluorophores [fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), FITC-dextran
10,000 and FITC-dextran70,000 ] were released rapidly from the polymersomes. The detergent Brij significantly increased the retention of FITC-dextran10,000 in the polymer globule. Electroporation up to 1000 V/cm did not induce release of QDs from the polymersomes, but accelerated the release of Brij-treated FITC-dextran10,000 B from the polymer matrix. High-voltage pulses (over 750 V/cm) induced also fragmentation or aggregation of the nanoparticles. QD_labeled polymersomes penetrated passively in cancer cells after 24-hour incubation., Conclusion: The results suggest that QD-labeled polymersomes are appropriate fluorescent probes and a nano-drug delivery system with high tracing opportunities for in vitro and in vivo applications. Furthermore, loading polymersomes with organic dyes with different molecular weights (such as FITC-dextrans) is a simple model for visualizing and predicting the rate of release of small organic molecules (e.g. conventional drugs, other contrasts, stabilizers, and supplements) from the polymer matrix., (Copyright© 2018, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.