👤 MengQi Zhang

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145
Articles
214
Name variants
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
Pengchao Hu, Ying Wang, Yan Zhang +6 more · 2016 · RSC Advances · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c6ra02571d
Biometal
Chuan-Chuan Zeng, Cheng Zhang, Shang-Hai Lai +4 more · 2016 · Inorganic Chemistry Communications · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.inoche.2016.06.020
Biometal
Chuan-Chuan Zeng, Cheng Zhang, Shang-Hai Lai +3 more · 2016 · Transition Metal Chemistry · Springer · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11243-016-0096-6
Biometal
Si-Hong Liu, Hui-Hua Xu, Jian-Wei Zhu +8 more · 2016 · Polyhedron · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.poly.2015.11.052
Biometal
Hao Zhang, Li Li, Qiong Wu +6 more · 2016 · Journal of Coordination Chemistry · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1080/00958972.2016.1237633
Biometal
Shang-Hai Lai, Wei Li, Xiu-Zhen Wang +5 more · 2016 · RSC Advances · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c6ra11391e
Biometal
Hai-Rong Zhang, Yan-Cheng Liu, Zhen-Feng Chen +4 more · 2016 · New Journal of Chemistry · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c6nj00182c
Biometal apoptosis
Yuping Jing, Kunwei Wu, Jiashuo Liu +8 more · 2015 · Public Library of Science · PLOS · added 2026-04-20
Aminotriazole (ATZ) is commonly used as a catalase (CAT) inhibitor. We previously found ATZ attenuated oxidative liver injury, but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Acetaminophen (APAP) overdo Show more
Aminotriazole (ATZ) is commonly used as a catalase (CAT) inhibitor. We previously found ATZ attenuated oxidative liver injury, but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Acetaminophen (APAP) overdose frequently induces life-threatening oxidative hepatitis. In the present study, the potential hepatoprotective effects of ATZ on oxidative liver injury and the underlying mechanisms were further investigated in a mouse model with APAP poisoning. The experimental data indicated that pretreatment with ATZ dose- and time-dependently suppressed the elevation of plasma aminotransferases in APAP exposed mice, these effects were accompanied with alleviated histological abnormality and improved survival rate of APAP-challenged mice. In mice exposed to APAP, ATZ pretreatment decreased the CAT activities, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) levels, malondialdehyde (MDA) contents, myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels in liver and reduced TNF-α levels in plasma. Pretreatment with ATZ also downregulated APAP-induced cytochrome P450 2E1 (CYP2E1) expression and JNK phosphorylation. In addition, posttreatment with ATZ after APAP challenge decreased the levels of plasma aminotransferases and increased the survival rate of experimental animals. Posttreatment with ATZ had no effects on CYP2E1 expression or JNK phosphorylation, but it significantly decreased the levels of plasma TNF-α. Our data indicated that the LD50 of ATZ in mice was 5367.4 mg/kg body weight, which is much higher than the therapeutic dose of ATZ in the present study. These data suggested that ATZ might be effective and safe in protect mice against APAP-induced hepatotoxicity, the beneficial effects might resulted from downregulation of CYP2E1 and inhibiton of inflammation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122781
acetaminophen acetaminophen poisoning aminotriazole anti-inflammatory bioinorganic catalase cytochrome p450 2e1 cytochrome p450 2e1 inhibition
Yan Zhang, Peng-Chao Hu, Ping Cai +2 more · 2015 · RSC Advances · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c4ra12715c
Biometal
Zhao Zhang, Ya-Jun Wang, Qiong Wu +5 more · 2015 · Australian Journal of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1071/ch14192
Biometal
Li-Bin Wu, Wen-Yi Su, Ya-Mei He +3 more · 2015 · Synthesis and Reactivity in Inorganic, Metal-Organic, and Nano-Metal Chemistry · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1080/15533174.2015.1016234
Biometal
De-Gang Xing, Yan Zhang, Gan-Jian Lin +5 more · 2014 · Medicinal Chemistry Research · Springer · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00044-014-1000-6
Biometal
Donna D Zhang · 2013 · Antioxidants & redox signaling · added 2026-04-20
The targeted activation of nuclear factor erythroid-derived-2-like 2 (Nrf2) to alleviate symptoms of chronic kidney disease has recently garnered much attention. Unfortunately, the greatest clinical s Show more
The targeted activation of nuclear factor erythroid-derived-2-like 2 (Nrf2) to alleviate symptoms of chronic kidney disease has recently garnered much attention. Unfortunately, the greatest clinical success to date, bardoxolone, failed in phase III clinical trial for unspecified safety reasons. The present letter to the editor discusses the clinical development of bardoxolone and explores potential reasons for the ultimate withdrawal from clinical trials. In particular, was the correct clinical indication pursued and would improved specificity have mitigated the safety concerns? Ultimately, it is concluded that the right clinical indication and heightened specificity will lead to successful Nrf2-based therapies. Therefore, the bardoxolone clinical results do not dampen enthusiasm for Nrf2-based therapies; rather it illuminates the clinical potential of the Nrf2 pathway as a drug target. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1089/ars.2012.5118
bardoxolone chronic kidney disease medicinal chemistry nrf2 nrf2 activation nuclear factor therapies
Qiong Wu, Jian Wu, Wen-Jie Mei +8 more · 2013 · Australian Journal of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1071/CH13269
Biometal
Yu Xia, Qingchang Chen, Xiuying Qin +3 more · 2013 · New Journal of Chemistry · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1039/c3nj00542a
Biometal apoptosis
Kenneth Yin Zhang, Karson Ka-Shun Tso, Man-Wai Louie +2 more · 2013 · Organometallics · ACS Publications · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1021/om400612f
Biometal
Qian Li, Dongdong Sun, Yanhui Zhou +3 more · 2012 · Inorganic Chemistry Communications · Elsevier · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.inoche.2012.02.037
Biometal
Du Liu, Yanan Liu, Chuan Wang +5 more · 2012 · ChemPlusChem · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/cplu.201200039
Biometal
Paul T. Henderson, Tao Li, Miaoling He +9 more · 2011 · International Journal of Cancer · Wiley · added 2026-04-20
AbstractFormation and repair of platinum (Pt)‐induced DNA adducts is a critical step in Pt drug‐mediated cytotoxicity. Measurement of Pt–DNA adduct kinetics in tumors may be useful for better understa Show more
AbstractFormation and repair of platinum (Pt)‐induced DNA adducts is a critical step in Pt drug‐mediated cytotoxicity. Measurement of Pt–DNA adduct kinetics in tumors may be useful for better understanding chemoresistance and therapeutic response. However, this concept has yet to be rigorously tested because of technical challenges in measuring the adducts at low concentrations and consistent access to sufficient tumor biopsy material. Ultrasensitive accelerator mass spectrometry was used to detect [14C]carboplatin–DNA monoadducts at the attomole level, which are the precursors to Pt–DNA crosslink formation, in six cancer cell lines as a proof‐of‐concept. The most resistant cells had the lowest monoadduct levels at all time points over 24 hr. [14C]Carboplatin “microdoses” (1/100th the pharmacologically effective concentration) had nearly identical adduct formation and repair kinetics compared to therapeutically relevant doses, suggesting that the microdosing approach can potentially be used to determine the pharmacological effects of therapeutic treatment. Some of the possible chemoresistance mechanisms were also studied, such as drug uptake/efflux, intracellular inactivation and DNA repair in selected cell lines. Intracellular inactivation and efficient DNA repair each contributed significantly to the suppression of DNA monoadduct formation in the most resistant cell line compared to the most sensitive cell line studied (p < 0.001). Nucleotide excision repair (NER)‐deficient and ‐proficient cells showed substantial differences in carboplatin monoadduct concentrations over 24 hr that likely contributed to chemoresistance. The data support the utility of carboplatin microdosing as a translatable approach for defining carboplatin–DNA monoadduct formation and repair, possibly by NER, which may be useful for characterizing chemoresistance in vivo. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/ijc.25814
Pt anticancer
B Chapman, L Van Camp, JE Trosko +375 more · 2011 · Metal ions in life sciences · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-20
B Chapman, L Van Camp, JE Trosko, VH Mansour, Y Jung, SJ Lippard, J Reedijk, ER Jamieson, GA Natile, LG Marzilli, M Akoboshi, K Kawai, H Maki, K Akuta, Y Ujeno, T Miyahara, JM Pascoe, JJ Roberts, J Rosenberg, P Sato, JM Rosenberg, PH Sato, KA Heminger, SD Hartson, J Rogers, RL Matts, TD Schmittgen, J-F Ju, KD Danenberg, PV Danenberg, LC Shea, T Horikoshi, P Papsai, T Persson, J Aldag, SKC Elmroth, AS Snygg, AA Hostetter, EG Chapman, VJ DeRose, JS Mattick, B Lippert, S Burns, N-K Kim, M Vogt, E Freisinger, RKO Sigel, PB Moore, AM Pyle, RH Crabtree, S Ahmad, AA Isab, S Ali, E Wong, CM Giandomenico, M Akaboshi, K Ono, D Esteban-Fernández, JM Verdaguer, R Ramírez-Camacho, MA Palacios, MM Gómez-Gómez, P Kabolizadeh, J Ryan, N Farrell, I-S Song, N Savaraj, ZH Siddik, P Liu, Y Wei, CJ Wu, MT Kuo, J Zhang, X Zhao, J Goodman, D Hagrman, KA Tacka, A-K Souid, E Gabano, D Colangelo, AR Ghezzi, D Osella, N Kitada, K Takara, T Minegaki, C Itoh, M Tsujimoto, T Sakaeda, T Yokoyama, L Martelli, F Di Mario, E Ragazzi, P Apostoli, R Leone, P Perego, G Fumagalli, M Gemba, E Nakatani, M Teramoto, S Nakano, Z Yang, LM Schumaker, MJ Egorin, EG Zuhowski, Z Guo, KJ Cullen, AJ Giurgiovich, BA Diwan, OA Olivero, LM Anderson, JM Rice, MC Poirier, C Semino, A Kassim, DM Lopez-Larraza, E Lindauer, E Holler, G Samimi, K Katano, AK Holzer, R Safaei, SB Howell, M Rochdi, M Tomioka, M Goodman, AV Klein, TW Hambley, GL Beretta, SC Righetti, L Lombardi, F Zunino, MUA Khan, PJ Sadler, Y Kiyozuka, K Takemoto, A Yamamoto, P Guttmann, A Tsubura, H Kihara, C Meijer, MJA van Luyn, EF Nienhuis, N Blom, NH Mulder, EGE de Vries, R Ortega, P Moretto, A Fajac, J Bénard, Y Llabador, M Simonoff, MD Hall, CT Dillon, M Zhang, P Beale, Z Cai, B Lai, APJ Stampfl, RA Alderden, PJ Beale, JP Berry, P Galle, A Viron, H Kacerovská, A Macieira-Coelho, RG Kirk, ME Gates, C-S Chang, P Lee, T Makita, S Itagaki, T Ohokawa, P Brille, AF LeRoy, Y Gouveia, P Ribaud, G Mathé, C Molenaar, J-M Teuben, RJ Heetebrij, HJ Tanke, GV Kalayda, G Zhang, T Abraham, A Holzer, BJ Larson, W Naerdemann, X-J Liang, D-W Shen, KG Chen, SM Wincovitch, SH Garfield, MM Gottesman, D Fink, S Nebel, S Aebi, H Zheng, B Cenm, A Nehm, R Christen, RL Hoffmann, N Carenini, F Giuliani, S Spinelli, GH Manorek, O Rixe, W Ortuzar, M Alvarez, R Parker, E Reed, K Paull, T Fojo, HC Harder, B Rosenberg, P Jordan, M Carmo-Fonseca, S Tornaletti, SM Patrick, JJ Turchi, PC Hanawalt, WH Ang, M Myint, GE Damsma, A Alt, F Brueckner, T Carell, P Cramer, K Rijal, CS Chow, D Draper, M Hägerlöf, V Monjardet-Bas, MA Elizondo-Riojas, JC Chottard, J Kozelka, M Brindell, G Stochel, T Cheatham, P Kollman, K Chin, KA Sharp, B Honig, P Acharya, S Acharya, P Cheruku, NV Amirkhanov, A Foldesi, J Chattopadhyaya, P Legault, A Pardi, D Rhodes, PW Piper, BFC Clark, JR Rubin, M Sabat, M Sundaralingam, JC Dewan, YT Yu, PA Maroney, E Darzynkiewicz, TW Nilsen, P Fabrizio, J Abelson, SA Woodson, R Dalbies, D Payet, M Leng, M Boudvillain, KM Comess, CE Costello, M Escaffre, S Bombard, M Guerin, T Saison-Behmoaras, B Alguero, JL de la Osa, C Gonzalez, E Pedroso, V Marchan, A Grandas, K Aupeix-Scheidler, S Chabas, L Bidou, JP Rousset, JJ Toulme, M Hagerlof, H Hedman, HK Hedman, U Jungwirth, V Jenei, A Favre, J-C Chottard, JR Thomas, PJ Hergenrother, J Boer, KF Blount, NW Luedtke, L Elson-Schwab, Y Tor, CN N’soukpoe-Kossi, C Descoteaux, E Asselin, J Bariyanga, HA Tajmir-Riahi, G Berube, JS Saad, G Natile, H Schöllhorn, G Raudaschl-Sieber, G Müller, U Thewalt, J Lippert, F Cannito, N Hadjiliadis, E Sletten, PJ Sanz Miguel, M Roitzsch, L Yin, PM Lax, L Holland, O Krizanovic, M Lutterbeck, M Schurmann, EC Fisch, SE Sherman, D Gibson, AH-J Wang, A Gelasco, GN Parkinson, GM Arvanitis, L Lessinger, SL Ginell, R Jones, B Gaffney, HM Berman, CC Correll, A Munishkin, Y-L Chan, Z Ren, IG Wool, TA Steitz, FM Jucker, HA Heus, PF Yip, EHM Moors, S Gelbel, S Banckenko, M Engell, E Lanka, W Saenger, PS Klosterman, SA Shah, K Hindmarsch, DA House, MM Turnbull, MF Osborn, JA Cowan, DE Draper, D Grilley, AM Soto, M Roychowdhury-Saha, DH Burke, AY Keel, RP Rambo, RT Batey, JS Kieft, E Ennifar, P Walter, P Dumas, DM Calderone, EJ Mantilla, M Hicks, DH Huchital, W Rorer Murphy, RD Sheardy, FR Keene, JA Smith, JG Collins Show less
In this chapter several aspects of Pt(II) are highlighted that focus on the properties of Pt(II)-RNA adducts and the possibility that they influence RNA-based processes in cells. Cellular distribution Show more
In this chapter several aspects of Pt(II) are highlighted that focus on the properties of Pt(II)-RNA adducts and the possibility that they influence RNA-based processes in cells. Cellular distribution of Pt(II) complexes results in significant platination of RNA, and localization studies find Pt(II) in the nucleus, nucleolus, and a distribution of other sites in cells. Treatment with Pt(II) compounds disrupts RNA-based processes including enzymatic processing, splicing, and translation, and this disruption may be indicative of structural changes to RNA or RNA-protein complexes. Several RNA-Pt(II) adducts have been characterized in vitro by biochemical and other methods. Evidence for Pt(II) binding in non-helical regions and for Pt(II) cross-linking of internal loops has been found. Although platinated sites have been identified, there currently exists very little in the way of detailed structural characterization of RNA-Pt(II) adducts. Some insight into the details of Pt(II) coordination to RNA, especially RNA helices, can be gained from DNA model systems. Many RNA structures, however, contain complex tertiary folds and common, purine-rich structural elements that present suitable Pt(II) nucleophiles in unique arrangements which may hold the potential for novel types of platinum-RNA adducts. Future research aimed at structural characterization of platinum-RNA adducts may provide further insights into platinum-nucleic acid binding motifs, and perhaps provide a rationale for the observed inhibition by Pt(II) complexes of splicing, translation, and enzymatic processing. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1039/9781849732512-00347
Pt amino-acid coordination-chemistry
Yanan Liu, Xiaonian Zhang, Rong Zhang +4 more · 2011 · European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-05-01
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/ejic.201000968
Biometal
Alexandria Lau, Xiao-Jun Wang, Fei Zhao +6 more · 2010 · Molecular and cellular biology · added 2026-04-20
In response to stress, cells can utilize several cellular processes, such as autophagy, which is a bulk-lysosomal degradation pathway, to mitigate damages and increase the chances of cell survival. De Show more
In response to stress, cells can utilize several cellular processes, such as autophagy, which is a bulk-lysosomal degradation pathway, to mitigate damages and increase the chances of cell survival. Deregulation of autophagy causes upregulation of p62 and the formation of p62-containing aggregates, which are associated with neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. The Nrf2-Keap1 pathway functions as a critical regulator of the cell's defense mechanism against oxidative stress by controlling the expression of many cellular protective proteins. Under basal conditions, Nrf2 is ubiquitinated by the Keap1-Cul3-E3 ubiquitin ligase complex and targeted to the 26S proteasome for degradation. Upon induction, the activity of the E3 ubiquitin ligase is inhibited through the modification of cysteine residues in Keap1, resulting in the stabilization and activation of Nrf2. In this current study, we identified the direct interaction between p62 and Keap1 and the residues required for the interaction have been mapped to 349-DPSTGE-354 in p62 and three arginines in the Kelch domain of Keap1. Accumulation of endogenous p62 or ectopic expression of p62 sequesters Keap1 into aggregates, resulting in the inhibition of Keap1-mediated Nrf2 ubiquitination and its subsequent degradation by the proteasome. In contrast, overexpression of mutated p62, which loses its ability to interact with Keap1, had no effect on Nrf2 stability, demonstrating that p62-mediated Nrf2 upregulation is Keap1 dependent. These findings demonstrate that autophagy deficiency activates the Nrf2 pathway in a noncanonical cysteine-independent mechanism. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00248-10
ROS
Zhaofei Wu, Jie Zhang, Baolu Zhao · 2009 · Antioxidants & redox signaling · added 2026-04-20
Mitochondrial dysfunction, which is closely related to intracellular calcium overload and excessive free radicals, is an important cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, molecular mechanisms of t Show more
Mitochondrial dysfunction, which is closely related to intracellular calcium overload and excessive free radicals, is an important cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, molecular mechanisms of the mitochondrial Ca(2+) disregulation induced by oxidative stress in AD are still obscure. In an effort to gain a further understanding of this problem, we investigated the effects of superoxide anion, a primary free radical, on the expression of uncoupling proteins (UCPs) and the mitochondrial free Ca(2+) levels in the neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cell line (neo) and stably expressed wild-type human APP(APP) and APP-Swedish mutation (APPsw) SH-SY5Y cells. It was found that UCP2 and UCP4 protein levels were upregulated in neo but downregulated in APP and APPsw cells by the superoxide anion. Our results show that the superoxide anion can regulate protein levels of UCP2 and UCP4 in SH-SY5Y cells, and the mitochondrial free Ca(2+) shifted their levels, tightly coupled with the protein levels of UCPs. When UCP2 and UCP4 were knocked down by siRNA, the result was reversed. These data suggest that the superoxide anion can regulate the mitochondrial free Ca(2+) by regulating the expression of UCPs. These observations also indicate that UCPs can be potential targets in pathotherapy prevention of AD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1089/ars.2009.2427
ROS amino-acid mitochondria
Terrie Moore, Yanming Zhang, Marcia O Fenley +1 more · 2004 · Structure (London, England : 1993) · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
We have determined and refined a crystal structure of the initial assembly complex of archaeal box C/D sRNPs comprising the Archaeoglobus fulgidus (AF) L7Ae protein and a box C/D RNA. The box C/D RNA Show more
We have determined and refined a crystal structure of the initial assembly complex of archaeal box C/D sRNPs comprising the Archaeoglobus fulgidus (AF) L7Ae protein and a box C/D RNA. The box C/D RNA forms a classical kink-turn (K-turn) structure and the resulting protein-RNA complex serves as a distinct platform for recruitment of the fibrillarin-Nop5p complex. The cocrystal structure confirms previously proposed secondary structure of the box C/D RNA that includes a protruded U, a UU mismatch, and two sheared tandem GA base pairs. Detailed structural comparisons of the AF L7Ae-box C/D RNA complex with previously determined crystal structures of L7Ae homologs in complex with functionally distinct K-turn RNAs revealed a set of remarkably conserved principles in protein-RNA interactions. These analyses provide a structural basis for interpreting the functional roles of the box C/D sequences in directing specific assembly of box C/D sRNPs. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2004.02.033
X-ray amino-acid
Chunming Zhang, Jinkun Huang, Mark L. Trudell +1 more · 1999 · The Journal of Organic Chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-20
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/jo990554o
Pd catalysis