👤 M. Varchenko

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Also published as: M Varchenko,
articles
Y. Park, P. Xu, D.M. Parkin +324 more · 2022 · Biomedicines · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
Y. Park, P. Xu, D.M. Parkin, F. Bray, J. Ferlay, P. Pisani, N. Andre, W. Schmiegel, B. Gustavsson, G. Carlsson, D. Machover, N. Petrelli, A. Roth, H. Schmoll, K. Tveit, F. Gibson, G. Housman, S. Byler, S. Heerboth, K. Lapinska, M. Longacre, N. Snyder, S. Sarkar, L. Bao, S. Hazari, S. Mehra, D. Kaushal, K. Moroz, S. Dash, Z. Yuan, X. Shi, Y. Qi, T. Jia, X. Yuan, Y. Zou, C. Liu, H. Yu, Y. Yuan, X. He, A.K. Pandurangan, D. Chao, W. Jiao, C. Yin, N. Jianyun, C. Ceshi, A. Guerrero-Zotano, I.A. Mayer, C.L. Arteaga, C. Han, G. Xing, M. Zhang, M. Zhong, Z. Han, C. He, X. Liu, Z. Zou, T. Tao, H. Li, X. Zhu, D.D. Sarbassov, S.M. Ali, D.M. Sabatini, D. Heras-Sandoval, J.M. Pérez-Rojas, J. Hernández-Damián, J. Pedraza-Chaverri, J. Roper, M.P. Richardson, W.V. Wang, L.G. Richard, W. Chen, E.M. Coffee, M.J. Sinnamon, L. Lee, P. Chen, R.T. Bronson, Y. Kondo, T. Kanzawa, R. Sawaya, S. Kondo, W. Li, Y. Zhou, J. Yang, H. Zhang, P. Zheng, Z. Wang, N. Wang, P. Liu, X. Xie, D. Zhang, W. Wang, X. Sun, D. Xu, C. Wang, Q. Zhang, H. Wang, W. Luo, Y. Chen, H. Chen, Z. Cao, Y. Yang, S. Yu, Y. Li, J. Huang, L. Xiong, S. Lei, C. Peng, M.G. Vander Heiden, L.C. Cantley, C.B. Thompson, D.H. Suh, M.A. Kim, H. Kim, M. Kim, H.S. Kim, H.H. Chung, Y. Kim, Y.S. Song, J. Peng, Y. Cui, S. Xu, X. Wu, Y. Huang, W. Zhou, S. Wang, Z. Fu, H. Xie, G. Wang, Y. Yu, Y.Z. Wang, P.H. Yin, K. Xu, H. Bleiberg, P. Perego, J. Robert, W. Lian, M. Li, R.N. Seetharam, A. Sood, S. Goel, E. Martinez-Balibrea, A. Martínez-Cardús, A. Ginés, V. Ruiz de Porras, C. Moutinho, L. Layos, J.L. Manzano, C. Bugés, S. Bystrup, M. Esteller, P. Noordhuis, A.C. Laan, K. Van de Born, R.J. Honeywell, G.J. Peters, W. Sun, Y. Ge, J. Cui, B. Liu, W. Lu, M. Ma, Q. Yan, W. He, Y. Hu, L. Xia, W. Hou, J. Chai, H. Guo, J. Yu, S.H. Bae, J.H. Park, H.G. Choi, S.H. Kim, H.Y. Yoo, S.Y. Park, S.Y. Chang, G. Meyer, A. Czompa, C. Reboul, E. Stepania, A. Czegledi, I. Bak, G. Balla, J. Balla, A. Tosaki, I. Lekli, W. Cao, J. Li, K. Yang, D. Cao, I. Tanida, T. Ueno, E. Kominami, J.M. Woynarowski, S. Faivre, M.C. Herzig, B. Arnett, W.G. Chapman, A.V. Trevino, E. Raymond, S.G. Chaney, A. Vaisman, M. Varchenko, R. Teng, J. Zhou, B. Seifer, J. Shen, L. Wang, H.R. Kang, C.K. Jeon, S. Lim, J.I. Barrasa, A. Santiago-Gómez, N. Olmo, M.A. Lizarbe, J. Turnay, A. Derjuga, C. Richard, M. Crosato, P.S. Wright, L. Chalifour, J. Valdez, A. Barraso, H.A. Crissman, W. Nishioka, E.M. Bradbury, Q. Shi, S. Li, L. Jin, H. Lai, Y. Wu, Z. Cai, M. Zhu, Q. Li, C.W. Yao, K.A. Kang, M.J. Piao, Y.S. Ryu, P.M.D.J. Fernando, M.C. Oh, J.E. Park, K. Shilnikova, S.-Y. Na, S.U. Jeong, Y. Zhao, X. Hu, Y. Liu, S. Dong, Z. Wen, S. Zhang, Q. Huang, M. Shi, V.G.A. Arciuch, M.A. Russo, K.S. Kang, A.D. Cristofano, L. Vucicevic, M. Misirkic, J. Kristina, U. Vilimanovich, E. Sudar, E. Isenovic, M. Prica, L. Harhaji-Trajkovic, T. Kravic-Stevovic, B. Vladimir, S. Lee, W. Yang, D.K. Kim, M. Shin, K.U. Choi, D.S. Suh, Y.H. Kim, T.-H. Hwang, J.H. Kim, C. Wu, Y. Chao, S. Shiah, W. Lin, M. Mouradian, K.D. Kikawa, B.P. Dranka, S.M. Komas, B. Kalyanaraman, R.S. Pardini, F. Gharibpoor, S.K. Zonouzi, S. Razi, H. Rezaei, Z. Yao, F. Xie, Z. Liang, W. Xu, H. Zhou, L.-H. Qu, D. Catanzaro, D. Gabbia, V. Cocetta, M. Biagi, E. Ragazzi, M. Montopoli, M. Carrara, X. Cao, L. Fang, S. Gibbs, Z. Dai, P. Wen, X. Zheng, W. Sadee, D. Sun, E.E. Mendoza, M.G. Pocceschi, X. Kong, D.B. Leeper, J. Caro, K.H. Limesand, R. Burd, E. Domenech, C. Maestre, L. Esteban-Martínez, D. Partida, R. Pascual, G. Fernandez-Miranda, E. Seco, R. Campos-Olivas, M. Perez, D. Megias Show less
Oxaliplatin is a platinum analog that can interfere with DNA replication and transcription. Continuous exposure to oxaliplatin results in chemoresistance; however, this mechanism is not well known. In Show more
Oxaliplatin is a platinum analog that can interfere with DNA replication and transcription. Continuous exposure to oxaliplatin results in chemoresistance; however, this mechanism is not well known. In this study, oxaliplatin-resistant (OR) colorectal cancer (CRC) cells of HCT116, HT29, SW480 and SW620 were established by gradually increasing the drug concentration to 2.5 μM. The inhibitory concentrations of cell growth by 50% (IC 50 ) of oxaliplatin were 4.40–12.7-fold significantly higher in OR CRC cells as compared to their respective parental (PT) CRC cells. Phospho-Akt and phospho-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) decreased in PT CRC cells but was overexpressed in OR CRC cells in response to oxaliplatin. In addition, an oxaliplatin-mediated decrease in phospho-AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in PT CRC cells induced autophagy. Contrastingly, an increased phospho-AMPK in OR CRC cells was accompanied by a decrease in LC3B, further inducing the activity of glycolytic enzymes, such as glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1), 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase 3 (PFKFB3) and phosphofructokinase 1 (PFK1), to mediate cell survival. Inhibition of AMPK in OR CRC cells induced autophagy through inactivation of Akt/mTOR pathway and a decrease in GLUT1, PFKFB3, and PFK1. Collectively, targeting AMPK may provide solutions to overcome chemoresistance in OR CRC cells and restore chemosensitivity to anticancer drugs. Show less
đź“„ PDF DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10112690
Pt amino-acid anticancer
J M Woynarowski, S Faivre, M C Herzig +8 more · 2000 · Molecular pharmacology · added 2026-04-20
Damage to cellular DNA is believed to determine the antiproliferative properties of platinum (Pt) drugs. This study characterized DNA damage by oxaliplatin, a diaminocyclohexane Pt drug with clinical Show more
Damage to cellular DNA is believed to determine the antiproliferative properties of platinum (Pt) drugs. This study characterized DNA damage by oxaliplatin, a diaminocyclohexane Pt drug with clinical antitumor activity. Compared with cisplatin, oxaliplatin formed significantly fewer Pt-DNA adducts (e.g., 0.86+/-0.04 versus 1.36+/- 0.01 adducts/10(6) base pairs/10 microM drug/1 h, respectively, in CEM cells, P<.01). Oxaliplatin was found to induce potentially lethal bifunctional lesions, such as interstrand DNA cross-links (ISC) and DNA-protein cross-links (DPC) in CEM cells. As with total adducts, however, oxaliplatin produced fewer (P<.05) bifunctional lesions than did cisplatin: 0.7+/-0.2 and 1.8+/-0.3 ISC and 0.8+/-0.1 and 1.5+/-0.3 DPC/10(6) base pairs/10 microM drug, respectively, after a 4-h treatment. Extended postincubation (up to 12 h) did not compensate the lower DPC and ISC levels by oxaliplatin. ISC and DPC determinations in isolated CEM nuclei unequivocally verified that oxaliplatin is inherently less able than cisplatin to form these lesions. Reactivation of drug-treated plasmids, observed in four cell lines, suggests that oxaliplatin adducts are repaired with similar kinetics as cisplatin adducts. Oxaliplatin, however, was more efficient than cisplatin per equal number of DNA adducts in inhibiting DNA chain elongation ( approximately 7-fold in CEM cells). Despite lower DNA reactivity, oxaliplatin exhibited similar or greater cytotoxicity in several other human tumor cell lines (50% growth inhibition in CEM cells at 1.1/1.2 microM, respectively). The results demonstrate that oxaliplatin-induced DNA lesions, including ISC and DPC, are likely to contribute to the drug's biological properties. However, oxaliplatin requires fewer DNA lesions than does cisplatin to achieve cell growth inhibition. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1124/mol.58.5.920
DNA-binding Pt amino-acid anticancer