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result(s) for
"romidepsin"
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Improved development of mouse somatic cell nuclear transfer embryos by chlamydocin analogues, class I and Ila histone deacetylase inhibitors
by
Ogonuki, Narumi
,
Kim, Jin-Moon
,
Ihashi, Shunya
in
Embryonic development
,
Epigenetic inheritance
,
Romidepsin
2021
In mammalian cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), the treatment of reconstructed embryos with histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors improves efficiency. So far, most of those used for SCNT are hydroxamic acid derivatives-such as trichostatin A-characterized by their broad inhibitory spectrum. Here, we examined whether mouse SCNT efficiency could be improved using chlamydocin analogues, a family of newly designed agents that specifically inhibit class I and Ila HDACs. Development of SCNT-derived embryos in vitro and in vivo revealed that four out of five chlamydocin analogues tested could promote the development of cloned embryos. The highest pup rates (7.1-7.2%) were obtained with Ky-9, similar to those achieved with trichostatin A (7.27.3%). Thus, inhibition of class I and/or Ila HDACs in SCNT-derived embryos is enough for significant improvements in full-term development. In mouse SCNT, the exposure of reconstructed oocytes to HDAC inhibitors is limited to 8-10 h because longer inhibition with class I inhibitors causes a two-cell developmental block. Therefore, we used Ky-29, with higher selectivity for class IIa than class I HDACs for longer treatment of SCNT-derived embryos. As expected, 24-h treatment with Ky-29 up to the two-cell stage did not induce a developmental block, but the pup rate was not improved. This suggests that the one-cell stage is a critical period for improving SCNT cloning using HDAC inhibitors. Thus, chlamydocin analogues appear promising for understanding and improving the epigenetic status of mammalian SCNT-derived embryos through their specific inhibitory effects on HDACs. Chlamydocin analogues, a novel family of inhibitors specific for class I and IIb HDACs, significantly improved the ability of mouse SCNT-derived embryos to produce offspring.
Journal Article
Dsup.Resup.Amocracy: A Method to Capitalise on Prior Drug Discovery Efforts to Highlight Candidate Drugs for Repurposing
by
Dietis, Nikolas
,
Bourdakou, Marilena M
,
Zachariou, Margarita
in
Diseases
,
Drug discovery
,
Iloperidone
2024
In the area of drug research, several computational drug repurposing studies have highlighted candidate repurposed drugs, as well as clinical trial studies that have tested/are testing drugs in different phases. To the best of our knowledge, the aggregation of the proposed lists of drugs by previous studies has not been extensively exploited towards generating a dynamic reference matrix with enhanced resolution. To fill this knowledge gap, we performed weight-modulated majority voting of the modes of action, initial indications and targeted pathways of the drugs in a well-known repository, namely the Drug Repurposing Hub. Our method, D[sup.R]e[sup.A]mocracy, exploits this pile of information and creates frequency tables and, finally, a disease suitability score for each drug from the selected library. As a testbed, we applied this method to a group of neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s disease and Multiple Sclerosis). A super-reference table with drug suitability scores has been created for all four neurodegenerative diseases and can be queried for any drug candidate against them. Top-scored drugs for Alzheimer’s Disease include agomelatine, mirtazapine and vortioxetine; for Parkinson’s Disease, they include apomorphine, pramipexole and lisuride; for Huntington’s, they include chlorpromazine, fluphenazine and perphenazine; and for Multiple Sclerosis, they include zonisamide, disopyramide and priralfimide. Overall, D[sup.R]e[sup.A]mocracy is a methodology that focuses on leveraging the existing drug-related experimental and/or computational knowledge rather than a predictive model for drug repurposing, offering a quantified aggregation of existing drug discovery results to (1) reveal trends in selected tracks of drug discovery research with increased resolution that includes modes of action, targeted pathways and initial indications for the investigated drugs and (2) score new candidate drugs for repurposing against a selected disease.
Journal Article
N- Induces Apoptosis and Cell Cycle Arrest in Breast Cancer Cells, Decreasing GPER Expression
by
Morales-Bárcena, Rocío
,
Flores-Mejía, Raúl
,
Prestegui Martel, Berenice
in
Apoptosis
,
Breast cancer
,
Development and progression
2024
In this work, we performed anti-proliferative assays for the compound N-(2-hydroxyphenyl)-2-propylpentanamide (HO-AAVPA) on breast cancer (BC) cells (MCF-7, SKBR3, and triple-negative BC (TNBC) MDA-MB-231 cells) to explore its pharmacological mechanism regarding the type of cell death associated with G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) expression. The results show that HO-AAVPA induces cell apoptosis at 5 h or 48 h in either estrogen-dependent (MCF-7) or -independent BC cells (SKBR3 and MDA-MB-231). At 5 h, the apoptosis rate for MCF-7 cells was 68.4% and that for MDA-MB-231 cells was 56.1%; at 48 h, that for SKBR3 was 61.6%, that for MCF-7 cells was 54.9%, and that for MDA-MB-231 (TNBC) was 43.1%. HO-AAVPA increased the S phase in MCF-7 cells and reduced the G2/M phase in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. GPER expression decreased more than VPA in the presence of HO-AAVPA. In conclusion, the effects of HO-AAVPA on cell apoptosis could be modulated by epigenetic effects through a decrease in GPER expression.
Journal Article
A die is cast: autologous neutralizing antibody resistance shapes the HIV reservoir during uninterrupted ART
2025
Initial efforts to control HIV infection include an autologous neutralizing antibody (aNAb) response. aNAbs bind Env trimers of the infecting HIV strain to neutralize virus but are not very effective at controlling HIV, as the virus quickly develops escape mutations to evade neutralization. Nevertheless, recent evidence suggests that aNAbs exert ongoing immune pressure on viral isolates in people living with HIV (PWH) treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) during chronic and early infection. In this issue of the JCI, McMyn et al. studied the dynamics of aNAb resistance in a cohort of 31 PWH treated with ART. Notably, a large proportion of HIV reservoir viral isolates were resistant to aNAb neutralization, which correlated with longer duration on uninterrupted ART, suggesting that selection for aNAb-resistant isolates occurs as reservoir cells containing neutralization-sensitive isolates are eliminated. aNAb resistance was not attributed to waning antibody response, which persisted for over 20 years despite viral suppression.
Journal Article
PROX1 is an early driver of lineage plasticity in prostate cancer
by
Khokhani, Dhruv
,
Rebernick, Ryan J
,
Quigley, David A
in
Analysis
,
B cells
,
Care and treatment
2025
Lineage plasticity is recognized as a critical determinant of lethality and resistance to AR pathway inhibitors in prostate cancer. Lineage plasticity is a continuum, ranging from AR activity-low tumors, AR-null tumors that do not express a neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC) program (i.e., double-negative prostate cancer [DNPC]), and AR-null NEPC tumors. Factors upregulated early in lineage plasticity are not well-characterized. The clarification of such factors is essential to identify tumors undergoing lineage plasticity or at risk of this occurring. Our integrative analysis of metastatic prostate cancer patient tumors, patient-derived xenografts, and cell models determined that PROX1 is upregulated early in the lineage plasticity continuum and progressively increases as tumors lose AR activity. We determined DNA methylation is a key regulator of PROX1 expression. PROX1 suppression in DNPC and NEPC reduces cell survival and impacts apoptosis and differentiation, demonstrating PROX1's functional importance. PROX1 is not directly targetable with standard drug development approaches. However, affinity immunopurification demonstrated histone deacetylases (HDACs) are among the top PROX1-interacting proteins; HDAC inhibition depletes PROX1 and recapitulates PROX1 suppression in DNPC and NEPC. Altogether, our results suggest PROX1 promotes the emergence of lineage plasticity, and HDAC inhibition is a promising approach to treat tumors across the lineage plasticity continuum.
Journal Article
FK228 suppress the growth of human malignant pleural mesothelioma tumor independent to epithelioid or non-epithelioid histology
by
Chang, Wei-Chin
,
Huang, Wen-Chien
,
Chang, Yuan-Ching
in
Animals
,
Antineoplastic Agents - pharmacology
,
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
2024
Human malignant pleural mesothelioma (hMPM) is an aggressive, rare disease with a poor prognosis. Histologically, MPM is categorized into epithelioid, biphasic, and sarcomatoid subtypes, with the epithelioid subtype generally displaying a better response to treatment. Conversely, effective therapies for the non-epithelioid subtypes are limited. This study aimed to investigate the potential role of FK228, a histone deacetylase inhibitor, in the suppression of hMPM tumor growth. We conducted a comprehensive analysis of the histological and molecular characteristics of two MPM cell lines, CRL-5820 (epithelioid) and CRL-5946 (non-epithelioid). CRL-5946 cells and non-epithelioid patient-derived xenografted mice exhibited heightened growth rates compared to those with epithelioid MPM. Both CRL-5946 cells and non-epithelioid mice displayed a poor response to cisplatin. However, FK228 markedly inhibited the growth of both epithelioid and non-epithelioid tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. Cell cycle analysis revealed FK228-induced G1/S and mitotic arrest in MPM cells. Caspase inhibitor experiments demonstrated that FK228-triggered apoptosis occurred via a caspase-dependent pathway in CRL-5946 but not in CRL-5820 cells. Additionally, a cytokine array analysis showed that FK228 reduced the release of growth factors, including platelet-derived and vascular endothelial growth factors, specifically in CRL-5946 cells. These results indicate that FK228 exhibits therapeutic potential in MPM by inducing cytotoxicity and modulating the tumor microenvironment, potentially benefiting both epithelioid and non-epithelioid subtypes.
Journal Article
Infections associated with immunotherapeutic and molecular targeted agents in hematology and oncology. A position paper by the European Conference on Infections in Leukemia (ECIL)
by
Thiebaut-Bertrand, Anne
,
Maertens, Johan A.
,
Maschmeyer, Georg
in
692/308/174
,
692/420/2780
,
B cells
2019
A multitude of new agents for the treatment of hematologic malignancies has been introduced over the past decade. Hematologists, infectious disease specialists, stem cell transplant experts, pulmonologists and radiologists have met within the framework of the European Conference on Infections in Leukemia (ECIL) to provide a critical state-of-the-art on infectious complications associated with immunotherapeutic and molecular targeted agents used in clinical routine. For brentuximab vedotin, blinatumomab, CTLA4- and PD-1/PD-L1-inhibitors as well as for ibrutinib, idelalisib, HDAC inhibitors, mTOR inhibitors, ruxolitinib, and venetoclax, a detailed review of data available until August 2018 has been conducted, and specific recommendations for prophylaxis, diagnostic and differential diagnostic procedures as well as for clinical management have been developed.
Journal Article
Epigenetic memory as crucial contributing factor in directing the differentiation of human iPSC into pancreatic -cells in vitro
by
Diane, Abdoulaye
,
Al-Siddiqi, Heba Hussain
,
Mu-U-Min, Razik Bin Abdul
in
Cell differentiation
,
Development and progression
,
Diabetes therapy
2025
Impaired insulin secretion contributes to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes mellitus through autoimmune destruction of pancreatic -cells and the pathogenesis of severe forms of type 2 diabetes mellitus through -cell dedifferentiation and other mechanisms. Replenishment of malfunctioning -cells via islet transplantation has the potential to induce long-term glycemic control in the body. However, this treatment option cannot widely be implemented in clinical due to healthy islet donor shortage. Emerging -cell replacement with human-induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) provides high remedial therapy hopes. Thus, tremendous progress has been made in developing -cell differentiation protocols in vitro; however, most of the differentiated iPSC-derived -cells showed immature phenotypes associated with low efficiency depending on the iPSC lines used, creating a crucial barrier for their clinical implementation. Multiple mechanisms including differences in genetic, cell cycle patterns, and mitochondrial dysfunction underlie the defective differentiation propensity of iPSC into insulin-producing -cells. Accumulating evidence recently indicated that, following the reprogramming, epigenetic memory inherited from parental cells substantially affects the differentiation capacity of many iPSC lines. Therefore, differences in epigenetic signature are likely to be essential contributing factors influencing the propensity of iPSC differentiation. In this review, we will document the impact of the epigenome on the reprogramming efficacy and differentiation potential of iPSCs and how targeting the epigenetic residual memory could be an additional strategy to improve the differentiation efficiency of existing protocols to generate fully functional hPSC-derived pancreatic -cells for diabetes therapy and drug screening.
Journal Article