👤 MengQi Zhang

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145
Articles
214
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Also published as: P. Zhang, XM Zhang, J. T. Zhang, Q Zhang, J.C. Zhang, Chunming Zhang, A Zhang, ZY Zhang, Xinyu Zhang, W. Zhang, R. N. Zhang, B Zhang, Y.J. Zhang, Y.Y. Zhang, Yu Zhang, Z.Q. Zhang, Jianhua Zhang, D. Zhang, R Zhang, HL Zhang, Cheng Zhang, S.P. Zhang, G. Zhang, S Zhang, Kenneth Yin Zhang, X.X. Zhang, Song-Bai Zhang, Yuan-Yuan Zhang, E Zhang, J. Zhang, H.‐Y. Zhang, XJ Zhang, MQ Zhang, Shumiao Zhang, Hai-Liang Zhang, G Zhang, Z.C. Zhang, Liyan Zhang, F. Zhang, Hairong Zhang, Hongmin Zhang, CY Zhang, Wenkan Zhang, Nannan Zhang, Shuren Zhang, Han Zhang, J.Y. Zhang, Dingpeng Zhang, Pingyu Zhang, Ling-Ling Zhang, Liang-Liang Zhang, M Zhang, Mingguang Zhang, Chengxiao Zhang, Haohao Zhang, Hai-Rong Zhang, N. Zhang, N Zhang, F.W. Zhang, LY Zhang, Weibin Zhang, D. R. Zhang, Xiaonian Zhang, YF Zhang, S.H. Zhang, BZ Zhang, Wen-Yao Zhang, Donna D Zhang, Bitian Zhang, C Zhang, Z. Zhang, V. Zhang, Q.Y. Zhang, Bingjie Zhang, Yan Zhang, Ting Zhang, J.P. Zhang, Yiwen Zhang, P Zhang, Wei-Cheng Zhang, S. Zhang, Xiang Zhang, Guofeng Zhang, K Zhang, Hui-Wen Zhang, Chenliang Zhang, W.C. Zhang, T.P. Zhang, Zhihong Zhang, Zijin Zhang, Die Zhang, Xuanjun Zhang, Zhao Zhang, Zhenwei Zhang, C-Y Zhang, Z.‐X. Zhang, Xianhuan Zhang, Weijia Zhang, AS Zhang, MB Zhang, D.W. Zhang, Xiujuan Zhang, YM Zhang, Jingyu Zhang, Y Zhang, Yao Zhang, T Zhang, Wu-Ya Zhang, Q. Zhang, Fengqiu Zhang, YL Zhang, SZ Zhang, N. C. Zhang, R. Zhang, Jinru Zhang, Y.M. Zhang, Yan-Xia Zhang, LL Zhang, X Zhang, B. Zhang, Z Zhang, ZP Zhang, Xianrui Zhang, Yaping Zhang, HQ Zhang, Jie Zhang, Song‐Bai Zhang, Y.D. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Ge Zhang, DW Zhang, Yujie Zhang, L. Zhang, Xianpeng Zhang, F Zhang, C. Zhang, Heng Zhang, Tianli Zhang, Zhengwen Zhang, Li Zhang, Y.‐M. Zhang, W Zhang, Rong Zhang, H Zhang, Hong-Jie Zhang, Xiaoxiao Zhang, Hao Zhang, T. Zhang, Yanyang Zhang, WY Zhang, Shihua Zhang, HJ Zhang, H. Zhang, Donna D. Zhang, Fan Zhang, Ya-Qin Zhang, Yanming Zhang, Yi Zhang, Guangyong Zhang, J Zhang, X.-X. Zhang, Dandan Zhang, S.R. Zhang, I. Zhang, Gui-Qiang Zhang, XF Zhang, Chenguang Zhang, Jinyuan Zhang, W. Y. Zhang, Huafeng Zhang, Q.H. Zhang, Jianguo Zhang, C.L. Zhang, H.M. Zhang, DD Zhang, JJ Zhang, XQ Zhang, D.Y. Zhang, Xin Zhang, M. Zhang, K. Zhang, X. M. Zhang, Ying Zhang, Junpeng Zhang, Jingnan Zhang, Long Zhang, Jing-Jing Zhang, Wei Zhang, Hongyong Zhang, Danyang Zhang, Qingzhao Zhang, D.‐H. Zhang, Zheng Zhang, Jun Zhang, Wendian Zhang, Z-B Zhang, Qian Zhang, S.-D. Zhang, Chong Zhang, Yangli Zhang, D Zhang, Qianling Zhang, Lei Zhang, JH Zhang, Yiguo Zhang, L Zhang, Guandong Zhang, Dingyi Zhang, Xiaoren Zhang, SX Zhang, X. Zhang, KR Zhang, Yun-Liang Zhang
articles
Xin You, Zhao-Guo Hong, Sheng-Mei Shi +6 more · 2022 · Dalton Transactions · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
A triphenylphosphine-modified tetra-nuclear Cu(I) coordinated cluster was constructed for enhanced chemodynamic therapy (CDT) by increasing the number of metal centers. Once inside human bladd Show more
A triphenylphosphine-modified tetra-nuclear Cu(I) coordinated cluster was constructed for enhanced chemodynamic therapy (CDT) by increasing the number of metal centers. Once inside human bladder cancer (T24) cells, a larger amount of copper accumulated compared with the mono-nuclear Cu(I) complex; the additional copper could generate more •OH and then induce more obvious apoptosis via a Fenton-like reaction, thus further increasing the tumor inhibition effect and ultimately improving the CDT efficiency. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/D2DT00063F
Cu
Lin Li, Yaping Zhang, Wanzhi Ma +5 more · 2022 · Nucleic acids research · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-20
In vivo, left-handed DNA duplex (usually refers to Z-DNA) is mainly formed in the region of DNA with alternating purine pyrimidine (APP) sequence and plays significant biological roles. It is well kno Show more
In vivo, left-handed DNA duplex (usually refers to Z-DNA) is mainly formed in the region of DNA with alternating purine pyrimidine (APP) sequence and plays significant biological roles. It is well known that d(CG)n sequence can form Z-DNA most easily under negative supercoil conditions, but its essence has not been well clarified. The study on sequence dependence of Z-DNA stability is very difficult without modification or inducers. Here, by the strong topological constraint caused by hybridization of two complementary short circular ssDNAs, left-handed duplex part was generated for various sequences, and their characteristics were investigated by using gel-shift after binding to specific proteins, CD and Tm analysis, and restriction enzyme cleavage. Under the strong topological constraint, non-APP sequences can also form left-handed DNA duplex as stable as that of APP sequences. As compared with non-APP sequences, the thermal stability difference for APP sequences between Z-form and B-form is smaller, which may be the reason that Z-DNA forms preferentially for APP ones. This result can help us to understand why nature selected APP sequences to regulate gene expression by transient Z-DNA formation, as well as why polymer with chirality can usually form both duplexes with left- or right-handed helix. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab1283
T Marx, J Yang, S Zhou +216 more · 2022 · Cancer & Metabolism · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
T Marx, J Yang, S Zhou, Y Wang, Y Li, X Tong, F Guerra, AA Arbini, L Moro, M Huttemann, I Lee, LI Grossman, JW Doan, TH Sanderson, R Diaz-Ruiz, M Rigoulet, A Devin, WH Koppenol, PL Bounds, CV Dang, E Gottlieb, KH Vousden, OD Maddocks, D Hanahan, RA Weinberg, NP Echeverri Ruiz, V Mohan, J Wu, S Scott, M Kreamer, M Benej, T Golias, I Papandreou, NC Denko, MA Desbats, I Giacomini, T Prayer-Galetti, M Montopoli, CS Ahn, CM Metallo, VC Fogg, NJ Lanning, JP Mackeigan, YK Shin, BC Yoo, YS Hong, HJ Chang, KH Jung, SY Jeong, JG Park, MM Schroll, GJ LaBonia, KR Ludwig, AB Hummon, RL Siegel, KD Miller, A Goding Sauer, SA Fedewa, LF Butterly, JC Anderson, A Cercek, RA Smith, A Jemal, S Brandhorst, VD Longo, A Nencioni, I Caffa, S Cortellino, Y Liang, J Liu, Z Feng, CR Berkers, SM Mason, L Zheng, K Blyth, F Yang, SS Teves, CJ Kemp, S Henikoff, K Fujita, Y Kubota, H Ishida, Y Sasaki, A Signes, E Fernandez-Vizarra, Y Chaban, EJ Boekema, NV Dudkina, C Maletzki, S Stier, U Gruenert, M Gock, C Ostwald, F Prall, M Linnebacher, K Prabst, H Engelhardt, S Ringgeler, H Hubner, AV Kudryavtseva, GS Krasnov, AA Dmitriev, BY Alekseev, OL Kardymon, AF Sadritdinova, MS Fedorova, AV Pokrovsky, NV Melnikova, AD Kaprin, M Skrtic, S Sriskanthadevan, B Jhas, M Gebbia, X Wang, Z Wang, R Hurren, Y Jitkova, M Gronda, N Maclean, Y Chen, E McMillan-Ward, J Kong, SJ Israels, SB Gibson, AC Little, I Kovalenko, LE Goo, HS Hong, SA Kerk, JA Yates, V Purohit, DB Lombard, SD Merajver, CA Lyssiotis, C Bailly, SA Huisman, P de Bruijn, IM Ghobadi Moghaddam-Helmantel, CF Labuschagne, NJ van den Broek, GM Mackay, EF Fang, H Kassahun, DL Croteau, M Scheibye-Knudsen, K Marosi, H Lu, RA Shamanna, S Kalyanasundaram, RC Bollineni, MA Wilson, KF Chua, MP Mattson, VA Bohr, MO Turgeon, NJS Perry, G Poulogiannis, Y Rai, R Pathak, N Kumari, DK Sah, S Pandey, N Kalra, R Soni, BS Dwarakanath, AN Bhatt, JE Hutton, LJ Zimmerman, RJ Slebos, IA Trenary, JD Young, M Li, DC Liebler, M Tabuso, M Christian, PK Kimani, K Gopalakrishnan, RP Arasaradnam, BJ Altman, ZE Stine, J Yun, C Rago, I Cheong, R Pagliarini, P Angenendt, H Rajagopalan, K Schmidt, JK Willson, S Markowitz, G Giachin, R Bouverot, S Acajjaoui, S Pantalone, M Soler-Lopez, C Gorrini, IS Harris, TW Mak, S Vogt, A Rhiel, P Weber, R Ramzan, BB Das, A Ghosh, S Bhattacharjee, A Bhattacharyya, Y Pommier, E Leo, H Zhang, C Marchand, TM Ashton, WG McKenna, LA Kunz-Schughart, GS Higgins, A Bansal, MC Simon, L Marx-Blumel, C Marx, M Kuhne, J Sonnemann Show less
Background Metabolic adaptations can allow cancer cells to survive DNA-damaging chemotherapy. This unmet clinical challenge is a potential vulnerability of cancer. Accordingly, there is an intense se Show more
Background Metabolic adaptations can allow cancer cells to survive DNA-damaging chemotherapy. This unmet clinical challenge is a potential vulnerability of cancer. Accordingly, there is an intense search for mechanisms that modulate cell metabolism during anti-tumor therapy. We set out to define how colorectal cancer CRC cells alter their metabolism upon DNA replication stress and whether this provides opportunities to eliminate such cells more efficiently. Methods We incubated p53-positive and p53-negative permanent CRC cells and short-term cultured primary CRC cells with the topoisomerase-1 inhibitor irinotecan and other drugs that cause DNA replication stress and consequently DNA damage. We analyzed pro-apoptotic mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cell death with flow cytometry. We evaluated cellular metabolism with immunoblotting of electron transport chain (ETC) complex subunits, analysis of mitochondrial mRNA expression by qPCR, MTT assay, measurements of oxygen consumption and reactive oxygen species (ROS), and metabolic flux analysis with the Seahorse platform. Global metabolic alterations were assessed using targeted mass spectrometric analysis of extra- and intracellular metabolites. Results Chemotherapeutics that cause DNA replication stress induce metabolic changes in p53-positive and p53-negative CRC cells. Irinotecan enhances glycolysis, oxygen consumption, mitochondrial ETC activation, and ROS production in CRC cells. This is connected to increased levels of electron transport chain complexes involving mitochondrial translation. Mass spectrometric analysis reveals global metabolic adaptations of CRC cells to irinotecan, including the glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and pentose phosphate pathways. P53-proficient CRC cells, however, have a more active metabolism upon DNA replication stress than their p53-deficient counterparts. This metabolic switch is a vulnerability of p53-positive cells to irinotecan-induced apoptosis under glucose-restricted conditions. Conclusion Drugs that cause DNA replication stress increase the metabolism of CRC cells. Glucose restriction might improve the effectiveness of classical chemotherapy against p53-positive CRC cells. Graphical Abstract The topoisomerase-1 inhibitor irinotecan and other chemotherapeutics that cause DNA damage induce metabolic adaptations in colorectal cancer (CRC) cells irrespective of their p53 status. Irinotecan enhances the glycolysis and oxygen consumption in CRC cells to deliver energy and biomolecules necessary for DNA repair and their survival. Compared to p53-deficient cells, p53-proficient CRC cells have a more active metabolism and use their intracellular metabolites more extensively. This metabolic switch creates a vulnerability to chemotherapy under glucose-restricted conditions for p53-positive cells. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40170-022-00286-9. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s40170-022-00286-9
DNA-binding ROS mitochondria
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
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10112690
Pt amino-acid anticancer
T. Narayan, A. Dutta, A. Agarwal +541 more · 2022 · iScience · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
T. Narayan, A. Dutta, A. Agarwal, R.J. MacKenzie, R. Pippa, C.A. Eide, J. Oddo, J.W. Tyner, R. Sears, M.P. Vitek, M.D. Odero, D.J. Christensen, B.J. Druker, A. Ashkenazi, R.C. Pai, S. Fong, S. Leung, D.A. Lawrence, S.A. Marsters, C. Blackie, L. Chang, A.E. McMurtrey, A. Hebert, A. Bene, T.C. Chambers, I. Beuvink, A. Boulay, S. Fumagalli, F. Zilbermann, S. Ruetz, T. O'Reilly, F. Natt, J. Hall, H.A. Lane, G. Thomas, M. Bhat, N. Robichaud, L. Hulea, N. Sonenberg, J. Pelletier, I. Topisirovic, R. Briffa, S.P. Langdon, G. Grech, D.J. Harrison, B.A. Carneiro, W.S. El-Deiry, T.C. Chou, A.E. Collier, D.F. Spandau, R.C. Wek, I. Cristobal, R. Manso, R. Rincón, C. Caramés, C. Senin, A. Borrero, J. Martínez-Useros, M. Rodriguez, S. Zazo, O. Aguilera, R. Rincon, C. Carames, J. Madoz-Gurpide, F. Rojo, J. Garcia-Foncillas, R.M. De Palma, S.R. Parnham, Y. Li, J.J. Oaks, Y.K. Peterson, Z.M. Szulc, B.M. Roth, Y. Xing, B. Ogretmen, D. Deng, K. Shah, M.J. Fournier, L. Coudert, S. Mellaoui, P. Adjibade, C. Gareau, M.F. Côté, R.C. Gaudreault, R. Mazroui, A.M. Gaben, C. Saucier, M. Bedin, V. Barbu, J. Mester, C. Filion, D. Martel, Y. Labelle, A.G. Georgakilas, O.A. Martin, W.M. Bonner, M.J. Gerdes, C.J. Sevinsky, A. Sood, S. Adak, M.O. Bello, A. Bordwell, A. Can, A. Corwin, S. Dinn, R.J. Filkins, M. Gorospe, X. Wang, K.Z. Guyton, N.J. Holbrook, M.M. Gottesman, J.R. Graff, B.W. Konicek, J.H. Carter, E.G. Marcusson, R.S. Herbst, S.G. Eckhardt, R. Kurzrock, S. Ebbinghaus, P.J. O'Dwyer, M.S. Gordon, W. Novotny, M.A. Goldwasser, T.M. Tohnya, B.L. Lum, S.D. Heys, K.G. Park, M.A. McNurlan, A.G. Calder, V. Buchan, K. Blessing, O. Eremin, P.J. Garlick, B. Hoang, A. Benavides, Y. Shi, Y. Yang, P. Frost, J. Gera, A. Lichtenstein, A.N. Hobden, E. Cundliffe, N. Ikoma, K. Raghav, G. Chang, A. Ishitsuka, E. Fujine, Y. Mizutani, C. Tawada, H. Kanoh, Y. Banno, M. Seishima, S. Iwasaki, N.T. Ingolia, S.C. Jahn, P.E. Corsino, B.J. Davis, M.E. Law, P. Nørgaard, B.K. Law, V. Janssens, S. Longin, J. Goris, M.A. Jensen, V. Ferretti, R.L. Grossman, L.M. Staudt, Y.H. Jin, K.J. Yoo, Y.H. Lee, S.K. Lee, A. Kahvejian, Y.V. Svitkin, R. Sukarieh, M.N. M'Boutchou, S.K. Kelley, L.A. Harris, D. Xie, L. Deforge, K. Totpal, J. Bussiere, J.A. Fox, S.L. Kim, Y.C. Liu, Y.R. Park, S.Y. Seo, S.H. Kim, I.H. Kim, S.O. Lee, S.T. Lee, D.G. Kim, S.W. Kim, N.N. Kreis, F. Louwen, J. Yuan, M. Law, E. Forrester, A. Chytil, P. Corsino, G. Green, B. Davis, T. Rowe, B. Law, S.L. Lehman, G.J. Cerniglia, G.J. Johannes, J. Ye, S. Ryeom, C. Koumenis, S. Lek, J. Vargas-Medrano, E. Villanueva, B. Marcus, W. Godfrey, R.G. Perez, J. Lemke, S. von Karstedt, J. Zinngrebe, H. Walczak, D. Leonard, W. Huang, S. Izadmehr, C.M. O'Connor, D.D. Wiredja, Z. Wang, N. Zaware, Y. Chen, D.M. Schlatzer, J. Kiselar, V. Leung-Pineda, C.E. Ryan, H. Piwnica-Worms, L. Li, J. Wang, J.G. Li, Z. Wu, P. Ma, X.J. Lian, I.E. Gallouzi, H. Lin, X. Qiu, B. Zhang, J. Zhang, T.A. Lin, X. Kong, T.A.J. Haystead, A. Pause, G. Belsham, J.C. Lawrence, J. Lu, J.S. Kovach, F. Johnson, J. Chiang, R. Hodes, R. Lonser, Z. Zhuang, M. Mahyar-Roemer, K. Roemer, A. Maiuthed, C. Ninsontia, K. Erlenbach-Wuensch, B. Ndreshkjana, J.K. Muenzner, A. Caliskan, H. Ahmed P, A.P. Husayn, C. Chaotham, A. Hartmann, K. Malinowsky, U. Nitsche, K.P. Janssen, F.G. Bader, C. Spath, E. Drecoll, G. Keller, H. Hofler, S. Mazhar, S.E. Taylor, J. Sangodkar, G. Narla, K. McClinch, R.A. Avelar, D. Callejas, D. Wiredja, A. Perl, D.B. Kastrinsky, D. Schlatzer, M. Cooper, D.R. McIlwain, T. Berger, T.W. Mak, N. Melling, R. Simon, J.R. Izbicki, L.M. Terracciano, C. Bokemeyer, G. Sauter, A.H. Marx, J.R. Mills, Y. Hippo, F. Robert, S.M.H. Chen, A. Malina, C.J. Lin, U. Trojahn, H.G. Wendel, A. Charest, R.T. Bronson, C.S. Mitsiades, S.P. Treon, N. Mitsiades, Y. Shima, P. Richardson, R. Schlossman, T. Hideshima, K.C. Anderson, K. Morita, S. He, R.P. Nowak, M.W. Zimmerman, C. Fu, A.D. Durbin, M.W. Martel, N. Prutsch, N.S. Gray, S. Narayan, A.S. Jaiswal, R. Sharma, A. Nawab, L.V. Duckworth, M. Zajac-Kaye, T.J. George, J. Sharma, A.K. Sharma, R.A. Hromas, S. Ramisetti, A. Singh-Pillay, P. Singh, S. Amin, P. Palaiologos, D. Chrysikos, S. Theocharis, G. Kouraklis, G.J. Belsham, A.C. Gingras, O. Donzé, M.D. Ralff, P.G. Richardson, C. Eng, J. Kolesar, N.R. Rodrigues, A. Rowan, M.E. Smith, I.B. Kerr, W.F. Bodmer, J.V. Gannon, D.P. Lane, H.K. Roy, B.F. Olusola, D.L. Clemens, W.J. Karolski, A. Ratashak, H.T. Lynch, T.C. Smyrk, E. Rozengurt, H.P. Soares, J. Sinnet-Smith, P.P. Ruvolo, R. Tohme, E.K. Schmidt, G. Clavarino, M. Ceppi, P. Pierre, R.R. Sharma, T.S. Ravikumar, D. Raimo, W.L. Yang, R.L. Siegel, K.D. Miller, H.E. Fuchs, A. Jemal, J.C. Soria, Z. Márk, P. Zatloukal, B. Szima, I. Albert, E. Juhász, J.L. Pujol, J. Kozielski, N. Baker, D. Smethurst, W. Stöcklein, W. Piepersberg, A. Surov, P. Clauser, Y.W. Chang, L. Martincich, S.C. Partridge, J.Y. Kim, H.J. Meyer, A. Wienke, A. Suzuki, T. Ito, H. Kawano, M. Hayashida, Y. Hayasaki, Y. Tsutomi, K. Akahane, T. Nakano, M. Miura, K. Shiraki, T. Araki, S. Tahmasebi, T. Alain, V.K. Rajasekhar, J.P. Zhang, M. Prager-Khoutorsky, A. Khoutorsky, Y. Dogan, C.G. Gkogkas, E. Petroulakis, A. Sylvestre, A. Thorburn, K. Behbakht, H. Ford, H. Tian, E.K. Wittmack, T.J. Jorgensen, R. Tohmé, S. Gandhe, G. Tabaro, S. Vallabhaneni, A. Thomas, N. Vasireddi, N.S. Dhawan, A. Ma'ayan, N. Sharma, C. Vaklavas, S.W. Blume, W.E. Grizzle, K. Van der Jeught, H.C. Xu, Y.J. Li, X.B. Lu, G. Ji, A. Montinaro, R.E. Miller, K. Ariail, B. Gliniak, T.S. Griffith, M. Kubin, W. Chin, J. Jones, A. Woodward, T. Le, H. Wang, Y. Liu, J. Ding, Y. Huang, J. Liu, N. Liu, Y. Ao, Y. Hong, L. Wang, L. Zhang, M. Wang, E. Yaaghubi, A.F. Ghilardi, R.B. Ferreira, C.W. Chiang, O.A. Guryanova, D. Kopinke, C.D. Heldermon, S.S. Wang, E.D. Esplin, J.L. Li, L. Huang, A. Gazdar, J. Minna, G.A. Evans, X.W. Wang, Y.J. Zhang, J.S. Warmus, G.J. Dilley, A.I. Meyers, F. Wei, Y. Zhang, L. Geng, P. Zhang, G. Wang, R.H. Weiss, J. Westermarck, N. Wu, Z. Du, Y. Zhu, Y. Song, L. Pang, Z. Chen, J. Xu, P. Wang, H. Yang, J. Zhou, X. Li, W. Xue, C. Yu, Y. Tian, F. Zhu, J.Y. Zhou, W.Z. Wei, G.S. Wu, S.Q. Xu, P. Yaffee, A. Osipov, C. Tan, R. Tuli, A. Hendifar, L. Yong, Z. YuFeng, B. Guang, P.E. Young, C.M. Womeldorph, E.K. Johnson, J.A. Maykel, B. Brucher, A. Stojadinovic, I. Avital, A. Nissan, S.R. Steele, Y. Yu, S.S. Kanwar, B.B. Patel, J. Nautiyal, F.H. Sarkar, A.P. Majumdar, B. Fang, N. Fujita, T. Tsuruo, X. Zhou, W. Liu, X. Hu, A. Dorrance, R. Garzon, P.J. Houghton, C. Shen Show less
Summary The treatment of colorectal cancer (CRC) with FOLFOX shows some efficacy, but these tumors quickly develop resistance to this treatment. We have observed increased phosphorylation of AKT1/mTO Show more
Summary The treatment of colorectal cancer (CRC) with FOLFOX shows some efficacy, but these tumors quickly develop resistance to this treatment. We have observed increased phosphorylation of AKT1/mTOR/4EBP1 and levels of p21 in FOLFOX-resistant CRC cells. We have identified a small molecule, NSC49L, that stimulates protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity, downregulates the AKT1/mTOR/4EBP1-axis, and inhibits p21 translation. We have provided evidence that NSC49L- and TRAIL-mediated sensitization is synergistically induced in p21-knockdown CRC cells, which is reversed in p21-overexpressing cells. p21 binds with procaspase 3 and prevents the activation of caspase 3. We have shown that TRAIL induces apoptosis through the activation of caspase 3 by NSC49L-mediated downregulation of p21 translation, and thereby cleavage of procaspase 3 into caspase 3. NSC49L does not affect global protein synthesis. These studies provide a mechanistic understanding of NSC49L as a PP2A agonist, and how its combination with TRAIL sensitizes FOLFOX-resistant CRC cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2022.104518
amino-acid synthesis
Linchong Sun, Huafeng Zhang, Ping Gao · 2022 · Protein & cell · Springer · added 2026-04-20
Metabolic rewiring and epigenetic remodeling, which are closely linked and reciprocally regulate each other, are among the well-known cancer hallmarks. Recent evidence suggests that many metabolites s Show more
Metabolic rewiring and epigenetic remodeling, which are closely linked and reciprocally regulate each other, are among the well-known cancer hallmarks. Recent evidence suggests that many metabolites serve as substrates or cofactors of chromatin-modifying enzymes as a consequence of the translocation or spatial regionalization of enzymes or metabolites. Various metabolic alterations and epigenetic modifications also reportedly drive immune escape or impede immunosurveillance within certain contexts, playing important roles in tumor progression. In this review, we focus on how metabolic reprogramming of tumor cells and immune cells reshapes epigenetic alterations, in particular the acetylation and methylation of histone proteins and DNA. We also discuss other eminent metabolic modifications such as, succinylation, hydroxybutyrylation, and lactylation, and update the current advances in metabolism- and epigenetic modification-based therapeutic prospects in cancer. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s13238-021-00846-7
amino-acid review
Yafang Qin, Xingguo Tang, Jintai Chen +6 more · 2022 · Inorganic Chemistry Communications · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.inoche.2021.109166
Biometal
Lei Feng, Kaikai Zhao, Liangchao Sun +4 more · 2021 · Journal of translational medicine · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-20
BACKGROUND: Solute carrier family 7 member 11(SLC7A11) is a component of cysteine/glutamate transporter, which plays a key role in tumor growth; however, its underlying effect on radiosensitivity in e Show more
BACKGROUND: Solute carrier family 7 member 11(SLC7A11) is a component of cysteine/glutamate transporter, which plays a key role in tumor growth; however, its underlying effect on radiosensitivity in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) remains unclear. This study aimed to clarify SLC7A11's expression and correlation with nuclear expression of nuclear factor erythroid-2 (NRF2)-associated radioresistance in ESCC. METHODS: We included 127 ESCC patients who received radical chemoradiotherapy. Immunohistochemical staining was used to detect SLC7A11 and NRF2 nuclear expression, and the relationship between clinicopathological characteristics and survival rates or therapy response were evaluated. Western blot, dual-reporter assays and Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-sequencing were used to analyze their relationship in vitro. Their roles in radioresistance were then investigated through multiple validation steps. RESULTS: NRF2 nuclear expression and SLC7A11 expression were overexpressed in ESCC tissues and were positively correlated with one another. NRF2 nuclear expression was significantly associated with tumor length, lymph node metastasis, and TNM stage, while SLC7A11 expression was associated with lymph node metastasis. Patients with high NRF2 nuclear expression and SLC7A11 expression had significantly shorter overall and progression-free survival, and poor treatment response. The multivariate model showed that NRF2 nuclear expression and SLC7A11 expression, sex and tumor location are independent prognostic factors. In vitro analysis confirmed that hyperactivation of NRF2 induced SLC7A11 expression by directly binding to its promoter region, promoting radioresistance, reducing radiotherapy-induced lipid peroxidation levels, PTGS2 expression, and radiotherapy-related ferroptosis morphologic features. CONCLUSION: Our study reveals a connection between high SLC7A11 expression and NRF2 nuclear expression in patients with ESCC that was related to worse survival and poorer therapy outcomes. SLC7A11-mediated ferroptosis inhibition induced NRF2-associated radioresistance, highlighting potential of NRF2/SLC7A11/ferroptosis axis as future therapeutic targets against therapy resistance biomarker. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12967-021-03042-7
Fe
M. Jin, H. Itamochi, J. Kigawa +532 more · 2021 · Pharmaceuticals · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
M. Jin, H. Itamochi, J. Kigawa, M.J. McKeage, K.H. Lee, M.S. Hyun, H.K. Kim, H.M. Jin, J. Yang, H.S. Song, Y.R. Do, H.M. Ryoo, J.S. Chung, D.Y. Zang, R.G. Kenny, S.W. Chuah, A. Crawford, C.J. Marmion, T.C. Johnstone, K. Suntharalingam, S.J. Lippard, S. Dilrub, G.V. Kalayd, X.Y. Wang, Z.J. Guo, A.A. Argyriou, P. Polychronopoulos, G. Iconomou, E. Chroni, H.P. Kalofonos, S.R. McWhinney, R.M. Goldberg, H.L. McLeod, Y.Z. Min, C.Q. Mao, S.M. Chen, G.L. Ma, J. Wang, Y.Z. Liu, D. Wang, V. Brabec, O. Hrabina, J. Kasparkova, S. Usanova, A. Piée-Staffa, U. Sied, J. Thomale, A. Schneider, B. Kaina, B. Köberle, W. Sakai, E.M. Swisher, B.Y. Karlan, M.K. Agarwal, J. Higgins, C. Friedman, E. Villegas, C. Jacquemont, D.J. Farrugia, F.J. Couch, G.Y. Park, W.J. Guo, Y.M. Zhang, L. Zhang, B. Huang, F.F. Tao, W. Chen, Q. Xu, Y. Sun, I.A. Riddell, J. Malina, N.P. Farrell, S.M. Alexander, W. Lin, K.S. Lovejoy, M. Serova, I. Bieche, S. Emami, M. D’Incalci, M. Broggini, E. Erba, C. Gespach, E. Cvitkovic, S. Faivre, W. Zhou, M. Almeqdadi, M.E. Xifaras, Ö.H. Yilmaz, J.J. Wilson, J.P. Macquet, J.L. Butour, M.J. Cleare, J.D. Hoeschele, W.I. Sundquist, D.P. Bancroft, L.S. Hollis, J.N. Burstyn, W.J. Heiger-Bernays, S.F. Bellon, K.J. Ahmed, A.R. Amundsen, E.W. Stern, S. Zhang, J.E. Shima, L.L. Lagpacan, Y. Shu, A. Lapuk, Y. Chen, T. Komori, J.W. Gray, X. Chen, R.C. Todd, M.S. McCormick, J.A. D’Aquino, J.T. Reardon, A. Sancar, K.M. Giacomini, G.Y. Zhu, X.H. Huang, Y. Song, A. Casini, J. Reedijk, M.W. Kellinger, J. Chong, A.A. Almaqwashi, M.N. Naufer, M.C. Williams, M.T. Gregory, Y.S. Lee, W. Yang, H. Baruah, C.L. Rector, S.M. Monnier, U. Bierbach, R. Guddneppanavar, G. Saluta, G.L. Kucera, J.R. Choudhury, A.R. Kheradi, B.D. Steen, C.S. Day, C.L. Smyre, T.E. Kute, G.V. Kalayda, B.A.J. Jansen, P. Wielaard, H.J. Tanke, C. Molenaar, M. Ferrari, J. Brouwer, S.D. Wu, C.C. Zhu, Y.J. Song, Y.Z. Li, C.L. Zhang, Z. Yu, W.J. He, Y.F. He, Z.F. Chen, S.P. Zhang, L. Shen, Z.Z. Zhu, J. Zhang, C. Zhang, R.L. Guan, X.X. Liao, C. Ouyang, T.W. Rees, J.P. Liu, L.N. Ji, H. Chao, S. Bonnet, L.M. Dabids, B. Kleemann, Z.J. Zhou, J.B. Song, L.M. Nie, X.Y. Chen, M. Ethirajan, Y.H. Chen, P. Joshi, R.K. Pandey, A. Naik, R. Rubbiani, G. Gasser, B. Spingler, G.C. Yu, S. Yu, M.L. Saha, J. Zhou, T.R. Cook, B.C. Yung, J. Chen, Z.W. Mao, F.W. Zhang, A.M. Santoro, M.C. Lo Giudice, A. D’Urso, R. Lauceri, R. Purrello, D. Milardi, I.O. Bacellar, T.M. Tsubone, C. Pavani, M.S. Baptista, T.T. Tasso, L.M. Mattiazzi, T.V. Acunha, B.A. Iglesias, G.K. Couto, B.S. Pacheco, V.M. Borba, J.C.R. Junior, T.L. Oliveira, N.V. Segatto, F.K. Seixas, T. Collares, X.J. Hu, K. Ogawa, S. Li, T. Kiwada, A. Odani, X.L. Xu, F.W. Lin, Y. Du, X. Zhang, J. Wu, Z.K. Xu, X. Li, B.D. Zheng, X.H. Peng, S.Z. Li, J.W. Ying, Y. Zhao, J.D. Huang, J. Yoon, R.C.H. Wonga, P.C. Lo, D.K.P. Ng, K. Mitra, M. Samsó, C.E. Lyonsb, M.C.T. Hartman, J.F. Mao, J.H. Zhu, M.K. Raza, S. Gautam, A. Garai, P. Kondaiah, A.R. Chakravarty, B. Wang, H.X. Yuan, Z. Liu, C.Y. Nie, L.B. Liu, F.T. Lv, Y.L. Wang, S. Wang, X.L. Xue, H.C. Chen, Y. Bai, X.C. Shi, Y. Jiao, Z.Y. Chen, Y.P. Miao, C. Settembre, A. Fraldi, D.L. Medina, A. Ballabio, S.R. Bonam, F.J. Wang, S. Muller, A.V. Klein, T.W. Hambley, C.G. Qian, H.B. Fang, H.K. Liu, H. Yuan, W.T. Liu, Y.F. Zhong, L.Y. Liu, C.T. Shen, W.J. Zeng, F.Y. Wang, D.Z. Yang, X.H. Zheng, G. Mu, T.P. Zhang, Q. Cao, H. Zhang, Y.W. Zhou, Y. Shen, P.Z. Qin, Y. Li, E. Freisinger, R.K.O. Sigel, B. Dumat, G. Bordeau, E. Faurel-Paul, F. Mahuteau-Betzer, N. Saettel, G. Metge, C. Fiorini-Debuisschert, F. Charra, M.P. Teulade-Fichou, C.P. Tan, U. Basu, B. Banik, R. Wen, R.K. Pathak, S. Dhar, M. Kansara, M.T. Teng, M.J. Smyth, D.M. Thomas, E. Alpaslan, H. Yazici, N.H. Golshan, K.S. Ziemer, T.J. Webster, D.E. Reed, K.M. Shokat, J.S. Whelan, L.E. Davis, G. Makris, E.D. Tseligka, I. Pirmettis, M.S. Papadopoulos, I.S. Vizirianakis, D. Papagiannopoulou, Z.Q. Zhang, C. Luo, K. Wang, S.R. Zhang, H. Hamidi, J. Ivaska, T. Chatzisideri, S. Thysiadis, S. Katsamakas, P. Dalezis, I. Sigala, T. Lazarides, E. Nikolakaki, D. Trafalis, O.A. Gederaas, M. Lindgren, A. Zamora, A. Gandioso, A. Massaguer, S. Buenestado, C. Calvis, J.L. Hernández, F. Mitjans, V. Rodríguez, J. Ruiz, V. Marchán, T. Wu, Y. Dai, A.A. Franich, M.D. Živković, T. Ilić-Tomić, I.S. Đorđević, J. Nikodinović-Runić, A. Pavić, G.V. Janjić, S. Rajković, U.E. Martinez-Outschoorn, M. Peiris-Pages, R.G. Pestell, F. Sotgia, M.P. Lisanti, Y.H. Yang, S. Karakhanova, W. Hartwig, J.G. D’haese, P.P. Philippov, J. Werner, A.V. Bazhin, M.G. Vander Heiden, L.C. Cantley, C.B. Thompson, D.C. Wallace, S. Marrachea, R.W. Taylor, D.M. Turnbull, P. Bouwman, J. Jonkers, C. Holohan, S. Van Schaeybroeck, D.B. Longley, P.G. Johnston, S. Fulda, L. Galluzzi, G. Kroemer, N. Lomeli, K.J. Di, J. Czerniawski, J.F. Guzowski, D.A. Bota, Y. Guo, D.F. Song, Z.H. Wang, Y.J. Wang, H.M. Zhang, Z.J. Gan, N. Muhammad, P. Imming, C. Sinning, A. Meyer, R. Ramsay, K. Tipton, N.K. Tonks, L.P. Lu, M.L. Zhu, C.X. Yuan, W.R. Wang, J.W. Wang, X.H. Li, Y.B. Wu, S.D. Li, S. Xing, X.Q. Fu, D.W. Zhang, Y.M. Yip, L.B. Li, S.N. Li, J.J. Li, W.Q. Dai, Q.H. Zhang, J. Feng, L.W. Wu, T. Liu, Q. Yu, S.Z. Xu, W.W. Wang, K. Muhammad, N. Sadia, Z.Y. Pan, P.A. Waghorn, M.R. Jackson, V. Gouverneur, K.A. Vallis, A. Paul, B. Maji, S.K. Misra, A.K. Jain, K. Muniyappa, S. Bhattacharya, G.B. Huang, S. Chen, Q.P. Qin, J.R. Luo, M.X. Tan, Z.F. Wang, B.Q. Zou, H. Liang, X.L. Huang, Y. Zhang, S.L. Wang, H.H. Zou, L. Wang, Z.X. Long, Z.K. Song, T. Xie, S.H. Zhang, Y.C. Liu, B. Lin, M. Sabbatini, I. Zanellato, M. Ravera, E. Gabano, E. Perin, B. Rangone, D. Osella, D.Y.Q. Wong, W.W.F. Ong, W.H. Ang, K.B. Huang, H.W. Feng, H.J. Luo, Y. Long, T.T. Zou, A.S.C. Chan, R. Liu, K. Al-Khayal, M.A. Vaali-Mohammed, M. Elwatidy, T. Bin Traiki, O. Al-Obeed, M. Azam, Z. Khan, M. Abdulla, R. Ahmad, K. Choroba, B. Machura, L.R. Raposo, J.G. Małecki, S. Kula, M. Pająk, K. Erfurt, A.M. Maroń, A.R. Fernandes, X.M. Tang, X. Wang, Y.N. Liu, G. Ferraro, T. Marzo, T. Infrasca, A. Cilibrizzi, R. Vilar, L. Messori, A. Merlino, Z. Li, Y. Gan, Y.H. Yin, W.C. Zhang, J.F. Yang, Y.X. Tang, Y.B. Dai, C. Icsel, V.T. Yilmaz, B. Cevatemre, M. Aygun, E. Ulukaya, I. Khan, B. Maity, J.Y. Zhang, C. Tu, J. Lin, J. Ding, L.P. Lin, Z.M. Wang, C. He, C.H. Yan, X.Z. You Show less
Platinum-based anticancer drugs represented by cisplatin play important roles in the treatment of various solid tumors. However, their applications are largely compromised by drug resistance and side Show more
Platinum-based anticancer drugs represented by cisplatin play important roles in the treatment of various solid tumors. However, their applications are largely compromised by drug resistance and side effects. Much effort has been made to circumvent the drug resistance and general toxicity of these drugs. Among multifarious designs, monofunctional platinum(II) complexes with a general formula of [Pt(3A)Cl] + (A: Ammonia or amine) stand out as a class of “non-traditional” anticancer agents hopeful to overcome the defects of current platinum drugs. This review aims to summarize the development of monofunctional platinum(II) complexes in recent years. They are classified into four categories: fluorescent complexes, photoactive complexes, targeted complexes, and miscellaneous complexes. The intention behind the designs is either to visualize the cellular distribution, or to reduce the side effects, or to improve the tumor selectivity, or inhibit the cancer cells through non-DNA targets. The information provided by this review may inspire researchers to conceive more innovative complexes with potent efficacy to shake off the drawbacks of platinum anticancer drugs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ph14020133
Pt anticancer imaging photoactivated review
R.R. Zhou, C. Alarcón, C. Nadal +374 more · 2021 · Cancers · MDPI · added 2026-04-20
R.R. Zhou, C. Alarcón, C. Nadal, C. Van Poznak, J. Massagué, J.M. Angelastro, P.D. Canoll, J. Kuo, M. Weicker, A. Costa, J.N. Bruce, L. A Greene, R. Piva, E. Pellegrino, M. Mattioli, L. Agnelli, L. Lombardi, F. Boccalatte, G. Costa, B.A. Ruggeri, M. Cheng, R. Chiarle, S.E. Monaco, M. Szabolcs, L.A. Greene, W.J. Oh, V. Rishi, A. Orosz, M.J. Gerdes, C. Vinson, Z. Sheng, L. Li, L.J. Zhu, T.W. Smith, A. Demers, A.H. Ross, R.P. Moser, M.R. Green, M.S. Carro, W.K. Lim, M.J. Alvarez, R.J. Bollo, X. Zhao, E.Y. Snyder, E.P. Sulman, S.L. Anne, F. Doetsch, H. Colman, J. Rousseau, V. Gagné, M. Labuda, C. Beaubois, D. Sinnett, C. Laverdière, A. Moghrabi, S.E. Sallan, L.B. Silverman, D. Neuberg, T.R. Sarkar, S. Sharan, J. Wang, S.A. Pawar, C.A. Cantwell, P.F. Johnson, D.K. Morrison, J.-M. Wang, E. Sterneck, M. Hu, B. Wang, D. Qian, L. Zhang, X. Song, D.X. Liu, Y.-H. Wang, W.-J. Wu, W.-J. Wang, H.-Y. Huang, W.-M. Li, B.-W. Yeh, T.-F. Wu, Y.-L. Shiue, J.J.-C. Sheu, S. Ishihara, M. Yasuda, A. Ishizu, M. Ishikawa, H. Shirato, H. Haga, A. Nukuda, H. Endoh, T. Mizutani, K. Kawabata, S. Banerjee, N. Aykin-Burns, K.J. Krager, S.K. Shah, S.B. Melnyk, M. Hauer-Jensen, J.D. Gardiner, L.M. Abegglen, X. Huang, B.E. Carter, E.A. Schackmann, M. Stucki, C.N. Paxton, R.L. Randall, J.F. Amatruda, A.R. Putnam, Y. Zhang, H.-R. Wang, J.L. Wrana, S. Ben-Shmuel, R. Rashed, R. Rostoker, E. Isakov, Z. Shen-Orr, D. Leroith, C.-F. Li, Y.-Y. Chu, T.-C. Hour, C.-J. Yen, W.-C. Chang, Z.J. Messenger, J.R. Hall, D.D. Jima, J.S. House, H.W. Tam, D.A. Tokarz, R.C. Smart, D. Liu, X.-X. Zhang, M.-C. Li, C.-H. Cao, D.-Y. Wan, B.-X. Xi, J.-H. Tan, Z.-Y. Yang, X.-X. Feng, J. Feldheim, A.F. Kessler, D. Schmitt, L. Wilczek, T. Linsenmann, M. Dahlmann, C.M. Monoranu, R.-I. Ernestus, C. Hagemann, M. Löhr, F. Wang, Y. Gao, L. Tang, K. Ning, N. Geng, H. Zhang, Y. Li, F. Liu, F. Li, Q. Du, Z. Tan, F. Shi, M. Tang, L. Xie, L. Zhao, J. Hu, M. Zhou, A. Bode, D. Wang, X. Cheng, M. Guo, W. Zhao, J. Qiu, Y. Zheng, M. Meng, X. Ping, X. Chen, X. Ruan, X. Liu, Y. Xue, L. Shao, C. Yang, L. Zhu, Y. Yang, Z. Li, B. Yu, H. Wu, J. Gu, D. Zhou, W. Cheng, Y. Wang, Q. Wang, X. Wang, T. Kudo, M.T. Prentzell, S.R. Mohapatra, F. Sahm, Z. Zhao, I. Grummt, W. Wick, C.A. Opitz, M. Platten, E.W. Green, Z.-Y. Hua, J.N. Hansen, M. He, S.-K. Dai, Y. Choi, M.D. Fulton, S.M. Lloyd, M. Szemes, J. Sen, H.-F. Ding, A. Arias, M.W. Lamé, L. Santarelli, R. Hen, C.C. Cates, A.D. Arias, L.S.N. Wong, M. Sidorov, G. Cayanan, D.J. Rowland, J. Fung, G. Karpel-Massler, M.D. Siegelin, B.A. Horst, C. Shu, L. Chau, T. Tsujiuchi, P. Canoll, X. Sun, P. Jefferson, Q. Zhou, M. Olive, S.C. Williams, C. Dezan, A.W. Reinke, J. Baek, O. Ashenberg, A.E. Keating, C.R. Vinson, T. Hai, S.M. Boyd, E. Dupont, A. Prochiantz, A. Joliot, A.M. Sonabend, J. Yun, L. Lei, R. Leung, C. Soderquist, C. Crisman, B.J. Gill, A. Carminucci, J. Sisti, M. Castelli, J.-F. Beaulieu, D. Ménard, W. Chai, I. Ullah, K. Chung, S. Bae, C. Kim, B. Choi, H.Y. Nam, S.H. Kim, C.-O. Yun, K.Y. Lee, S. Rodrigues-Ferreira, H. Moindjie, M.M. Haykal, C. Nahmias, R. Xu, Z. Ji, C. Xu, J. Zhu, N.J. Caron, S.P. Quenneville, J.P. Tremblay, S.Y. Van Der Zanden, X. Qiao, J. Neefjes, F. A Fornari, W.D. Jarvis, S. Grant, M.S. Orr, J.K. Randolph, F.K. White, V.R. Mumaw, E.T. Lovings, R.H. Freeman, D. A Gewirtz, A. Bojko, J. Czarnecka-Herok, A. Charzynska, M. Dabrowski, E. Sikora, T. Kuilman, C. Michaloglou, L.C. Vredeveld, S. Douma, R. Van Doorn, C.J. Desmet, L.A. Aarden, W.J. Mooi, D.S. Peeper, E.S. Hungness, G.-J. Luo, T.A. Pritts, B.W. Robb, D. Hershko, P.-O. Hasselgren, M.Y. Taher, D.M. Davies, J. Maher, J. David, C. Dominguez, D.H. Hamilton, C. Palena, J. Al Sarraj, G. Thiel, F. Siu, C. Chen, C. Zhong, M.S. Kilberg, M. Chiu, G. Taurino, M.G. Bianchi, O. Bussolati, S.P. Wheatley, D.C. Altieri, N.M. Warrier, P. Agarwal, P. Kumar, D.M. García, N. Manero-Rupérez, R. Quesada, L. Korrodi-Gregório, V. Soto-Cerrato, D. Merino, D. Dluzen, G. Li, D. Tacelosky, M. Moreau, W. Li, C. Fiorese, A.M. Schulz, Y.-F. Lin, N. Rosin, M.W. Pellegrino, C.M. Haynes, B. Madarampalli, Y. Yuan, K. Lengel, Y. Xu, J. Yang, Z. Lu, I.K. Mann, R. Chatterjee, J. Zhao, X. He, M.T. Weirauch, T.R. Hughes, M.A. Summers, M.M. McDonald, P.I. Croucher, S.-Y. Park, J.-S. Nam, K.J. Kurppa, Y. Liu, C. To, T. Zhang, M. Fan, A. Vajdi, E.H. Knelson, Y. Xie, K. Lim, P. Cejas Show less
Simple Summary The gene-regulatory factors ATF5, CEBPB and CEBPD promote survival, growth, metastasis and treatment resistance of a range of cancer cell types. Presently, no drugs target all three at Show more
Simple Summary The gene-regulatory factors ATF5, CEBPB and CEBPD promote survival, growth, metastasis and treatment resistance of a range of cancer cell types. Presently, no drugs target all three at once. Here, with the aim of treating cancers, we designed novel cell-penetrating peptides that interact with and inactivate all three. The peptides Bpep and Dpep kill a range of cancer cell types in culture and in animals. In animals with tumors, they also significantly increase survival time. In contrast, they do not affect survival of non-cancer cells and have no apparent side effects in animals. The peptides work in combination with other anti-cancer treatments. Mechanism studies of how the peptides kill cancer cells indicate a decrease in survival proteins and increase in death proteins. These studies support the potential of Bpep and Dpep as novel, safe agents for the treatment of a variety of cancer types, both as mono- and combination therapies. Abstract Transcription factors are key players underlying cancer formation, growth, survival, metastasis and treatment resistance, yet few drugs exist to directly target them. Here, we characterized the in vitro and in vivo anti-cancer efficacy of novel synthetic cell-penetrating peptides (Bpep and Dpep) designed to interfere with the formation of active leucine-zipper-based dimers by CEBPB and CEBPD, transcription factors implicated in multiple malignancies. Both peptides similarly promoted apoptosis of multiple tumor lines of varying origins, without such effects on non-transformed cells. Combined with other treatments (radiation, Taxol, chloroquine, doxorubicin), the peptides acted additively to synergistically and were fully active on Taxol-resistant cells. The peptides suppressed expression of known direct CEBPB/CEBPD targets IL6 , IL8 and asparagine synthetase ( ASNS ), supporting their inhibition of transcriptional activation. Mechanisms by which the peptides trigger apoptosis included depletion of pro-survival survivin and a required elevation of pro-apoptotic BMF. Bpep and Dpep significantly slowed tumor growth in mouse models without evident side effects. Dpep significantly prolonged survival in xenograft models. These findings indicate the efficacy and potential of Bpep and Dpep as novel agents to treat a variety of cancers as mono- or combination therapies. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102504
Xue-Quan Zhou, Imma Carbo-Bague, Maxime A. Siegler +8 more · 2021 · JACS Au · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
In this work, a pair of gold(III) complexes derived from the analogous tetrapyridyl ligands H2biqbpy1 and H2biqbpy2 was prepared: the rollover, bis-cyclometalated [Au(biqbpy1)Cl Show more
In this work, a pair of gold(III) complexes derived from the analogous tetrapyridyl ligands H2biqbpy1 and H2biqbpy2 was prepared: the rollover, bis-cyclometalated [Au(biqbpy1)Cl ([1]Cl) and its isomer [Au(biqbpy2)Cl ([2]Cl). In [1]+, two pyridyl rings coordinate to the metal via a Au-C bond (CNNC coordination) and the two noncoordinated amine bridges of the ligand remain protonated, while in [2]+ all four pyridyl rings of the ligand coordinate to the metal via a Au-N bond (NNNN coordination), but both amine bridges are deprotonated. As a result, both complexes are monocationic, which allowed comparison of the sole effect of cyclometalation on the chemistry, protein interaction, and anticancer properties of the gold(III) compounds. Due to their identical monocationic charge and similar molecular shape, both complexes [1]Cl and [2]Cl displaced reference radioligand [3H]dofetilide equally well from cell membranes expressing the Kv11.1 (hERG) potassium channel, and more so than the tetrapyridyl ligands H2biqbpy1 and H2biqbpy2. By contrast, cyclometalation rendered [1]Cl coordinatively stable in the presence of biological thiols, while [2]Cl was reduced by a millimolar concentration of glutathione into metastable Au(I) species releasing the free ligand H2biqbpy2 and TrxR-inhibiting Au+ ions. The redox stability of [1]Cl dramatically decreased its thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) inhibition properties, compared to [2]Cl. On the other hand, unlike [2]Cl, [1]Cl aggregated into nanoparticles in FCS-containing medium, which resulted in much more efficient gold cellular uptake. [1]Cl had much more selective anticancer properties than [2]Cl and cisplatin, as it was almost 10 times more cytotoxic to human cancer cells (A549, A431, A375, and MCF7) than to noncancerous cells (MRC5). Mechanistic studies highlight the strikingly different mode of action of the two compounds: while for [1]Cl high gold cellular uptake, nuclear DNA damage, and interaction with hERG may contribute to cell killing, for [2]Cl extracellular reduction released TrxR-inhibiting Au+ ions that were taken up in minute amounts in the cytosol, and a toxic tetrapyridyl ligand also capable of binding to hERG. These results demonstrate that bis-cyclometalation is an appealing method to improve the redox stability of Au(III) compounds and to develop gold-based cytotoxic compounds that do not rely on TrxR inhibition to kill cancer cells. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.0c00104
Au amino-acid anticancer coordination-chemistry cyclometalating
Riccardo Pettinari, Fabio Marchetti, Alessia Tombesi +8 more · 2021 · Inorganica Chimica Acta · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2021.120610
Biometal
Qi Sun, Yi Wang, Qiuxia Fu +8 more · 2021 · Angewandte Chemie · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ange.202015009
Biometal
Hao Yuan, Zhong Han, Yuncong Chen +5 more · 2021 · Angewandte Chemie · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ange.202014959
Biometal
Can Huang, Chao Liang, Tumpa Sadhukhan +7 more · 2021 · Angewandte Chemie · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ange.202015671
Biometal
Qi Wang, Xi Chen, Yuhang Jiang +13 more · 2020 · Journal of molecular cell biology · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-20
Histone methylation is a context-dependent modification that regulates gene expression, and the trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3) usually induces gene silencing. Overcoming colorectal Show more
Histone methylation is a context-dependent modification that regulates gene expression, and the trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3) usually induces gene silencing. Overcoming colorectal cancer (CRC) chemoresistance is currently a huge challenge, but the relationship between H3K27me3 modification and chemoresistance remains largely unclear. Here, we found that H3K27me3 levels positively correlated with the metastasis-free survival of CRC patients and a low H3K27me3 level predicted a poor outcome upon chemotherapeutic drug treatment. Oxaliplatin stimulation significantly induced the expression of H3K27 lysine demethylase 6A/6B (KDM6A/6B), thus decreasing the level of H3K27me3 in CRC cells. Elevation of H3K27me3 level through KDM6A/6B depletion or GSK-J4 (a KDM6A/6B inhibitor) treatment significantly enhanced oxaliplatin-induced apoptosis. Conversely, when inhibiting the expression of H3K27me3 by EPZ-6438, an inhibitor of the histone methyltransferase EZH2, the proportion of apoptotic cells remarkably decreased. In addition, the combination of GSK-J4 and oxaliplatin significantly inhibited tumor growth in an oxaliplatin-resistant patient-derived xenograft model. Importantly, we revealed that oxaliplatin treatment dramatically induced NOTCH2 expression, which was caused by downregulation of H3K27me3 level on the NOTCH2 transcription initiation site. Thus, the activated NOTCH signaling promoted the expression of stemness-related genes, which resulted in oxaliplatin resistance. Furthermore, oxaliplatin-induced NOTCH signaling could be interrupted by GSK-J4 treatment. Collectively, our findings suggest that elevating H3K27me3 level can improve drug sensitivity in CRC patients. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjz032
S.J. Rayhan, K.M. Koeller, J.C. Wong +221 more · 2020 · Heliyon · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
S.J. Rayhan, K.M. Koeller, J.C. Wong, R.A. Butcher, S.L. Schreiber, F.G. Kuruvilla, A.F. Shamji, S.M. Sternson, P.J. Hergenrother, D.B. Kitchen, H. Decornez, J.R. Furr, J. Bajorath, Z. Mousavian, A. Masoudi-Nejad, R.S. Olayan, H. Ashoor, V.B. Bajic, Y. Yamanishi, M. Araki, A. Gutteridge, W. Honda, M. Kanehisa, S. Khakabimamaghani, K. Kavousi, F. Rayhan, S. Ahmed, S. Shatabda, D.M. Farid, A. Dehzangi, M.S. Rahman, K. Tian, M. Shao, Y. Wang, J. Guan, S. Zhou, K.C. Chan, Z.-H. You, W. Wang, S. Yang, J. Li, X. Chen, M.-X. Liu, G.-Y. Yan, K. Bleakley, S. Alaimo, A. Pulvirenti, R. Giugno, A. Ferro, F. Cheng, C. Liu, J. Jiang, W. Lu, W. Li, G. Liu, W. Zhou, J. Huang, Y. Tang, Z. He, J. Zhang, X.-H. Shi, L.-L. Hu, X. Kong, Y.-D. Cai, K.-C. Chou, X. Xiao, J.-L. Min, P. Wang, J. Keum, H. Nam Self-blm, M. Hao, S.H. Bryant, M. Gönen, W. Ba-Alawi, O. Soufan, M. Essack, P. Kalnis, H. Chen, Z. Zhang, Y.-A. Huang, S. Daminelli, J.M. Thomas, C. Durán, C.V. Cannistraci, V.J. Haupt, M. Schroeder, Q. Yuan, J. Gao, D. Wu, S. Zhang, H. Mamitsuka, S. Zhu, L. Wang, S.-X. Xia, F. Liu, X. Yan, Y. Zhou, K.-J. Song, A. Ezzat, M. Wu, X.-L. Li, C.-K. Kwoh, C.C. Yan, X. Zhang, F. Dai, J. Yin, Y. Zhang, M. Wen, S. Niu, H. Sha, R. Yang, Y. Yun, H. Lu, Y. López, S.P. Lal, G. Taherzadeh, J. Michaelson, A. Sattar, T. Tsunoda, A. Sharma, A.W.-C. Liew, Y. Yang, Y. Freund, R.E. Schapire, I. Goodfellow, Y. Bengio, A. Courville, Y. Du, J. Wang, X. Wang, J. Chen, H. Chang, C. Szegedy, W. Liu, Y. Jia, P. Sermanet, S. Reed, D. Anguelov, D. Erhan, V. Vanhoucke, A. Rabinovich, S. Ioffe, J. Shlens, Z. Wojna, A.A. Alemi, M. Abadi, P. Barham, Z. Chen, A. Davis, J. Dean, M. Devin, S. Ghemawat, G. Irving, M. Isard, A. Mahbub, M. Jani, D.P. Kingma, J. Ba Adam, M. Lin, Q. Chen, S. Yan, D.S. Wishart, C. Knox, A.C. Guo, D. Cheng, S. Shrivastava, D. Tzur, B. Gautam, M. Hassanali, S. Goto, M. Hattori, M. Hirakawa, M. Itoh, T. Katayama, S. Kawashima, S. Okuda, T. Tokimatsu, I. Schomburg, A. Chang, C. Ebeling, M. Gremse, C. Heldt, G. Huhn, D. Schomburg, S. Günther, M. Kuhn, M. Dunkel, M. Campillos, C. Senger, E. Petsalaki, J. Ahmed, E.G. Urdiales, A. Gewiess, L.J. Jensen, D.-S. Cao, S. Liu, Q.-S. Xu, H.-M. Lu, J.-H. Huang, Q.-N. Hu, Y.-Z. Liang, J.H. Friedman, F. Pedregosa, G. Varoquaux, A. Gramfort, V. Michel, B. Thirion, O. Grisel, M. Blondel, P. Prettenhofer, R. Weiss, V. Dubourg, S.R. Safavian, D. Landgrebe, T. Joachims, C.M. Rahman, M. Kotera, P. Mutowo, A.P. Bento, N. Dedman, A. Gaulton, A. Hersey, J. Lomax, J.P. Overington Show less
The task of drug-target interaction prediction holds significant importance in pharmacology and therapeutic drug design. In this paper, we present FRnet-DTI, an auto-encoder based feature manipulation Show more
The task of drug-target interaction prediction holds significant importance in pharmacology and therapeutic drug design. In this paper, we present FRnet-DTI, an auto-encoder based feature manipulation and a convolutional neural network based classifier for drug target interaction prediction. Two convolutional neural networks are proposed: FRnet-Encode and FRnet-Predict. Here, one model is used for feature manipulation and the other one for classification. Using the first method FRnet-Encode, we generate 4096 features for each of the instances in each of the datasets and use the second method, FRnet-Predict, to identify interaction probability employing those features. We have tested our method on four gold standard datasets extensively used by other researchers. Experimental results shows that our method significantly improves over the state-of-the-art method on three out of four drug-target interaction gold standard datasets on both area under curve for Receiver Operating Characteristic (auROC) and area under Precision Recall curve (auPR) metric. We also introduce twenty new potential drug-target pairs for interaction based on high prediction scores. The source codes and implementation details of our methods are available from https://github.com/farshidrayhanuiu/FRnet-DTI/ and also readily available to use as an web application from http://farshidrayhan.pythonanywhere.com/FRnet-DTI/ . Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03444
Au ML
Kenneth Yin Zhang, Linna Song, Tianhan Gu +6 more · 2020 · European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ejic.202000702
Biometal
Fangman Chen, Fan Zhang, Dan Shao +9 more · 2020 · Applied Materials Today · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.apmt.2020.100558
Biometal
Shi Kuang, Xinxing Liao, Xianrui Zhang +6 more · 2020 · Angewandte Chemie · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ange.201915828
Biometal apoptosis
Shujiao Chen, Xicheng Liu, Xingxing Ge +7 more · 2020 · Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c9qi01161g
Biometal
Yi Zhou, Lan Bai, Yi-Ying Gu +6 more · 2020 · Inorganic Chemistry Communications · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.inoche.2020.108012
Biometal
Jing Xu, Lan Bai, Yi-Ying Gu +4 more · 2020 · Inorganic Chemistry Communications · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.inoche.2019.107594
Biometal
Dan Bai, Yi Tian, Kai Chen +6 more · 2020 · Dyes and Pigments · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.dyepig.2020.108635
Biometal
Yongkang Xie, Shumiao Zhang, Xingxing Ge +7 more · 2020 · Applied Organometallic Chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/aoc.5589
Biometal
Chen Ge, Jiayi Zhu, Ai Ouyang +4 more · 2020 · Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/d0qi00846j
Biometal
Jingyu Zhang, Su Wang, Yanyan Ba +1 more · 2019 · European journal of medicinal chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
Cancer is one of the main causes of death throughout the world. The anticancer agents are indispensable for the treatment of various cancers, but most of them currently on the market are not specific, Show more
Cancer is one of the main causes of death throughout the world. The anticancer agents are indispensable for the treatment of various cancers, but most of them currently on the market are not specific, resulting in series of side effects of chemotherapy. Moreover, the emergency of drug-resistance towards cancers has already increased up to alarming level in the recent decades. Therefore, it's imperative to develop novel anticancer candidates with excellent activity against both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant cancers, and low toxicity as well. Tetrazole is the bioisoster of carboxylic acid, and its derivatives demonstrated promising anticancer activity. Hybridization of tetrazole with other anticancer pharmacophores may provide novel candidates with anticancer potency. The present review described the anticancer activity of tetrazole hybrids, and the structure-activity relationship (SAR) is also discussed to provide an insight for rational designs of tetrazole anticancer candidates with higher efficiency. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2019.05.071
anticancer review tetrazole
Qinjun Chen, Lisha Liu, Yifei Lu +10 more · 2019 · Advanced Science · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
AbstractAnticancer therapies, which can induce cell death and elevate antitumor immune response in the meantime, are considered as effective treatments for many types of cancers. Immunogenic cell deat Show more
AbstractAnticancer therapies, which can induce cell death and elevate antitumor immune response in the meantime, are considered as effective treatments for many types of cancers. Immunogenic cell death (ICD) induced by chemodrugs is a promising and typical strategy to achieve cell cytotoxicity and immunological enhancement together. However, due to the low level of ICD induction and less tumor‐targeting accumulation, application of traditional ICD inducers is limited. Here, tumor‐targeting core–shell magnetic nanoparticles (ETP‐PtFeNP:α‐enolase targeting peptide modified Pt‐prodrug loaded Fe3O4 nanoparticles) are developed to reinforce ICD induction of loaded‐oxaliplatin (IV) prodrug. After tumor‐targeting accumulation and endocytosis, platinum (IV) complexes are activated by intracellular reductive elimination to yield and release the Pt (II) congener, oxaliplatin, leading to DNA lesions and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Simultaneously, in‐progress‐released ferric ions elicit highly toxic ROS (·OH or ·OOH) burst and interfere with the intracytoplasmic redox balance (like endoplasmic reticulum stress), leading to ICD‐associated immunogenicity enhancement and specific antitumor immune responses to kill the tumor cells synergistically. Meanwhile, the transverse relaxation rate R 2 of ETP‐PtFeNP is remarkably increased by more than three times while triggered by reductant, suggesting ETP‐PtFeNP a high‐sensitivity T 2 contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/advs.201802134
Fe Pt ROS amino-acid anticancer drug-delivery imaging immunogenic
Shenghua Shi, Huimin Lu, Tongguo Shi +96 more · 2019 · Cell Death & Disease · Nature · added 2026-04-20
Accumulating evidence suggests that aerobic glycolysis is important for colorectal cancer (CRC) development. However, the underlying mechanisms have yet to be elucidated. B7-H3, an immunoregulatory pr Show more
Accumulating evidence suggests that aerobic glycolysis is important for colorectal cancer (CRC) development. However, the underlying mechanisms have yet to be elucidated. B7-H3, an immunoregulatory protein, is broadly overexpressed by multiple tumor types and plays a vital role in tumor progression. In this study, we found that overexpression of B7-H3 effectively increased the rate of glucose consumption and lactate production, whereas knockdown of B7-H3 had the opposite effect. Furthermore, we showed that B7-H3 increased glucose consumption and lactate production by promoting hexokinase 2 (HK2) expression in CRC cells, and we also found that HK2 was a key mediator of B7-H3-induced CRC chemoresistance. Depletion of HK2 expression or treating cells with HK2 inhibitors could reverse the B7-H3-induced increase in aerobic glycolysis and B7-H3-endowed chemoresistance of cancer cells. Moreover, we verified a positive correlation between the expression of B7-H3 and HK2 in tumor tissues of CRC patients. Collectively, our findings suggest that B7-H3 may be a novel regulator of glucose metabolism and chemoresistance via controlling HK2 expression in CRC cells, a result that could help develop B7-H3 as a promising therapeutic target for CRC treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41419-019-1549-6
amino-acid
Joshua J. Woods, Neeharika Nemani, Santhanam Shanmughapriya +10 more · 2019 · ACS Central Science · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
Mitochondrial Ca2+ (mCa2+) uptake mediated by the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) plays a critical role in signal transduction, bioenergetics, and cell death, an Show more
Mitochondrial Ca2+ (mCa2+) uptake mediated by the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) plays a critical role in signal transduction, bioenergetics, and cell death, and its dysregulation is linked to several human diseases. In this study, we report a new ruthenium complex Ru265 that is cell-permeable, minimally toxic, and highly potent with respect to MCU inhibition. Cells treated with Ru265 show inhibited MCU activity without any effect on cytosolic Ca2+ dynamics and mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm). Dose-dependent studies reveal that Ru265 is more potent than the currently employed MCU inhibitor Ru360. Site-directed mutagenesis of Cys97 in the N-terminal domain of human MCU ablates the inhibitory activity of Ru265, suggesting that this matrix-residing domain is its target site. Additionally, Ru265 prevented hypoxia/reoxygenation injury and subsequent mitochondrial dysfunction, demonstrating that this new inhibitor is a valuable tool for studying the functional role of the MCU in intact biological models. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.8b00773
mitochondria