πŸ‘€ Manmohan Kapur

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3
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3
Name variants
Also published as: A. Kapur, Payal Kapur
articles
L.A. Zhou, Q. Zhou, M.D. Siegelin +351 more Β· 2024 Β· Cells Β· MDPI Β· added 2026-04-20
L.A. Zhou, Q. Zhou, M.D. Siegelin, J.M. Angelastro, P. Paerhati, J. Liu, Z. Jin, T. Jakos, S. Zhu, L. Qian, J. Zhu, Y. Yuan, P.D. Canoll, J. Kuo, M. Weicker, A. Costa, J.N. Bruce, L.A. Greene, T.K. Sears, M. Zhang, X. Wang, N. Yang, X. Zhu, Z. Lu, Y. Cai, B. Li, Y. Zhu, X. Li, Y. Wei, K.H. Klempnauer, X. Sun, P. Jefferson, S. Wang, J. Wu, W. Zhao, M. Li, S. Li, L. Hartl, J. Duitman, M.F. Bijlsma, C.A. Spek, C.C. Cates, A.D. Arias, L.S. Nakayama Wong, M.W. Lame, M. Sidorov, G. Cayanan, D.J. Rowland, J. Fung, G. Karpel-Massler, B.A. Horst, C. Shu, L. Chau, T. Tsujiuchi, P. Canoll, N. Pasquier, T.T.T. Nguyen, D. Banerjee, S. Boboila, S. Okochi, A.V. Kadenhe-Chiweshe, G. Lopez, A. Califano, E.P. Connolly, D.J. Yamashiro, S.E. Monaco, M. Szabolcs, D. Merino, P. Vaupel, G. Multhoff, A. Fukushi, H.D. Kim, Y.C. Chang, C.H. Kim, M. Jaworska, J. Szczudlo, A. Pietrzyk, J. Shah, S.E. Trojan, B. Ostrowska, K.A. Kocemba-Pilarczyk, T. Ackermann, G. Hartleben, C. Muller, G. Mastrobuoni, M. Groth, B.A. Sterken, M.A. Zaini, S.A. Youssef, H.R. Zuidhof, S.R. Krauss, Z. Wang, J. Pang, L. Wang, Q. Dong, D. Jin, Z. Chai, Y. Yang, Z. Gu, X. Cai, W. Ye, L. Kong, X. Qiu, L. Ying, T.C. Chan, Y.L. Shiue, C.F. Li, K. Balamurugan, J.M. Wang, H.H. Tsai, S. Sharan, M. Anver, R. Leighty, E. Sterneck, Y. Zhang, L. Li, F. Chu, H. Wu, X. Xiao, J. Ye, K. Li, A. Subramanian, P. Tamayo, V.K. Mootha, S. Mukherjee, B.L. Ebert, M.A. Gillette, A. Paulovich, S.L. Pomeroy, T.R. Golub, E.S. Lander, C.M. Lindgren, K.F. Eriksson, S. Sihag, J. Lehar, P. Puigserver, E. Carlsson, M. Ridderstrale, E. Laurila, M. Maslowska, H.W. Wang, K. Cianflone, S. Mizuno, R. Seishima, J. Yamasaki, K. Hattori, M. Ogiri, S. Matsui, K. Shigeta, K. Okabayashi, O. Nagano, P. Bajwa, K. Kordylewicz, A. Bilecz, R.R. Lastra, K. Wroblewski, Y. Rinkevich, E. Lengyel, H.A. Kenny, S. Xiao, W. Nai-Dong, Y. Jin-Xiang, T. Long, L. Xiu-Rong, G. Hong, Y. Jie-Cheng, Z. Fei, C. Zhou, L.H. Lyu, H.K. Miao, T. Bahr, Q.Y. Zhang, T. Liang, H.B. Zhou, G.R. Chen, Y. Bai, P.C. Hart, M. Mao, A.L. de Abreu, K. Ansenberger-Fricano, D.N. Ekoue, D. Ganini, A. Kajdacsy-Balla, A.M. Diamond, R.D. Minshall, M.E. Consolaro, M. Shimizu, N. Tanaka, S. Dagdeviren, R.T. Lee, N. Wu, N. Qayyum, M. Haseeb, M.S. Kim, S. Choi, E. Yoshihara, N.M. Alhawiti, S. Al Mahri, M.A. Aziz, S.S. Malik, S. Mohammad, S.Y. Hong, F.X. Yu, Y. Luo, T. Hagen, L. Shen, J.M. O’Shea, M.R. Kaadige, S. Cunha, B.R. Wilde, A.L. Cohen, A.L. Welm, D.E. Ayer, L. Feng, R. Ding, X. Qu, Y. Li, T. Shen, R. Li, J. Zhang, Y. Ru, X. Bu, Q. Yan, L. Gong, H. Xu, B. Liu, X. Fang, D. Yu, T. Wei, Y. Wang, Y. Liang, H. Wang, B. Chen, Q. Mao, W. Xia, T. Zhang, X. Song, Z. Zhang, L. Xu, G. Dong, Y. Chen, J. Ning, W. Cao, T. Du, J. Jiang, X. Feng, B. Zhang, B. Kalyanaraman, G. Cheng, M. Hardy, M. You, T.M. Ashton, W.G. McKenna, L.A. Kunz-Schughart, G.S. Higgins, L. Liu, P.K. Patnana, X. Xie, D. Frank, S.C. Nimmagadda, A. Rosemann, M. Liebmann, L. Klotz, B. Opalka, C. Khandanpour, N. Chen, Y.S. Zhou, L.C. Wang, J.B. Huang, Z. Wu, W. Wang, L. Wei, A.M. Stevens, E.S. Schafer, M. Terrell, R. Rashid, H. Paek, M.B. Bernhardt, A. Weisnicht, W.T. Smith, N.J. Keogh, A. Kapur, P. Mehta, A.D. Simmons, S.S. Ericksen, G. Mehta, S.P. Palecek, M. Felder, Z. Stenerson, A. Nayak, J.M.A. Dominguez, H. Dykstra, C. LaRose, C. Fisk, A. Waldhart, X. Meng, G. Zhao, A.N. Waldhart, A.S. Peck, E.A. Boguslawski, Z.B. Madaj, J. Wen, K. Veldkamp, M. Hollowell, B. Zheng, L.C. Cantley, A. Shaywitz, Y. Dagon, C. Tower, G. Bellinger, C.H. Shen, J. Asara, T.E. McGraw, S.J. Qualls-Histed, C.P. Nielsen, J.A. MacGurn, S. Kim, J. Ge, D. Kim, J.J. Lee, Y.J. Choi, W. Chen, J.W. Bowman, S.S. Foo, L.C. Chang, Q. Liang, M. Pliszka, L. Szablewski, P.B. Ancey, C. Contat, E. Meylan, M.H. Chan, Y.F. Yang, C.H. Li, M. Hsiao, P. Patwari, W.A. Chutkow, K. Cummings, V.L. Verstraeten, J. Lammerding, E.R. Schreiter, J. Deng, T. Pan, Z. Liu, C. McCarthy, J.M. Vicencio, L. Cao, G. Alfano, A.A. Suwaidan, M. Yin, R. Beatson, H. Gong, P. Zhang, X. Hu Show less
We have designed cell-penetrating peptides that target the leucine zipper transcription factors ATF5, CEBPB and CEBPD and that promote apoptotic death of a wide range of cancer cell types, but not nor Show more
We have designed cell-penetrating peptides that target the leucine zipper transcription factors ATF5, CEBPB and CEBPD and that promote apoptotic death of a wide range of cancer cell types, but not normal cells, in vitro and in vivo. Though such peptides have the potential for clinical application, their mechanisms of action are not fully understood. Here, we show that one such peptide, Dpep, compromises glucose uptake and glycolysis in a cell context-dependent manner (in about two-thirds of cancer lines assessed). These actions are dependent on induction of tumor suppressor TXNIP (thioredoxin-interacting protein) mRNA and protein. Knockdown studies show that TXNIP significantly contributes to apoptotic death in those cancer cells in which it is induced by Dpep. The metabolic actions of Dpep on glycolysis led us to explore combinations of Dpep with clinically approved drugs metformin and atovaquone that inhibit oxidative phosphorylation and that are in trials for cancer treatment. Dpep showed additive to synergistic activities in all lines tested. In summary, we find that Dpep induces TXNIP in a cell context-dependent manner that in turn suppresses glucose uptake and glycolysis and contributes to apoptotic death of a range of cancer cells. Show less
πŸ“„ PDF DOI: 10.3390/cells13121025
amino-acid
Prajyot Jayadev Nagtilak, Manoj V. Mane, Deveen Rajeshbhai Hirapara +2 more Β· 2023 Β· Β· added 2026-04-20
no PDF DOI: 10.26434/chemrxiv-2023-rgc7x
Pd carboxylate
Rebecca R J Collins, Khushbu Patel, William C Putnam +2 more Β· 2017 Β· Clinical chemistry Β· added 2026-04-20
BACKGROUND: Pediatric clinical laboratories commonly measure tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates for screening, diagnosis, and monitoring of specific inborn errors of metabolism, such as organic ac Show more
BACKGROUND: Pediatric clinical laboratories commonly measure tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates for screening, diagnosis, and monitoring of specific inborn errors of metabolism, such as organic acidurias. In the past decade, the same tricarboxylic acid cycle metabolites have been implicated and studied in cancer. The accumulation of these metabolites in certain cancers not only serves as a biomarker but also directly contributes to cellular transformation, therefore earning them the designation of oncometabolites. CONTENT: D-2-hydroxyglutarate, L-2-hydroxyglutarate, succinate, and fumarate are the currently recognized oncometabolites. They are structurally similar and share metabolic proximity in the tricarboxylic acid cycle. As a result, they promote tumorigenesis in cancer cells through similar mechanisms. This review summarizes the currently understood common and distinct biological features of these compounds. In addition, we will review the current laboratory methodologies that can be used to quantify these metabolites and their downstream targets. SUMMARY: Oncometabolites play an important role in cancer biology. The metabolic pathways that lead to the production of oncometabolites and the downstream signaling pathways that are activated by oncometabolites represent potential therapeutic targets. Clinical laboratories have a critical role to play in the management of oncometabolite-associated cancers through development and validation of sensitive and specific assays that measure oncometabolites and their downstream effectors. These assays can be used as screening tools and for follow-up to measure response to treatment, as well as to detect minimal residual disease and recurrence. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2016.267666
review