👤 Bing Liu

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179
Articles
209
Name variants
Also published as: A Liu, A. Liu, AJ Liu, B. Liu, Ben Liu, Bin Liu, Bonnie Hei Man Liu, C Liu, C. Liu, C.H. Liu, CS Liu, Chang Liu, Chang-Hai Liu, Chi-Man Liu, Conghe Liu, D Liu, D. Liu, D.X. Liu, DL Liu, Dan Liu, Dandan Liu, Du Liu, E. C. H. Liu, F Liu, F. Liu, Fangyi Liu, G Liu, G. Liu, GY Liu, Gongyuan Liu, Guocheng Liu, H Liu, H. C. Liu, H. F. Liu, H. Liu, H.K. Liu, HC Liu, HF Liu, HH Liu, HY Liu, Hanshao Liu, Hanxue Liu, Hong-Ke Liu, Hongke Liu, Hongling Liu, Hongxin Liu, Hongxing Liu, Hong‐Ke Liu, Hua-Wei Liu, Huaiwei Liu, Huanting Liu, Hui Liu, Hui-Fang Liu, Hui‐Fang Liu, J Liu, J. Liu, J. W. M. Liu, J.P. Liu, JC Liu, JF Liu, JJ Liu, JO Liu, JQ Liu, JW Liu, Jiang-ping Liu, Jiao Liu, Jiashuo Liu, Jie Liu, Jin-Biao Liu, Jinbao Liu, Jinfeng Liu, Jing Liu, Jinlong Liu, Jun-Hong Liu, Junliang Liu, Junwen Liu, Junxiong Liu, K Liu, K. Liu, Kuan-Guan Liu, L Liu, L. Liu, L.B. Liu, L.Y. Liu, LL Liu, Lei Liu, Li Liu, Libo Liu, Lifeng Liu, Lihong Liu, Lisha Liu, Liu-Yi Liu, Liu‐Yi Liu, Lu Liu, Luwei Liu, M Liu, M. Liu, M. T. Liu, M.-X. Liu, Meng Liu, Mengqin Liu, N Liu, N. Liu, NC Liu, Ning-Yi Liu, Ning‐Yi Liu, P Liu, P. Liu, PS Liu, Peng Liu, Pengfei Liu, Q Liu, QH Liu, QX Liu, Qi-Yan Liu, Qian-Qian Liu, Qiang Liu, Qiao Liu, Qing-Hua Liu, R Liu, R. Liu, Rongfang Liu, Ruixuan Liu, S Liu, S. Liu, Sanhong Liu, Shanshan Liu, Sheng-Gui Liu, Shengnan Liu, Shichang Liu, Shihua Liu, Shujuan Liu, Shuyuan Liu, Si-Hong Liu, T Liu, T. Liu, Tianming Liu, Ting Liu, VW Liu, W Liu, W. Liu, W.T. Liu, Wei Liu, Wei-ping Liu, Wenting Liu, Wukun Liu, X Liu, X. Liu, X.Z. Liu, XP Liu, XS Liu, XT Liu, XY Liu, Xiao-Dong Liu, Xiao-Ming Liu, Xiaolong Liu, Xicheng Liu, Xinling Liu, Xinyu Liu, Xiulian Liu, Xue-Wen Liu, Xuena Liu, Xue‐Wen Liu, Xukui Liu, Y Liu, Y. Liu, Y.B. Liu, Y.C. Liu, Y.N. Liu, Y.Z. Liu, YH Liu, YQ Liu, Ya-Fang Liu, Ya-Min Liu, Yahong Liu, Yan-Cheng Liu, Yanan Liu, Yang Liu, Yanjun Liu, Yanyu Liu, Yi Liu, Ying Liu, Yingchao Liu, Yingtao Liu, Yiwei Liu, Yong Liu, Yongzhong Liu, You-Nian Liu, Yu Liu, Yue Liu, Yun-Jun Liu, Yunjun Liu, Yun‐Jun Liu, Yuxuan Liu, Yuyang Liu, Yuyao Liu, Z Liu, Z. Liu, ZM Liu, ZW Liu, ZX Liu, Zefan Liu, Zhe Liu, Zhi Liu, Zhongyang Liu, Zhu-dong Liu, Ziqi Liu, Zitian Liu
articles
Jie Liu, Jinyuan Zhang, Qianghui Zheng +1 more · 2026 · Inorganic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Glutathione (GSH), the most abundant intracellular thiol-containing antioxidant, plays a pivotal role in cellular metabolism and redox homeostasis. Its critical involvement in cancer and neurodegenera Show more
Glutathione (GSH), the most abundant intracellular thiol-containing antioxidant, plays a pivotal role in cellular metabolism and redox homeostasis. Its critical involvement in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases has made it an important target for thiol detection systems. In this work, we report the design and synthesis of two novel near-infrared (NIR) phosphorescent Ir(III) complexes as multifunctional probes for GSH detection and photodynamic therapy (PDT). These probes feature an α,β-unsaturated ketone moiety that selectively reacts with the thiol group in GSH, enabling the specific sensing of intracellular and extracellular GSH with applications in bioimaging. Beyond their sensing capabilities, both Ir(III) complexes exhibit strong reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation efficiency, aggregation-induced emission (AIE) characteristics, and mitochondria-targeting properties, making them highly effective for PDT. Notably, upon cellular uptake, these complexes deplete mitochondrial GSH, disrupting redox homeostasis and triggering a rapid accumulation of localized ROS. This dual mechanism─combining GSH depletion and enhanced ROS production─induces potent apoptotic cell death. This work provides a strategic approach for developing advanced NIR photosensitizers with AIE activity, mitochondria-specific targeting, and the ability to simultaneously engage type I and type II PDT pathways while modulating intracellular antioxidant defense systems. Such multifunctional theranostic probes offer considerable potential for enhancing the efficacy of photodynamic cancer therapy, particularly in the treatment of hypoxic tumors. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.5c05682 📎 SI
Ir imaging mitochondria photoactivated
Dan Liu, Ziqi Liu, Yan Hu +3 more · 2025 · Biochimica et biophysica acta. Reviews on cancer · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) refers to the increase in permeability of the mitochondrial outer membrane, allowing proteins, DNA, and other molecules to pass through the interme Show more
Mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) refers to the increase in permeability of the mitochondrial outer membrane, allowing proteins, DNA, and other molecules to pass through the intermembrane space into the cytosol. As a crucial event in the induction of apoptosis, MOMP plays a significant role in regulating various forms of cell death, including apoptosis, ferroptosis, and pyroptosis. Importantly, MOMP is not a binary process of "all-or-nothing." Under sub-lethal stress stimuli, cells may experience a phenomenon referred to as minority MOMP (miMOMP), where only a subset of mitochondria undergo functional impairment, thereby disrupting the normal life cycle of the cell. This can lead to pathological and physiological changes such as tumor formation, cellular senescence, innate immune dysfunction, and chronic inflammation. This review focuses on the diversity of MOMP events to elucidate how varying degrees of MOMP under different stress conditions influence cell fate. Additionally, it summarizes the current research progress on novel antitumor therapeutic strategies targeting MOMP in clinical contexts. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bbcan.2025.189280
Fe anticancer mitochondria review
Yongrui Hai, Ruizhuo Lin, Weike Liao +8 more · 2025 · Molecular Biomedicine · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
Abstract Cancer cells rely heavily on de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Inhibiting pyrimidine metabolism directly suppresses tumor growth and fosters immune activation within the tumor microenvironment. D Show more
Abstract Cancer cells rely heavily on de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Inhibiting pyrimidine metabolism directly suppresses tumor growth and fosters immune activation within the tumor microenvironment. Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) is a key enzyme in the de novo pyrimidine synthesis pathway. Inhibiting DHODH can reverse immune suppression and trigger a mild innate immune response. However, the impact of DHODH inhibition on natural killer (NK) cells remains to be explored. In this study, we found that DHODH inhibition promoted NK cell infiltration into tumors efficiently. Mechanistically, DHODH suppression induced mitochondrial oxidative stress, leading to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) release into the cytoplasm through voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) oligomerization and caspase-3 activation. This subsequently activated the stimulator of interferon gene (STING) pathway, triggered ferroptosis, and induced gasdermin E (GSDME) mediated pyroptosis in cancer cells. These changes collectively facilitated NK cell recruitment. Furthermore, infiltrated NK cells enhanced GSDME-dependent pyroptosis in tumor cells through granzyme release, establishing a positive feedback loop that amplified anti-tumor immunity. Additionally, we developed EA6, a novel DHODH inhibitor that is more effective at promoting NK cell infiltration. In summary, this study reveals that targeting pyrimidine metabolism activates a novel mechanism involving pyroptosis-ferroptosis crosstalk and STING pathway activation to enhance NK cell-mediated immunity. These finding opens new avenues for enhancing the efficacy of targeted nucleotide metabolism in cancer therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s43556-025-00339-7
Fe ROS mitochondria synthesis
Chengcheng Li, Yang Liu, Handing Mao +3 more · 2025 · PLOS ONE · PLOS · added 2026-04-20
Background Rhabdomyolysis (RM), particularly heat exhaustion-associated rhabdomyolysis (ehsRM), is a significant clinical issue associated with high mortality and healthcare costs. However, the cellul Show more
Background Rhabdomyolysis (RM), particularly heat exhaustion-associated rhabdomyolysis (ehsRM), is a significant clinical issue associated with high mortality and healthcare costs. However, the cellular death mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Oncosis, a form of passive cell death distinct from apoptosis, is characterized by cell swelling and triggered by ATP depletion. Additionally, porimin, a specific biomarker, can uniquely identify oncosis. This study aims to investigate the role and mechanisms of oncosis in both in vitro and in vivo models of ehsRM. Objective This study aims to investigate the role and mechanisms of oncosis in both in vitro and in vivo models of ehsRM. Methods In the in vitro study, 6-8-week-old male rats were subjected to treadmill exercise at an ambient temperature of (39.5 ± 0.5)°C and relative humidity of 50%-60%, at a speed of 15 meters per minute until their core body temperature (Tc) reached 43.0°C to establish a heatstroke animal model. Skeletal muscle and blood samples from the gastrocnemius were collected for cytokine, biochemical, and histopathological analyses. Pathological findings revealed decreased muscle fiber density, structural disarray, swelling, degeneration, and hemorrhage. Ultrastructural analysis showed cell swelling, structural disarray, cytoplasmic vacuolation, mitochondrial swelling and degeneration, loss of cristae, and nuclear degeneration, indicating myocyte swelling and necrosis. Porimin, CytC, Bax, and caspase-1 expression increased, while Bcl-2 expression decreased. JC-1 staining indicated a decline in mitochondrial membrane potential and dysfunction. ATP levels decreased, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production increased. In the in vivo study, HSKMC cells were subjected to 4 hours of heat shock at 43°C to establish a heatstroke-induced rhabdomyolysis cell model. Electron microscopy revealed cell swelling, cytoplasmic vacuolation, mitochondrial swelling and degeneration, and nuclear swelling; late-stage (necrotic-like death) was characterized by nucleolar dissolution, nuclear fragmentation, chromatin condensation, and collapse of cytoplasmic structures. After 24 hours post-modeling, the proportion of double-positive cells (porimin + /PI+) and ROS levels significantly increased, as did porimin expression, while mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP levels significantly decreased. The proportion of Annexin V + /PI + double-positive cells and caspase-3 levels showed no significant changes. Results In both in vitro and in vivo studies, oncosis played a crucial role in ehsRM. Pathological and ultrastructural analyses demonstrated cell swelling, structural disarray, mitochondrial damage, and nuclear degeneration. Porimin, CytC, Bax, and caspase-1 expression increased, while Bcl-2 expression decreased. ATP levels decreased, and ROS production increased. In the in vivo study, the proportion of porimin + /PI + double-positive cells and ROS levels significantly increased, while mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP levels significantly decreased. The proportion of Annexin V + /PI + double-positive cells and caspase-3 levels showed no significant changes. Conclusion Oncosis is predominant in ehsRM, involving mitochondrial dysfunction, ATP depletion, and oxidative stress. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308586
ROS mitochondria
Hui Liu, Mengmeng Pan, Yumeng Li +5 more · 2025 · Journal of translational medicine · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
Mitochondria are bilayer membrane organelles with basic metabolic activity. They are considered hubs for biosynthesis, bioenergy, and signaling functions, coordinating major biological pathways. Mitoc Show more
Mitochondria are bilayer membrane organelles with basic metabolic activity. They are considered hubs for biosynthesis, bioenergy, and signaling functions, coordinating major biological pathways. Mitochondria are coupled to the oxidation of fatty acids and pyruvate through electron transport chains and have historically been considered the primary source of cellular energy. Recent studies have depicted that mitochondria are centers that promote inflammatory responses and play a crucial role in combating pathogenic infections. Moreover, mitochondria provide the basis for tumor synthesis metabolism, control redox and calcium homeostasis, participate in transcriptional regulation, and control cell death. Mitochondria are involved in all steps of tumorigenesis. This review discusses the relationship between mitochondria (including mitochondrial metabolism and mitophagy) and tumors, and the relationship between mtDNA and inflammation, as well as its clinical application in inflammatory diseases. More importantly, the application and targeted treatment strategies provide more opportunities for the development of new anticancer drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12967-025-06722-w
anticancer mitochondria review synthesis
Qiu, Hui, Hui Qiu, Liu, Jing +13 more · 2025 · BioMed Central · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
Cell death is a basic physiological process involved in embryonic development, aging, immune responses and other life processes. In particular, ferroptosis
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12964-025-02447-x
Fe
MdS VERZA, P Soni, GR Duddukuri +646 more · 2025 · Oncology Research · added 2026-04-20
MdS VERZA, P Soni, GR Duddukuri, F Bray, M Laversanne, H Sung, J Ferlay, RL Siegel, I Soerjomataram, R Malhotra, N Manoharan, SS Deo, S Bhatnagar, JE Carroll, JE Bower, PA Ganz, B Li, H Ming, S Qin, EC Nice, J Dong, Z Du, C Swanton, E Bernard, C Abbosh, F André, J Auwerx, A Balmain, LCP Dharshini, RR Rasmi, C Kathirvelan, KM Kumar, KM Saradhadevi, KM Sakthivel, K Li, Z Deng, C Lei, X Ding, J Li, C Wang, M Neganova, J Liu, Y Aleksandrova, S Klochkov, R Fan, Y Ren, R Wang, S Weng, H Xu, Y Zhang, S Chen, FU Vaidya, A Sufiyan Chhipa, V Mishra, VK Gupta, SG Rawat, A Kumar, M Cai, XL Song, XA Li, M Chen, J Guo, DH Yang, D Dima, D Jiang, DJ Singh, M Hasipek, HS Shah, F Ullah, ET Bin, A Shahriar, AR Mahmud, T Rahman, MH Abir, MFR Siddiquee, S Milewska, K Niemirowicz-Laskowska, G Siemiaszko, P Nowicki, AZ Wilczewska, H Car, WMC van den Boogaard, DSJ Komninos, WP Vermeij, J Moon, I Kitty, K Renata, F Zhao, W Kim, N Chatterjee, GC Walker, R Huang, PK Zhou, FJ Groelly, M Fawkes, RA Dagg, AN Blackford, M Tarsounas, CJ Lord, A Ashworth, ZE Karanjawala, U Grawunder, CL Hsieh, MR Lieber, E Ryan, R Hollingworth, R Grand, US Srinivas, BWQ Tan, BA Vellayappan, AD Jeyasekharan, Y Baiken, D Kanayeva, S Taipakova, R Groisman, AA Ishchenko, D Begimbetova, L Sarmini, M Meabed, E Emmanouil, G Atsaves, E Robeska, BT Karwowski, S Neri, S Guidotti, C Bini, S Pelotti, S D’Adamo, M Minguzzi, T Murmann-Konda, A Soni, M Stuschke, G Iliakis, H Sies, VV Belousov, NS Chandel, MJ Davies, DP Jones, GE Mann, Y Wang, F Li, L Mao, Y Liu, AE Vendrov, MD Stevenson, A Lozhkin, T Hayami, NA Holland, X Yang, MT Keeney, EM Rocha, EK Hoffman, K Farmer, R Di Maio, J Weir, K Wu, AE El Zowalaty, VI Sayin, T Papagiannakopoulos, B Zhang, C Pan, C Feng, C Yan, Y Yu, Z Chen, JYS Lim, JQ Eu, AKMH Chan, BC Goh, L Wang, V Purohit, DM Simeone, CA Lyssiotis, MJ Iqbal, A Kabeer, Z Abbas, HA Siddiqui, D Calina, J Sharifi-Rad, V Shah, HY Lam, CHM Leong, R Sakaizawa, JS Shah, AP Kumar, X An, W Yu, D Tang, L Yang, X Chen, L Sun, N Ouyang, S Shafi, R Zhao, J Pan, L Hong, J Xie, Z Lai, X Zheng, H Liao, Y Xian, Q Li, JN Rana, S Mumtaz, EH Choi, I Han, D Averill-Bates, A Mohsin, K Haneef, A Ilyas, S Zarina, Z Hashim, N Sadeghi, G Boissonneault, M Tavalaee, MH Nasr-Esfahani, M Labrie, JS Brugge, GB Mills, IK Zervantonakis, C Glorieux, S Liu, D Trachootham, P Huang, B Farhood, M Najafi, E Salehi, N Hashemi Goradel, MS Nashtaei, N Khanlarkhani, KF Zahra, R Lefter, A Ali, EC Abdellah, C Trus, A Ciobica, M Wang, M Chang, C Li, Q Chen, Z Hou, B Xing, A O’Reilly, W Zhao, S Wickström, ESJ Arnér, R Kiessling, S Murakami, Y Kusano, K Okazaki, T Akaike, H Motohashi, F Chen, M Xiao, S Hu, MT Bayo Jimenez, K Frenis, O Hahad, S Steven, G Cohen, A Cuadrado, A Namani, Y Li, XJ Wang, X Tang, T Sengoku, M Shiina, K Suzuki, K Hamada, K Sato, A Uchiyama, M McMahon, N Thomas, K Itoh, M Yamamoto, JD Hayes, W Tian, M Rojo de la Vega, CJ Schmidlin, A Ooi, DD Zhang, Y Katoh, K Iida, MI Kang, A Kobayashi, M Mizukami, KI Tong, S Fourquet, R Guerois, D Biard, MB Toledano, A Raghunath, K Sundarraj, R Nagarajan, F Arfuso, J Bian, JW Kaspar, SK Niture, AK Jaiswal, MY Song, DY Lee, KS Chun, EH Kim, L Liang, M Matsumoto, K Iwata, A Umemura, F He, S Adinolfi, T Patinen, A Jawahar Deen, S Pitkänen, J Härkönen, E Kansanen, N Wakabayashi, T Ishii, K Igarashi, JD Engel, SC Lo, X Li, MT Henzl, LJ Beamer, M Hannink, YS Keum, B Choi, P Canning, FJ Sorrell, AN Bullock, T Clifford, JP Acton, SP Cocksedge, KAB Davies, SJ Bailey, M Thiruvengadam, B Venkidasamy, U Subramanian, R Samynathan, M Ali Shariati, M Rebezov, M Ruwali, R Shukla, M Hayashi, T Papgiannakopoulos, H Robertson, AT Dinkova-Kostova, K Taguchi, SB Lee, BN Sellers, GM DeNicola, YC Tang, YJ Chuang, HH Chang, SH Juang, GC Yen, JY Chang, S Kalthoff, U Ehmer, N Freiberg, MP Manns, CP Strassburg, JF Lin, ZX Liu, DL Chen, RZ Huang, F Cao, K Yu, Z Zhu, S Du, Y Du, J Ren, G Ying, Z Yan, C Biswas, N Shah, M Muthu, P La, AP Fernando, S Sengupta, FJ Lei, JY Chiang, HJ Chang, DC Chen, HL Wang, HA Yang, TW Kensler, L Baird, S Dayalan Naidu, TH Rushmore, MR Morton, CB Pickett, R Venugopal, P Nioi, T Chiba, S Takahashi, JL Xiao, HY Liu, CC Sun, CF Tang, W Tu, H Wang, S Li, Q Liu, H Sha, P Stenvinkel, CJ Meyer, GA Block, GM Chertow, PG Shiels, AV Ulasov, AA Rosenkranz, GP Georgiev, AS Sobolev, A Uruno, X Luo, X Zhu, Y Chen, B Xu, X Bai, DJ Schaer, N Schulthess-Lutz, L Baselgia, K Hansen, RM Buzzi, R Humar, X Wang, S Su, Y Zhu, X Cheng, C Cheng, L Chen, FV Reinema, FCGJ Sweep, GJ Adema, WJM Peeters, JWM Martens, J Bussink, D Karagiannis, W Wu, A Li, M Yip, C Gur, FM Kandemir, C Caglayan, E Satıcı, D Sapochnik, AR Raimondi, V Medina, J Naipauer, EA Mesri, O Coso, Y Pu, Y Tan, C Zang, C Cai, L Kong, HH Chen, JY Yao, YT Chen, A Sharma, AK Singh, AA Osman, E Arslan, M Bartels, C Michikawa, A Lindemann, K Tomczak, MA Skowron, G Niegisch, P Albrecht, G van Koeveringe, A Romano, P Albers, H Zhang, J Xu, Y Long, A Maimaitijiang, Z Su, W Li, IC Taritsa, ET Fossel, A Garufi, G Pistritto, V D’Orazi, M Cirone, G D’Orazi, K Lisek, E Campaner, Y Ciani, D Walerych, G Del Sal, A Nazari, P Osati, S Seifollahy Fakhr, F Faghihkhorasani, M Ghanaatian, X Gu, C Mu, R Zheng, Z Zhang, Q Zhang, T Liang, J Wang, J Yang, M Cao, Z Zhao, B Cao, S Yu, D Xue, X Zhou, J Qiu, X Hou, M Huang, J Jin, S Dastghaib, SM Shafiee, F Ramezani, N Ashtari, F Tabasi, J Saffari-Chaleshtori, M Oskomić, A Tomić, L Barbarić, A Matić, DC Kindl, M Matovina, MH Nguyen, NYT Nguyen, YS Chen, HT Nguyen Le, HT Vo, CH Yen, S Mirzaei, A Zarrabi, F Hashemi, A Zabolian, H Saleki, N Azami, L Lin, Q Wu, F Lu, J Lei, Y Zhou, J Krishnaraj, T Yamamoto, R Ohki, G Barrera, MA Cucci, M Grattarola, C Dianzani, G Muzio, S Pizzimenti, L Mosca, A Ilari, F Fazi, YG Assaraf, G Colotti, Z Wang, B Yang, Y Xie, Feng S ling, PY Yan, XJ Yao, XX Fan, L Gan, W Wang, J Jiang, K Tian, W Liu, Z Cao, S Karathedath, BM Rajamani, SM Musheer Aalam, A Abraham, S Varatharajan, P Krishnamurthy, C Monge, A Roetto, E Caputo, M Sorice, E Profumo, A Capozzi, S Recalchi, G Riitano, B Di Veroli, P Paramasivan, IH Kankia, SP Langdon, YY Deeni, R Srivastava, R Fernández-Ginés, JA Encinar, G Wells, P Wadowski, M Juszczak, K Woźniak, E Crisman, P Duarte, E Dauden, MI Rodríguez-Franco, MG López, D Zhang, KE Aldrich, L Lockwood, AL Odom, KT Liby, R Afjei, N Sadeghipour, SU Kumar, M Pandrala, V Kumar, SV Malhotra, K Gall Trošelj, M Tomljanović, M Jaganjac, T Matijević Glavan, A Čipak Gašparović, L Milković, M Poornashree, H Kumar, R Ajmeer, R Jain, V Jain, F Pouremamali, A Pouremamali, M Dadashpour, N Soozangar, F Jeddi, W Chen, Z Sun, T Jiang, Z Huang, D Fang, M Robert, BK Kennedy, KC Crasta, S Tao, A Lau, MS Joo, SB Shin, EJ Kim, HJ Koo, H Yim, SG Kim, X Liu, N Hu, RJ Mailloux, U Jakob, J Pi, JW Kupiec-Weglinski Show less
Cancer remains a major global health burden, with rising incidence and mortality linked to aging populations and increased exposure to genotoxic agents. Oxidative stress plays a critical role in cance Show more
Cancer remains a major global health burden, with rising incidence and mortality linked to aging populations and increased exposure to genotoxic agents. Oxidative stress plays a critical role in cancer development, progression, and resistance to therapy. The nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2)-Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (KEAP1)-antioxidant response element (ARE) signaling pathway is central to maintaining redox balance by regulating the expression of antioxidant and detoxification genes. Under physiological conditions, this pathway protects cells from oxidative damage, however, sustained activation of NRF2 in cancer, often due to mutations in KEAP1, supports tumor cell survival, drug resistance, and metabolic reprogramming. Recent studies demonstrate that NRF2 enhances glutathione (GSH) synthesis, induces detoxifying enzymes, and upregulates drug efflux transporters, collectively contributing to resistance against chemotherapy and targeted therapies. The inhibition of NRF2 using small molecules or dietary phytochemicals has shown promise in restoring drug sensitivity in preclinical cancer models. This review highlights the dual role of NRF2 in redox regulation and cancer therapy, emphasizing its potential as a therapeutic target. While targeting NRF2 offers a novel approach to overcoming treatment resistance, further research is needed to enhance specificity and facilitate clinical translation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.32604/or.2025.065755
ROS amino-acid anticancer review synthesis
Lu Tang, Xingyu Chang, Jing Shi +3 more · 2025 · European journal of medicinal chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Platinum-based drugs are a mainstay in chemotherapy, with traditional forms exerting their work directly on DNA. In recent years, it has been observed that platinum complexes had the potential to indu Show more
Platinum-based drugs are a mainstay in chemotherapy, with traditional forms exerting their work directly on DNA. In recent years, it has been observed that platinum complexes had the potential to induce immunogenic cell death (ICD) and effectively trigger antitumor immune responses. Herein, to obtain novel platinum complexes with chemo-immunological properties, a series of Pt(ΙΙ)-N-heterocyclic carbene (Pt(ΙΙ)-NHC) complexes derived from 4,5-diarylimidazoles were synthesized. Among them, the dominant complex 3f was proved to exhibit better anti-liver cancer capacity compared to cisplatin and oxaliplatin. Complex 3f showed the ability to cause DNA damage by binding to DNA. In addition, it triggered intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, affected the function of mitochondria, and blocked cells in G0/G1 phase, ultimately induced apoptosis in liver cancer cells. Furthermore, complex 3f activated endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) which promoted the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), induced ICD and dendritic cells (DCs) maturation. Interestingly, complex 3f also upregulated PD-L1, consequently converted "cold tumors" into "hot tumors". Overall, complex 3f had the potential to be regarded as a promising chemoimmunotherapy for the treatment of liver cancer. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2024.117014
DNA-binding NHC Pd Pt ROS anticancer immunogenic mitochondria
Yingying Yu, Qian Wang, Yanli Wei +9 more · 2025 · Virologica Sinica · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) are single-stranded negative-sense RNA viruses that continually challenge animal and human health. In IAV-infected cells, host RNA-binding proteins play key roles in the lif Show more
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) are single-stranded negative-sense RNA viruses that continually challenge animal and human health. In IAV-infected cells, host RNA-binding proteins play key roles in the life cycle of IAV by directly binding to viral RNA. Here, we examined the role of the host RNA-binding protein nucleophosmin-1 (NPM1) in IAV replication. We found that, as a nucleolar phosphoprotein, NPM1 directly binds to viral RNA (vRNA) and inhibits the replication of various subtypes of IAV. NPM1 binding to vRNA competitively reduces the assembly of the viral ribonucleoprotein complex and the viral polymerase activity, thereby reducing the generation of progeny viral RNA and virions. The RNA-binding activity of NPM1, with the key residues T199, T219, T234, and T237, is essential for its anti-influenza function. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that NPM1 acts as an RNA-binding protein and interacts with IAV vRNA to suppress viral replication. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.virs.2025.04.007
amino-acid
Yaxi Wang, Junliang Liu, Jinxuan He +3 more · 2025 · Chemical Communications · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Hydrogen bonding is crucial in the self-assembly of energetic materials. However, such dynamic networks suffer from selectivity difficulties and are susceptible to interference from the multip Show more
Hydrogen bonding is crucial in the self-assembly of energetic materials. However, such dynamic networks suffer from selectivity difficulties and are susceptible to interference from the multiple assembly components. In this work, we proposed a polyamino energetic framework 2,5,6,9-tetraamino-pyrazino[2,3-d]pyridazine (TPP). With the tetraamino-driven hydrogen-bonded networks, selective self-assembly can be achieved. Several self-assembled materials were texted, and TPP-HClO4 was found to exhibit an overall performance superior to that of the benchmark heat-resistant explosive hexanitrostilbene (HNS). Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D5CC02653A
coordination chemistry energetic materials energetic performance hexanitrostilbene (hns) hydrogen bonding pyrazino[2,3-d]pyridazine self-assembly supramolecular
Sadeem Qdaisat, Brandon Wummer, Brian D Stover +38 more · 2025 · Nature biomedical engineering · Nature · added 2026-04-20
The success of cancer immunotherapies is predicated on the targeting of highly expressed neoepitopes, which preferentially favours malignancies with high mutational burden. Here we show that early res Show more
The success of cancer immunotherapies is predicated on the targeting of highly expressed neoepitopes, which preferentially favours malignancies with high mutational burden. Here we show that early responses by type-I interferons mediate the success of immune checkpoint inhibitors as well as epitope spreading in poorly immunogenic tumours and that these interferon responses can be enhanced via systemic administration of lipid particles loaded with RNA coding for tumour-unspecific antigens. In mice, the immune responses of tumours sensitive to checkpoint inhibitors were transferable to resistant tumours and resulted in heightened immunity with antigenic spreading that protected the animals from tumour rechallenge. Our findings show that the resistance of tumours to immunotherapy is dictated by the absence of a damage response, which can be restored by boosting early type-I interferon responses to enable epitope spreading and self-amplifying responses in treatment-refractory tumours. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41551-025-01380-1
immunogenic
L. Volpicella, G. Punzi, V. Porcelli +494 more · 2025 · Biomolecules · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
L. Volpicella, G. Punzi, V. Porcelli, N. Gambacorta, L. Trisolini, C.L. Pierri, A. De Grassi, D.M. Muoio, R.C. Noland, J.P. Kovalik, S.E. Seiler, M.N. Davies, K.L. Debalsi, O.R. Ilkayeva, R.D. Stevens, I. Kheterpal, J. Zhang, J. Hsu, N. Fatuzzo, N. Weng, W. Michno, W. Dong, M. Kienle, Y. Dai, A. Pasca, M. Abu-Remaileh, N. Rasgon, R.R. Ramsay, R.D. Gandour, F.R. van der Leij, M.A.K. Westin, M.C. Hunt, S.E.H. Alexson, O.J. Martin, D.H. Slentz, J. An, C.B. Newgard, T.R. Koves, K.H. Fisher-Wellman, C.-T. Lin, T.E. Ryan, L.R. Reese, L.A.A. Gilliam, B.L. Cathey, D.S. Lark, C.D. Smith, P.D. Neufer, J.R. Gooding, K.E. Wong, A.H. Wittmann, L. Lindeboom, L. Kjalarsdottir, J.W. Thompson, L.G. Dubois, M.J. Brosnan, T.P. Rolph, P.A. Grimsrud, V. Mezhnina, R. Pearce, A. Poe, N. Velingkaar, A. Astafev, O.P. Ebeigbe, K. Makwana, Y. Sandlers, R.V. Kondratov, M.A.B. Melone, A. Valentino, S. Margarucci, U. Galderisi, A. Giordano, G. Peluso, N.D. Amoedo, S. Sarlak, E. Obre, P. Esteves, H. Bégueret, Y. Kieffer, B. Rousseau, A. Dupis, J. Izotte, N. Bellance, N. Giangregorio, A. Tonazzi, G. Incampo, V. Tragni, C. Indiveri, G. Fiermonte, E. Paradies, S. Todisco, C.M.T. Marobbio, F. Palmieri, T. Haitina, J. Lindblom, T. Renström, R. Fredriksson, A. Vozza, F. De Leonardis, G. Parisi, F.M. Lasorsa, L. Muto, L. Capobianco, G. Agrimi, A. Russo, P. Scarcia, V.A. Zammit, G. Jogl, L. Tong, A.C. Rufer, R. Thoma, M. Hennig, Y.S. Hsiao, I. Lasheras-Otero, I. Feliu, A. Maillo, H. Moreno, M. Redondo-Muñoz, P. Aldaz, A. Bocanegra, A. Olias-Arjona, F. Lecanda, J. Fernandez-Irigoyen, B. Musio, V. Pesce, M.M. Cavalluzzi, G. Petrosillo, G. La Piana, M.N. Sgobba, N. Schlosserová, L. Cafferati Beltrame, R. Di Lorenzo, G. Primiano, A. Tummolo, G. Paterno, R. Gorgoglione, M. Volpicella, V. Iacobazzi, V. Infantino, P. Convertini, L. Console, C. Lanave, C. Saccone, S.M. Houten, R.J.A. Wanders, D. Lacombe, R. Rossignol, C. Caggese, D. D’Elia, G. Pesole, M. Montaruli, L. Laera, F. Colella, V. Scaglione, S. Barile, A.L. Francavilla, D.I. De Luca, X. Wang, C. Yang, C. Huang, W. Wang, G. Chen, B. Bao, Y. Cheng, M. Tian, J. Song, L. Zheng, Q. Tong, R. Vishwa, B. BharathwajChetty, S. Girisa, B.S. Aswani, M.S. Alqahtani, M. Abbas, M. Hegde, A.B. Kunnumakkara, L.T.M. Le, J.R. Thompson, P.X. Dang, J. Bhandari, A. Alam, K. Zacharowski, B. Blackburn, C. Thiemermann, R. Shi, Y. Zhang, Y. Shi, S. Shi, L. Jiang, K. Jaudzems, J. Kuka, A. Gutsaits, K. Zinovjevs, I. Kalvinsh, E. Liepinsh, M. Dambrova, M. Tsoko, F. Beauseigneur, J. Gresti, I. Niot, J. Demarquoy, J. Boichot, J. Bezard, L. Rochette, P. Clouet, M. Kuwajima, H. Harashima, M. Hayashi, S. Ise, M. Sei, K.-m. Lu, H. Kiwada, Y. Sugiyama, K. Shima, D.L. Jenkins, O.W. Griffith, L.T. Izzo, S. Trefely, C. Demetriadou, J.M. Drummond, T. Mizukami, N. Kuprasertkul, A.T. Farria, P.T.T. Nguyen, N. Murali, L. Reich, H. Mao, A. Angelini, S. Li, G. Wang, L. Li, C. Patterson, X. Pi, L. Xie, A.G. Cordente, E. López-Viñas, M.I. Vázquez, P. Gómez-Puertas, G. Asins, D. Serra, F.G. Hegardt, L. Govindasamy, T. Kukar, W. Lian, B. Pedersen, Y. Gu, M. Agbandje-McKenna, S. Jin, R. McKenna, D. Wu, A.R. Kim, R.J. Rylett, B.H. Shilton, Y. Cai, C.N. Cronin, A.G. Engel, K. Ohno, L.B. Hersh, D.W. Rodgers, J.D. McGarry, N.F. Brown, A. Mattevi, A.M. Waterhouse, J.B. Procter, D.M.A. Martin, M. Clamp, G.J. Barton, M.A. Larkin, G. Blackshields, N.P. Brown, R. Chenna, P.A. McGettigan, H. McWilliam, F. Valentin, I.M. Wallace, A. Wilm, R. Lopez, J.F. Chase, S. Violante, L. Ijlst, J. Ruiter, J. Koster, H. van Lenthe, M. Duran, I.T. de Almeida, F.V. Ventura, P.K. Tubbs, M. Morillas, B. Rubí, J. Clotet, J. Ariño, A. Valencia, K. Kashfi, R.L. Mynatt, E.A. Park, G.A. Cook, R.J. Wanders, W.L. Delano, S. Bromberg, A.C. Wallace, R.A. Laskowski, J.M. Thornton, T.R. Altamimi, P.D. Thomas, A.M. Darwesh, N. Fillmore, M.U. Mahmoud, L. Zhang, A. Gupta, R. Al Batran, J.M. Seubert, G.D. Lopaschuk, M.A. Schroeder, H.J. Atherton, M.S. Dodd, P. Lee, L.E. Cochlin, G.K. Radda, K. Clarke, D.J. Tyler, A. Pop, M. Williams, E.A. Struys, M. Monné, E.E.W. Jansen, W.A. Kanhai, M.R.F. Ojeda, A. Tessa, C. Dionisi-Vici, M.R. Baumgartner, Y.H. Chien, C. Loguercio, H.O. De Baulny, M.-C. Nassogne, M. Schiff, R. Wibom, V. Töhönen, M. Barbaro, F.H. Sterky, T. Kucinski, K. Naess, M. Jonsson, S. Edvardson, C. Jalas, D. Soiferman, Y. Kellner, A. Shaag, S.H. Korman, N.D. Fraenkel, M. Ruggiu, M.F. Hossain, A. Menga, A. Castegna, F. Invernizzi, S. Baratta, R. Pons, W. Chung, B. Garavaglia, A. Ribes, R. Parini, M.D. Huertas, M.A. Shahroor, I. Dweikat, M.A. Di Noia, M. Gur, G. Agostino, T. Rinaldi, G. Gasparre, A. Onofrio, G. Redavid, A. Santarsiero, N.C. Williams, D. Iacobazzi, G. De Stefano, L.A.J. O’Neill, X. Li, F. Zhao, Z. Zhao, X. Zhao, H. Meng, D. Zhang, S. Zhao, M. Ding, C. Amat di San Filippo, M.R.G. Taylor, L. Mestroni, L.D. Botto, N. Longo, K. Gotvaldová, J. Špačková, K. Smolková, G. Benard, F. Furt, H. Begueret, E. Passerieux, J.P. Delage, J.M. Baste, P. Moreau, J. Novotný, K. Baslarová, P. Ježek, L. Rossmeislová, J. Gojda, E.M. Palmieri, R. Holewinski, C.L. McGinity, N. Maio, J.M. Weiss, K.M. Miranda, T.A. Rouault, T. Andresson, S. Sharma, X. Sun, S. Agarwal, R. Rafikov, S. Dasarathy, S. Kumar, S.M. Black, J.M. Rutkowsky, T.A. Knotts, K.D. Ono-Moore, C.S. McCoin, S. Huang, D. Schneider, S. Singh, S.H. Adams, D.H. Hwang, L. Amadori, C. Calcagno, D.M. Fernandez, S. Koplev, N. Fernandez, R. Kaur, P. Mury, N.S. Khan, S. Sajja, R. Shamailova, A. Ta-Shma, P. Stepensky, S. Zenvirt, O. Elpeleg, A.J.J.T. Rein, T. Hu, C.H. Liu, M. Lei, Q. Zeng, H. Tang, N. Zhang, C. Garcia, C.J. Andersen, C.N. Blesso, M. Wang, K. Wang, X. Liao, H. Hu, L. Chen, L. Meng, W. Gao, Q. Li, G. Ghilardi, L. Paruzzo, J. Svoboda, E.A. Chong, A.A. Shestov, I.J. Cohen, G. Gabrielli, S.D. Nasta, P. Porazzi, J.B. Baell, J.W.M. Nissink, N. Wiedemar, D.A. Hauser, P. Mäser, M. Favia, A. Muscella, L. Guerra, C. Jose, T. Zhao, X. Mu, Q. You, A.D.R. Campos-Contreras, M. Díaz-Muñoz, F.G. Vázquez-Cuevas, L. Nicassio, F. Fracasso, G. Sirago, C. Musicco, A. Picca, E. Marzetti, R. Calvani, P. Cantatore, M.N. Gadaleta, P. Cassano, A.M.S. Lezza, V. Capelli, A.M. Timperio, M. Calvani, L. Mosconi Show less
Carnitine O-acetyltransferase (CRAT) is a key mitochondrial enzyme involved in maintaining metabolic homeostasis by mediating the reversible transfer of acetyl groups between acetyl-CoA and carnitine. Show more
Carnitine O-acetyltransferase (CRAT) is a key mitochondrial enzyme involved in maintaining metabolic homeostasis by mediating the reversible transfer of acetyl groups between acetyl-CoA and carnitine. This enzymatic activity ensures the optimal functioning of mitochondrial carbon flux by preventing acetyl-CoA accumulation, buffering metabolic flexibility, and regulating the balance between fatty acid and glucose oxidation. CRAT’s interplay with the mitochondrial carnitine shuttle, involving carnitine palmitoyltransferases (CPT1 and CPT2) and the carnitine carrier (SLC25A20), underscores its critical role in energy metabolism. Emerging evidence highlights the structural and functional diversity of CRAT and structurally related acetyltransferases across cellular compartments, illustrating their coordinated role in lipid metabolism, amino acid catabolism, and mitochondrial bioenergetics. Moreover, the structural insights into CRAT have paved the way for understanding its regulation and identifying potential modulators with therapeutic applications for diseases such as diabetes, mitochondrial disorders, and cancer. This review examines CRAT’s structural and functional aspects, its relationships with carnitine shuttle members and other carnitine acyltransferases, and its broader role in metabolic health and disease. The potential for targeting CRAT and its associated pathways offers promising avenues for therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring metabolic equilibrium and addressing metabolic dysfunction in disease states. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/biom15020216
amino-acid mitochondria review
H Zhou, J Ferlay, RL Siegel +660 more · 2025 · Oncology Reports · added 2026-04-20
H Zhou, J Ferlay, RL Siegel, M Laversanne, I Soerjomataram, A Jemal, F Bray, PS Steeg, KD Miller, HE Fuchs, FX Xu, YL Zhang, JJ Liu, DD Zhang, HB Chen, K Saxena, MK Jolly, JA Bertout, SA Patel, MC Simon, X Meng, FM Kong, J Yu, A Challapalli, L Carroll, EO Aboagye, DC Hinshaw, LA Shevde, P Desai, N Takahashi, R Kumar, S Nichols, J Malin, A Hunt, C Schultz, Y Cao, D Tillo, D Nousome, FF Tam, KL Ning, M Lee, JM Dumlao, JC Choy, AA Tirpe, D Gulei, SM Ciortea, C Crivii, I Berindan-Neagoe, EB Rankin, AJ Giaccia, GN Masoud, W Li, Y Della Rocca, L Fonticoli, TS Rajan, O Trubiani, S Caputi, F Diomede, J Pizzicannella, GD Marconi, SG Zeng, X Lin, JC Liu, J Zhou, RY Hapke, SM Haake, S Musleh Ud Din, SG Streit, BT Huynh, C Hana, AN Abraham, A Hussein, S Liu, Y Zhan, J Luo, J Feng, J Lu, H Zheng, Q Wen, S Fan, C Wang, S Xu, X Yang, W Luo, H Hu, R Chang, J Zhong, M Knabel, R O'Meally, RN Cole, A Pandey, GL Semenza, Y Wei, D Wang, F Jin, Z Bian, L Li, H Liang, M Li, L Shi, C Pan, D Zhu, X Ji, R Zhu, C Gao, H Xie, X Gong, H Jiang, H Zhao, M Zhang, Y He, X Li, Y Xu, X Liu, S Jiang, R Wang, H Yan, L Jin, X Dou, D Chen, V Becker, X Yuan, AS Boewe, E Ampofo, E Ebert, J Hohneck, RM Bohle, E Meese, Y Zhao, MD Menger, J Zhao, CR Qiao, Z Ding, YL Sheng, XN Li, Y Yang, DY Zhu, CY Zhang, DL Liu, K Wu, S Zhao, C Han, Y Zhang, F Liu, J Ren, HL Yin, HW Xu, QY Lin, RD Leone, JD Powell, Z Yu, J Zou, F Xu, J Jin, G Yu, J Gu, S Yang, X Wang, Y Wu, J Wei, J Xu, AL Jackson, B Zhou, WY Kim, KL Eales, KER Hollinshead, DA Tennant, E Dai, W Wang, Y Li, D Ye, R Courtnay, DC Ngo, N Malik, K Ververis, SM Tortorella, TC Karagiannis, F Luo, N Yan, S Li, G Cao, Q Cheng, Q Xia, H Wang, S Shang, MZ Wang, Z Xing, N He, H Nisar, PM Sanchidrián González, M Brauny, FM Labonté, C Schmitz, MD Roggan, B Konda, CE Hellweg, Z Guo, L Hu, Q Wang, Y Wang, XP Liu, C Chen, W Hu, X Zhang, C Liang, C Wu, S Wan, L Xu, S Wang, J Wang, X Huang, C Zhang, L Zhou, Y Du, C Li, H Ren, L Zheng, PE Porporato, N Filigheddu, JMB Pedro, G Kroemer, L Galluzzi, OT Brustugun, RX Huang, PK Zhou, H Chen, Z Han, Q Luo, Q Li, H Zuo, L Gong, C Liu, S Han, T Zhou, LY Zhang, JZ He, ZM Miao, YY Li, YM Zhang, ZW Liu, SZ Zhang, Y Chen, GC Zhou, YQ Liu, LH Gray, AD Conger, M Ebert, S Hornsey, OC Scott, AB Herrera-Campos, E Zamudio-Martinez, D Delgado-Bellido, M Fernández-Cortés, LM Montuenga, FJ Oliver, A Garcia-Diaz, Q Guo, F Lan, X Yan, Z Xiao, Q Zhang, S Roy, S Kumaravel, A Sharma, CL Duran, KJ Bayless, S Chakraborty, CY Hu, CF Hung, PC Chen, JY Hsu, CT Wang, MD Lai, YS Tsai, AL Shiau, GS Shieh, CL Wu, A Mancino, T Schioppa, P Larghi, F Pasqualini, M Nebuloni, IH Chen, S Sozzani, JM Austyn, A Mantovani, A Sica, X Peng, J Huang, Y Tao, HK Eltzschig, LF Thompson, J Karhausen, RJ Cotta, JC Ibla, SC Robson, SP Colgan, J Li, L Wang, X Chen, Y Ping, L Huang, D Yue, Z Zhang, F Wang, SM An, HM Lei, XP Ding, F Sun, YB Tang, HZ Chen, Y Shen, L Zhu, A Kogita, Y Togashi, H Hayashi, S Sogabe, M Terashima, MA De Velasco, K Sakai, Y Fujita, S Tomida, Y Takeyama, S Karan, MY Cho, H Lee, HS Park, M Sundararajan, JL Sessler, KS Hong, MHY Cheng, Y Mo, G Zheng, LC Clark, R Wolf, D Granger, Z Taylor, X Sun, G Niu, N Chan, B Shen, MV Shirmanova, MM Lukina, MA Sirotkina, LE Shimolina, VV Dudenkova, NI Ignatova, S Tobita, VI Shcheslavskiy, EV Zagaynova, JM Vanderkooi, G Maniara, TJ Green, DF Wilson, CJ Koch, SM Evans, MR Horsman, BS Sørensen, M Busk, DW Siemann, C Huang, J Liang, X Lei, X Xu, L Luo, X Hu, J Gou, W Lin, F Yang, C Liao, D Nasri, R Manwar, A Kaushik, EE Er, K Avanaki, KA Krohn, JM Link, RP Mason, JR Brender, Y Saida, N Devasahayam, MC Krishna, S Kishimoto, I Godet, S Doctorman, F Wu, DM Gilkes, K Matsumoto, JB Mitchell, W Qin, C Xu, C Yu, S Shen, W Huang, DS Vikram, JL Zweier, P Kuppusamy, B Epel, MK Bowman, C Mailer, HJ Halpern, B Hao, H Dong, R Xiong, C Song, N Li, Q Geng, R Zhang, L Lai, J He, D You, W Duan, X Dong, Y Zhu, L Lin, C Ostheimer, M Bache, A Güttler, M Kotzsch, D Vordermark, A Giatromanolaki, AL Harris, AH Banham, CA Contrafouris, MI Koukourakis, H Geng, L Chen, S Lv, SJ Kim, ZN Rabbani, RT Vollmer, EG Schreiber, E Oosterwijk, MW Dewhirst, Z Vujaskovic, MJ Kelley, D Coppola, M Szabo, D Boulware, P Muraca, M Alsarraj, AF Chambers, TJ Yeatman, T Reese, K Stępień, RP Ostrowski, E Matyja, SW Kim, IK Kim, JH Ha, CD Yeo, HH Kang, JW Kim, SH Lee, O Thews, P Vaupel, M Heyboer, D Sharma, W Santiago, N McCulloch, LW Jones, BL Viglianti, JA Tashjian, SM Kothadia, ST Keir, SJ Freedland, MQ Potter, EJ Moon, T Schroeder, JE Herndon, S Jo, J Jeon, G Park, HK Do, J Kang, KJ Ahn, SY Ma, YM Choi, D Kim, B Youn, Y Ki, P Ghosh, C Vidal, S Dey, L Zhang, TM Ashton, WG McKenna, LA Kunz-Schughart, GS Higgins, B Kalyanaraman, G Cheng, M Hardy, M You, M Shameem, AJ Bagherpoor, A Nakhi, P Dosa, G Georg, F Kassie, M Skwarski, DR McGowan, E Belcher, F Di Chiara, D Stavroulias, M McCole, JL Derham, KY Chu, E Teoh, J Chauhan, M Benej, X Hong, S Vibhute, S Scott, J Wu, E Graves, QT Le, AC Koong, B Yu, S Sohoni, T Wang, SP Kalainayakan, PC Konduri, A Ashrafi, P Modareszadeh, N Salamat, PS Alemi, E Berisha, TW Secomb, V Sukhatme, G Bouche, L Meheus, VP Sukhatme, P Pantziarka, BJT Reymen, MW van Gisbergen, AJG Even, CML Zegers, M Das, E Vegt, JE Wildberger, FM Mottaghy, A Yaromina, LJ Dubois, PP Wong, N Bodrug, KM Hodivala-Dilke, S Guelfi, K Hodivala-Dilke, G Bergers, C Wigerup, S Påhlman, D Bexell, Y Xia, HK Choi, K Lee, L Iommarini, AM Porcelli, G Gasparre, I Kurelac, N Albadari, S Deng, J Ma, K Cao, X Ling, P Zhang, J Zhu, H Deng, P Li, Q Hang, Y Jin, M Chen, MS Lara, CM Blakely, JW Riess, H Zhu, S Zhang, W Tian, C Cao, L Shu, A Mahdi, B Darvishi, K Majidzadeh-A, M Salehi, L Farahmand, Z Xie, T Zou, JL Bryant, SL Meredith, KJ Williams, A White, WR Wilson, MP Hay, SX Chen, J Zhang, F Xue, W Liu, Y Kuang, B Gu, S Song, F Shepherd, G Koschel, J Von Pawel, U Gatzmeier, N Van Zandwiyk, P Woll, R Van Klavren, P Krasko, P Desimone, M Nicolson, L Marcu, I Olver, K Graham, E Unger, D Lindsay, CM Garvey, SM Mumenthaler, J Foo, C Meaney, GG Powathil, P Lambin, M Kohandel, BT Oronsky, SJ Knox, JJ Scicinski, B Oronsky, J Scicinski, S Ning, D Peehl, A Oronsky, P Cabrales, M Bednarski, S Knox, L Zhao, C Shen, Y Luo, X Hou, Y Qi, Z Huang, L Gao, M Wu, Y Zhou, X Feng, Z Wu, X Rao, R Zhou, R Meng, P Dey, R Das, S Chatterjee, R Paul, U Ghosh, Y Demizu, O Fujii, H Iwata, N Fuwa, SM Bentzen, V Gregoire, G Meijer, J Steenhuijsen, M Bal, K De Jaeger, D Schuring, J Theuws Show less
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is one of the most prevalent and lethal types of cancers worldwide and its high incidence and mortality rates pose a significant public health challenge. Despite sig Show more
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is one of the most prevalent and lethal types of cancers worldwide and its high incidence and mortality rates pose a significant public health challenge. Despite significant advances in targeted therapy and immunotherapy, the overall prognosis of patients with NSCLC remains poor. Hypoxia is a critical driving factor in tumor progression, influencing the biological behavior of tumor cells through complex molecular mechanisms. The present review systematically examined the role of the hypoxic microenvironment in NSCLC, demonstrating its crucial role in promoting tumor cell growth, invasion and metastasis. Additionally, it has been previously reported that the hypoxic microenvironment enhances tumor cell resistance by activating hypoxia-inducible factor and regulating exosome secretion. The hypoxic microenvironment also enables tumor cells to adapt to low oxygen and nutrient-deficient conditions by enhancing metabolic reprogramming, such as through upregulating glycolysis. Further studies have shown that the hypoxic microenvironment facilitates immune escape by modulating tumor-associated immune cells and suppressing the antitumor response of the immune system. Moreover, the hypoxic microenvironment increases tumor resistance to radiotherapy, chemotherapy and other types of targeted therapy through various pathways, significantly reducing the therapeutic efficacy of these treatments. Therefore, it could be suggested that early detection of cellular hypoxia and targeted therapy based on hypoxia may offer new therapeutic approaches for patients with NSCLC. The present review not only deepened the current understanding of the mechanisms of action and role of the hypoxic microenvironment in NSCLC but also provided a solid theoretical basis for the future development of precision treatments for patients with NSCLC. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3892/or.2024.8862
anticancer review
Jianfeng He, Yongyi Zhu, Zichao Tian +15 more · 2025 · Molecular cell · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Z-DNA-binding protein 1 (ZBP1; also known as DAI or DLM-1) regulates cell death and inflammation by sensing left-handed double-helical nucleic acids, including Z-RNA and Z-DNA. However, the physiologi Show more
Z-DNA-binding protein 1 (ZBP1; also known as DAI or DLM-1) regulates cell death and inflammation by sensing left-handed double-helical nucleic acids, including Z-RNA and Z-DNA. However, the physiological conditions that generate Z-form nucleic acids (Z-NAs) and activate ZBP1-dependent signaling pathways remain largely elusive. In this study, we developed a probe, Zα-mFc, that specifically detected both Z-DNA and Z-RNA. Utilizing this probe, we discovered that inhibiting spliceosome causes nuclear accumulation of Z-RNA:DNA hybrids, which are sensed by ZBP1 via its Zα domains, triggering apoptosis and necroptosis in mammalian cells. Furthermore, we solved crystal structures of the human or mouse Zα1 domain complexed with a 6-bp RNA:DNA hybrid, revealing that the RNA:DNA hybrid adopts a left-handed conformation. Our findings demonstrate that the spliceosome acts as a checkpoint preventing accumulation of Z-RNA:DNA hybrids, which potentially function as endogenous ligands activating ZBP1-dependent cell death pathways. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2025.04.004
DNA-binding X-ray amino-acid
Yifei Pan, Junlin Lei, Shiqi Mou +7 more · 2025 · Journal of the American Chemical Society · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Biomolecular condensates exhibit distinct microenvironments that arise from interactions between proteins, RNA, and solutions. In aqueous solutions, these membraneless structures constantly encounter Show more
Biomolecular condensates exhibit distinct microenvironments that arise from interactions between proteins, RNA, and solutions. In aqueous solutions, these membraneless structures constantly encounter small molecules that could affect the structure and properties of the condensates. However, the effects of organic small molecules in water solutions on the microenvironments of condensates remain poorly understood. In this study, we used various organic solutes as an example to explore how small molecules could influence the physicochemical properties in the microenvironment of protein condensates. Particularly, we quantitatively studied micropolarity and microviscosity using a combination of techniques, including fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, and passive rheology. Unexpectedly, our results revealed that the microenvironment was not correlated with the polarity of organic solutes; instead, the correlation was observed on the interaction strength between water and small molecules. We found that solutes with stronger interaction with water and weaker interaction with proteins increase the micropolarity and decrease the microviscosity of condensates. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the modulation of the micropolarity of condensates could impact the miscibility of multicomponent condensates. Finally, we showed that organic solutes could influence the micropolarity of condensates and the partitioning of products in condensates, thus affecting the rate and equilibrium of the chemical reactions. In summary, our work provides a quantitative analysis of how the microenvironment of biomolecular condensates is impacted by organic solutes. Since protein condensates coexist with various types of metabolites in the aqueous cellular milieu, results from this work offer insights into how organic metabolites could regulate the microenvironment and behaviors of biological condensates. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c04180
biomolecular condensates fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy fluorescence recovery after photobleaching influence on physicochemical properties microenvironment micropolarity microviscosity modulation of microenvironment
Dandan Zhang, Mengshan Li, A.F.M. Motiur Rahman +2 more · 2025 · Journal of Molecular Structure · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.molstruc.2024.140044
Biometal
Yunli Xu, Xuwen Da, Lei Wang +7 more · 2025 · Chinese Chemical Letters · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.cclet.2024.110168
Biometal
Panpan Wang, Hongbao Fang, Mengmeng Wang +5 more · 2025 · Chinese Chemical Letters · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.cclet.2024.110099
Biometal
Jingyue Zhao, Xiangyu Dai, Mengdi Lv +5 more · 2025 · Inorganica Chimica Acta · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2025.122601
Biometal
Qiying Feng, Lin Zhou, Shuang Tian +2 more · 2025 · Transition Metal Chemistry · Springer · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11243-025-00642-w
Biometal
Zejing Chen, Qingchao Tu, Peiling Dai +8 more · 2025 · Journal of Organometallic Chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jorganchem.2025.123750
Biometal
Jianxiong Du, Ling Wang, Lei Wu +3 more · 2025 · Cell Reports Physical Science · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.xcrp.2025.102592
Biometal
Feng Chen, Kelun Cui, Shufen Si +6 more · 2025 · Inorganica Chimica Acta · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2025.122537
Biometal
Xin Chen, Andrey S. Tsvetkov, Han-Ming Shen +66 more · 2024 · Autophagy · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-20
Macroautophagy/autophagy is a complex degradation process with a dual role in cell death that is influenced by the cell types that are involved and the stressors they are exposed to. Ferroptosis is an Show more
Macroautophagy/autophagy is a complex degradation process with a dual role in cell death that is influenced by the cell types that are involved and the stressors they are exposed to. Ferroptosis is an iron-dependent oxidative form of cell death characterized by unrestricted lipid peroxidation in the context of heterogeneous and plastic mechanisms. Recent studies have shed light on the involvement of specific types of autophagy (e.g. ferritinophagy, lipophagy, and clockophagy) in initiating or executing ferroptotic cell death through the selective degradation of anti-injury proteins or organelles. Conversely, other forms of selective autophagy (e.g. reticulophagy and lysophagy) enhance the cellular defense against ferroptotic damage. Dysregulated autophagy-dependent ferroptosis has implications for a diverse range of pathological conditions. This review aims to present an updated definition of autophagy-dependent ferroptosis, discuss influential substrates and receptors, outline experimental methods, and propose guidelines for interpreting the results.Abbreviation: 3-MA:3-methyladenine; 4HNE: 4-hydroxynonenal; ACD: accidentalcell death; ADF: autophagy-dependentferroptosis; ARE: antioxidant response element; BH2:dihydrobiopterin; BH4: tetrahydrobiopterin; BMDMs: bonemarrow-derived macrophages; CMA: chaperone-mediated autophagy; CQ:chloroquine; DAMPs: danger/damage-associated molecular patterns; EMT,epithelial-mesenchymal transition; EPR: electronparamagnetic resonance; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; FRET: Försterresonance energy transfer; GFP: green fluorescent protein;GSH: glutathione;IF: immunofluorescence; IHC: immunohistochemistry; IOP, intraocularpressure; IRI: ischemia-reperfusion injury; LAA: linoleamide alkyne;MDA: malondialdehyde; PGSK: Phen Green™ SK;RCD: regulatedcell death; PUFAs: polyunsaturated fatty acids; RFP: red fluorescentprotein;ROS: reactive oxygen species; TBA: thiobarbituricacid; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; TEM:transmission electron microscopy. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2024.2319901
Fe
Yi Li, Ben Liu, Yue Zheng +6 more · 2024 · Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Title: Photoinduction of Ferroptosis and cGAS-STING Activation by a H Abstract: Triggering ferroptosis represents a promising anticancer therapeutic strategy, but the development of a selective ferro Show more
Title: Photoinduction of Ferroptosis and cGAS-STING Activation by a H Abstract: Triggering ferroptosis represents a promising anticancer therapeutic strategy, but the development of a selective ferroptosis inducer for cancer-specific therapy remains a great challenge. Herein, a H2S-responsive iridium(III) complex NA-Ir has been well-designed as a ferroptosis inducer. NA-Ir could selectively light up H2S-rich cancer cells, primarily localize in mitochondria, intercalate into mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and induce mtDNA damage, exhibiting higher anticancer activity under light irradiation. Mechanistic studies showed that NA-Ir-mediated PDT triggered lipid peroxidation and glutathione peroxidase 4 downregulation through ROS production and GSH depletion, resulting in ferroptosis through multiple pathways. Moreover, the intense mtDNA damage can activate the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-stimulator of the interferon gene (cGAS-STING) pathway, leading to ferritinophagy and further ferroptosis. RNA-sequencing analysis showed that NA-Ir-mediated PDT mainly affects the expression of genes related to ferroptosis, autophagy, and cancer immunity. This study demonstrates the first cancer-specific example with ferroptosis and cGAS-STING activation, which provides a new strategy for multimodal synergistic therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c01065
Biometal Fe Ir
Yu-Qing Jin, Hang Yuan, Ya-Fang Liu +7 more · 2024 · MedComm · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
In the past, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) was recognized as a toxic and dangerous gas; in recent years, with increased research, we have discovered that H2S can act as an endogenous regulatory transmitter. Show more
In the past, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) was recognized as a toxic and dangerous gas; in recent years, with increased research, we have discovered that H2S can act as an endogenous regulatory transmitter. In mammals, H2S-catalyzing enzymes, such as cystathionine-β-synthase, cystathionine-γ-lyase, and 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase, are differentially expressed in a variety of tissues and affect a variety of biological functions, such as transcriptional and posttranslational modification of genes, activation of signaling pathways in the cell, and metabolic processes in tissues, by producing H2S. Various preclinical studies have shown that H2S affects physiological and pathological processes in the body. However, a detailed systematic summary of these roles in health and disease is lacking. Therefore, this review provides a thorough overview of the physiological roles of H2S in different systems and the diseases associated with disorders of H2S metabolism, such as ischemia-reperfusion injury, hypertension, neurodegenerative diseases, inflammatory bowel disease, and cancer. Meanwhile, this paper also introduces H2S donors and novel release modes, as well as the latest preclinical experimental results, aiming to provide researchers with new ideas to discover new diagnostic targets and therapeutic options. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/mco2.661
review
Wei Gao, Ya-Fang Liu, Yan-Xia Zhang +7 more · 2024 · Cell Death Discovery · Nature · added 2026-04-20
For a long time, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) has been considered a toxic compound, but recent studies have found that H2S is the third gaseous signaling molecule which plays a vital role in physiological a Show more
For a long time, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) has been considered a toxic compound, but recent studies have found that H2S is the third gaseous signaling molecule which plays a vital role in physiological and pathological conditions. Currently, a large number of studies have shown that H2S mediates apoptosis through multiple signaling pathways to participate in cancer occurrence and development, for example, PI3K/Akt/mTOR and MAPK signaling pathways. Therefore, the regulation of the production and metabolism of H2S to mediate the apoptotic process of cancer cells may improve the effectiveness of cancer treatment. In this review, the role and mechanism of H2S in cancer cell apoptosis in mammals are summarized. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41420-024-01868-w
review
Guofeng Zhang, Xue Hao, Yongbin Zou +4 more · 2024 · Journal of Materials Chemistry A · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
Developing a new generation of increased energy, stability, and easily applicable N-rich energetic materials to replace RDX and HMX has posed significant challenges over the past decade. This Show more
Developing a new generation of increased energy, stability, and easily applicable N-rich energetic materials to replace RDX and HMX has posed significant challenges over the past decade. This work presents the design and synthesis of a series of novel N-rich energetic materials (N1 to N3 series) based on the triazole–tetrazole system. Among these, the N3 series demonstrates exceptional detonation performance and stability. It is noteworthy that the N3-3 molecule has achieved the best overall performance among N-rich energetic materials, with an onset decomposition temperature of 302 °C and a detonation velocity of 9341 m s−1, which significantly surpasses that of HMX. Additionally, structural studies of the N1 molecule reveal that the positioning effect of the nitro group and steric hindrance within the molecule disrupt the planar characteristics of the triazole–tetrazole system. In contrast, the amino group in the N3 series enhances molecular planarity, facilitating the formation of large conjugated systems and extensive hydrogen bond networks in N-rich energetic materials. This approach effectively enhances the stability of energetic material molecules and offers valuable insights for the development and design of stable N-rich energetic compounds. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D4TA06447J
synthesis tetrazole
Ziru Sun, Jianbin Han, Jun Xu +8 more · 2024 · Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy has proven to be one of the most effective treatments for advanced or metastatic colorectal cancer. However, increasing clinical resistance to oxaliplatin poses unpreced Show more
Oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy has proven to be one of the most effective treatments for advanced or metastatic colorectal cancer. However, increasing clinical resistance to oxaliplatin poses unprecedented challenges for both patients and clinicians. Despite extensive efforts to combat this issue, to date, no new molecules have been discovered that can successfully replace oxaliplatin. With the aim of developing a new generation of Pt(II)-based anticancer agents in response to the challenges of oxaliplatin-induced drug resistance, we performed a systematic screening of new Pt(II)-complexes with a quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) study based on their antiresistance activity against oxaliplatin-resistant colon cancer cells. The results revealed that both the structure and chirality of the chelating ligand had a significant impact on the antiresistance properties of the Pt(II)-complexes. Our study culminated in the identification of chiral R-binaphthyldiamine-ligated Pt(II)-malonatoglycoconjugates that can completely counteract oxaliplatin resistance with excellent in vitro and in vivo potency. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c00366
Pt anticancer
C. Crivelli, S. Garcia-Madrona, M. Gil-Minguez +428 more · 2024 · Frontiers in Neuroscience · Frontiers · added 2026-04-20
C. Crivelli, S. Garcia-Madrona, M. Gil-Minguez, R. Lujan, A. Almeida, S. Moncada, J. P. Bolanos, C. Angebault, J. Fauconnier, S. Patergnani, J. Rieusset, A. Danese, C. A. Affortit, A. Ardalan, S. Sowlati-Hashjin, H. Oduwoye, S. O. Uwumarenogie, M. Karttunen, M. D. Smith, A. Atlante, G. Amadoro, V. Latina, D. Valenti, M. Belanger, I. Allaman, P. J. Magistretti, K. F. Bell, B. Al-Mubarak, J. H. Fowler, P. S. Baxter, K. Gupta, T. Tsujita, A. M. Bertholet, A. M. Natale, P. Bisignano, J. Suzuki, A. Fedorenko, J. Hamilton, C. Bienboire-Frosini, D. Wang, M. Marcet-Rius, D. Villanueva-Garcia, A. Gazzano, A. Dominguez-Oliva, M. Bienengraeber, K. S. Echtay, M. Klingenberg, C. Bionda, J. Portoukalian, D. Schmitt, C. Rodriguez-Lafrasse, D. Ardail, M. Bozluolcay, G. Andican, S. Firtina, G. Erkol, D. Konukoglu, R. D. Burgoyne, D. A. Butterfield, B. Halliwell, M. Cater, S. M. Holter, K. A. Chamberlain, N. Huang, Y. Xie, F. LiCausi, S. Li, Y. Li, S. L. Chan, D. Liu, G. A. Kyriazis, P. Bagsiyao, X. Ouyang, M. P. Mattson, W. Chen, J. Yang, S. Chen, H. Xiang, H. Liu, D. Lin, Z. Chen, C. Zhong, I. Cho, G. J. Hwang, J. H. Cho, H. O. Song, H. E. Ji, S. Yang, A. C. Chu, P. W. Ho, K. H. Kwok, J. W. Ho, K. H. Chan, H. F. Liu, E. H. Corder, A. M. Saunders, W. J. Strittmatter, D. E. Schmechel, P. C. Gaskell, G. W. Small, S. M. Crivelli, Z. Quadri, H. J. Vekaria, Z. Zhu, P. Tripathi, A. Elsherbini, J. Cummings, Y. Zhou, G. Lee, K. Zhong, J. Fonseca, F. Cheng, C. H. Davis, K. Y. Kim, E. A. Bushong, E. A. Mills, D. Boassa, T. Shih, S. M. de la Monte, J. R. Wands, L. E. de Vries, A. Jongejan, J. Monteiro Fortes, R. Balesar, A. J. M. Rozemuller, P. D. Moerland, G. A. Dienel, D. L. Rothman, R. Domingues, C. Pereira, M. T. Cruz, A. Silva, R. Dringen, J. M. Gutterer, J. Hirrlinger, H. H. Hoepken, T. Minich, C. Ruedig, A. Lajtha, G. E. Gibson, R. H. Du, F. F. Wu, M. Lu, X. D. Shu, J. H. Ding, G. Wu, E. Winkler, J. Fortea, J. Pegueroles, D. Alcolea, O. Belbin, O. Dols-Icardo, L. Vaque-Alcazar, P. Garcia-Nogales, K. D. Garlid, M. Jaburek, P. Jezek, D. E. Orosz, M. Modriansky, S. Vassanelli, K. N. Green, H. Khashwji, T. Estrada, F. M. LaFerla, J. Grundlingh, P. I. Dargan, M. El-Zanfaly, D. M. Wood, A. Gustavsson, N. Norton, T. Fast, L. Frolich, J. Georges, D. Holzapfel, J. N. Guzman, J. Sanchez-Padilla, D. Wokosin, J. Kondapalli, E. Ilijic, P. T. Schumacker, A. Habas, J. Hahn, X. Wang, M. Margeta, P. Hanak, K. Hayakawa, E. Esposito, Y. Terasaki, Y. Liu, C. Xing, A. Herrero-Mendez, E. Fernandez, C. Maestre, D. H. So, Z. H. Tse, H. M. Tse, D. C. Yiu, W. Y. Zhang, T. Hoang, M. Kuljanin, M. Jelokhani-Niaraki, K. A. Hogan, C. C. S. Chini, E. N. Chini, N. Hu, Y. Fu, W. F. Li, X. R. Yang, M. Cao, F. F. Li, S. G. Huang, M. O. Isei, M. Crockett, E. Chen, J. Rodwell-Bullock, T. Caroll, P. A. Girardi, M. V. Ivanova, F. R. McSorley, G. Krnac, H. T. Jacobs, D. Jiang, H. Lu, D. Jimenez-Blasco, P. Santofimia-Castano, A. Gonzalez, Y. Jing, Y. Niu, C. Liu, K. Zen, D. Li, J. M. Johnson, A. D. Peterlin, E. Balderas, E. G. Sustarsic, J. A. Maschek, M. J. Lang, S. M. Joksimovic, P. Eggan, Y. Izumi, S. L. Joksimovic, V. Tesic, R. M. Dietz, S. M. Ghodsi, J. A. Heinsbroek, J. E. Orfila, N. Busquet, B. Kaltschmidt, M. Uherek, B. Volk, P. A. Baeuerle, C. Kaltschmidt, Y. Kang, L. Chen, D. Kapogiannis, K. I. Avgerinos, B. M. Kenwood, J. L. Weaver, A. Bajwa, I. K. Poon, F. L. Byrne, B. A. Murrow, E. Klotzsch, A. Smorodchenko, L. Lofler, R. Moldzio, E. Parkinson, G. J. Schutz, N. Kyrtata, H. C. A. Emsley, O. Sparasci, L. M. Parkes, B. R. Dickie, Y. Lee, B. M. Morrison, S. Lengacher, M. H. Farah, P. N. Hoffman, S. A. Liddelow, K. A. Guttenplan, L. E. Clarke, F. C. Bennett, C. J. Bohlen, L. Schirmer, N. C. de Souza-Pinto, J. R. Slevin, R. P. Wersto, M. Zhan, J. Y. Chatton, M. Manczak, M. J. Calkins, P. H. Reddy, W. Mao, X. X. Yu, A. Zhong, W. Li, J. Brush, S. W. Sherwood, A. Montesanto, P. Crocco, M. Anfossi, N. Smirne, G. Puccio, R. Colao, S. Moriguchi, N. Shioda, Y. Yamamoto, H. Tagashira, K. Fukunaga, H. Morton, S. Kshirsagar, E. Orlov, L. E. Bunquin, N. Sawant, L. Boleng, L. Mosconi, R. D. Andrews, D. C. Matthews, T. Y. Nakamura, S. Nakao, S. Wakabayashi, K. F. Neumann, L. Rojo, L. P. Navarrete, G. Farias, P. Reyes, R. B. Maccioni, D. G. Nicholls, S. Oddo, A. Caccamo, J. D. Shepherd, M. P. Murphy, T. E. Golde, R. Kayed, D. M. A. Oliver, W. R. Pearson, L. Pellerin, A. K. Bouzier-Sore, A. Aubert, S. Serres, M. Merle, R. Costalat, H. Perreten Lambert, M. Zenger, G. Azarias, R. J. Perry, D. Zhang, X. M. Zhang, J. L. Boyer, G. I. Shulman, C. Petersen, M. D. Nielsen, E. S. Andersen, A. L. Basse, M. S. Isidor, L. K. Markussen, T. Philips, J. D. Rothstein, C. Poetschke, J. Duda, J. Benkert, E. Dragicevic, T. P. Snutch, J. Striessnig, J. A. Pradeepkiran, R. A. Rice, N. C. Berchtold, C. W. Cotman, N. Rosenberg, M. Reva, F. Binda, L. Restivo, P. Depierre, J. Puyal, J. J. Ruprecht, E. R. S. Kunji, A. S. Saab, I. D. Tzvetanova, K. A. Nave, I. D. Tzvetavona, A. Trevisiol, S. Baltan, P. Dibaj, K. Kusch, A. Serrano-Pozo, Z. Li, A. Noori, H. N. Nguyen, A. Mezlini, L. Li, M. Sheridan, B. Ogretmen, C. Simons, N. Deuter, O. Pongs, T. Schneider, A. Rupprecht, I. Sarilova, O. Ninnemann, A. U. Brauer, K. Franke, G. E. Stutzmann, I. Smith, I. Parker, R. H. Swerdlow, R. Thangavel, D. Kempuraj, S. Zaheer, S. Raikwar, M. E. Ahmed, G. P. Selvakumar, B. Vaccari-Cardoso, M. Antipina, A. G. Teschemacher, S. Kasparov, B. R. Villa, A. G. George, T. E. Shutt, P. G. Sullivan, J. M. Rho, G. C. Teskey, A. A. Willette, B. B. Bendlin, E. J. Starks, A. C. Birdsill, S. C. Johnson, B. T. Christian, S. Q. Xu, X. D. Yang, Y. W. Qian, Q. Xiao Show less
The brain’s high demand for energy necessitates tightly regulated metabolic pathways to sustain physiological activity. Glucose, the primary energy substrate, undergoes complex metabolic transformatio Show more
The brain’s high demand for energy necessitates tightly regulated metabolic pathways to sustain physiological activity. Glucose, the primary energy substrate, undergoes complex metabolic transformations, with mitochondria playing a central role in ATP production via oxidative phosphorylation. Dysregulation of this metabolic interplay is implicated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), where compromised glucose metabolism, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction contribute to disease progression. This review explores the intricate bioenergetic crosstalk between astrocytes and neurons, highlighting the function of mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCPs), particularly UCP4, as important regulators of brain metabolism and neuronal function. Predominantly expressed in the brain, UCP4 reduces the membrane potential in the inner mitochondrial membrane, thereby potentially decreasing the generation of reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, UCP4 mitigates mitochondrial calcium overload and sustains cellular ATP levels through a metabolic shift from mitochondrial respiration to glycolysis. Interestingly, the levels of the neuronal UCPs, UCP2, 4 and 5 are significantly reduced in AD brain tissue and a specific UCP4 variant has been associated to an increased risk of developing AD. Few studies modulating the expression of UCP4 in astrocytes or neurons have highlighted protective effects against neurodegeneration and aging, suggesting that pharmacological strategies aimed at activating UCPs, such as protonophoric uncouplers, hold promise for therapeutic interventions in AD and other neurodegenerative diseases. Despite significant advances, our understanding of UCPs in brain metabolism remains in its early stages, emphasizing the need for further research to unravel their biological functions in the brain and their therapeutic potential. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1483708
ROS amino-acid mitochondria review