early apoptosis
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsen Sedaghat Janaghard ◽  
Vahid Erfani-Moghadam ◽  
Ali Akbar Saffar Moghadam

Abstract Background Breast cancer is a heterogenic disease and hormone dependence. Estrogen receptor is positive in more than seventy percent of breast cancer patients. Tamoxifen is an estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist and used as the first line of treatment. Drug resistance is a main reason in failure of cancer treatment and progression of the disease. Combination drug therapy is a method to treatment but is not sufficient. New approaches like molecular therapy reveal new insight to cancer therapy. Studies shown, Bcl-2 gene family inhibitors and ER blockers enhance recovery. Interfering molecules such as antisense can inhibit the expression of Bcl-2 and push the cancer cells to apoptosis. Nevertheless, their effectiveness is low, mostly due to their direct use. Methods Our team designed an Antisense Oligonucleotides (ASO). The MCF-7 and the MDA-MB-231breast cancer cell lines used to evaluate cellular proliferation. Liposome and cationic nano-complex (Niosome) used to increase cellular delivery of ASO and Tamoxifen. We also investigated the cytotoxicity and apoptotic effects of Tamoxifen, naked ASO and Nano-packed ASO. Results The ASO functional potency to assess apoptosis and expression of Bcl-2 mRNA compared in different groups. The results indicated, significant down regulation of Bcl-2 gene and inhibition of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cellular proliferation. Flow-cytometry showed early apoptosis in all groups. Conclusions The ASO reduced the expression of Bcl-2 gene. It also had the synergistic effect with the Tamoxifen. In all studied groups, it was able to push cancer cells to apoptosis. The cationic nano-complex (Niosome) was more efficient than the liposome in delivering designed oligo antisense Bcl-2 into the cancer cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 105 (18) ◽  
pp. 6871-6886 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng-Fa Li ◽  
Shuai-Bing Zhang ◽  
Huan-Chen Zhai ◽  
Yang-Yong Lv ◽  
Yuan-Sen Hu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Pan ◽  
Izhar Hyder Qazi ◽  
Shichao Guo ◽  
Jingyu Yang ◽  
Jianpeng Qin ◽  
...  

Abstract Background This study investigated the effect of melatonin (MT) on cell cycle (G1/S/G2/M) of parthenogenetic zygotes developed from vitrified-warmed mouse metaphase II (MII) oocytes and elucidated the potential mechanism of MT action in the first cleavage of embryos. Results After vitrification and warming, oocytes were parthenogenetically activated (PA) and in vitro cultured (IVC). Then the spindle morphology and chromosome segregation in oocytes, the maternal mRNA levels of genes including Miss, Doc1r, Setd2 and Ythdf2 in activated oocytes, pronuclear formation, the S phase duration in zygotes, mitochondrial function at G1 phase, reactive oxygen species (ROS) level at S phase, DNA damage at G2 phase, early apoptosis in 2-cell embryos, cleavage and blastocyst formation rates were evaluated. The results indicated that the vitrification/warming procedures led to following perturbations 1) spindle abnormalities and chromosome misalignment, alteration of maternal mRNAs and delay in pronucleus formation, 2) decreased mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and lower adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels, increased ROS production and DNA damage, G1/S and S/G2 phase transition delay, and delayed first cleavage, and 3) increased early apoptosis and lower levels of cleavage and blastocyst formation. Our results further revealed that such negative impacts of oocyte cryopreservation could be alleviated by supplementation of warming, recovery, PA and IVC media with 10− 9 mol/L MT before the embryos moved into the 2-cell stage of development. Conclusions MT might promote cell cycle progression via regulation of MMP, ATP, ROS and maternal mRNA levels, potentially increasing the first cleavage of parthenogenetic zygotes developed from vitrified–warmed mouse oocytes and their subsequent development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 6128
Author(s):  
Ana Rita Vaz ◽  
Daniela Vizinha ◽  
Hermes Morais ◽  
Ana Rita Colaço ◽  
Gecioni Loch-Neckel ◽  
...  

miRNA(miR)-124 is an important regulator of neurogenesis, but its upregulation in SOD1G93A motor neurons (mSOD1 MNs) was shown to associate with neurodegeneration and microglia activation. We used pre-miR-124 in wild-type (WT) MNs and anti-miR-124 in mSOD1 MNs to characterize the miR-124 pathological role. miR-124 overexpression in WT MNs produced a miRNA profile like that of mSOD1 MNs (high miR-125b; low miR-146a and miR-21), and similarly led to early apoptosis. Alterations in mSOD1 MNs were abrogated with anti-miR-124 and changes in their miRNAs mostly recapitulated by their secretome. Normalization of miR-124 levels in mSOD1 MNs prevented the dysregulation of neurite network, mitochondria dynamics, axonal transport, and synaptic signaling. Same alterations were observed in WT MNs after pre-miR-124 transfection. Secretome from mSOD1 MNs triggered spinal microglia activation, which was unno-ticed with that from anti-miR-124-modulated cells. Secretome from such modulated MNs, when added to SC organotypic cultures from mSOD1 mice in the early symptomatic stage, also coun-teracted the pathology associated to GFAP decrease, PSD-95 and CX3CL1-CX3CR1 signaling im-pairment, neuro-immune homeostatic imbalance, and enhanced miR-124 expression levels. Data suggest that miR-124 is implicated in MN degeneration and paracrine-mediated pathogenicity. We propose miR-124 as a new therapeutic target and a promising ALS biomarker in patient sub-populations.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Duncan-Lewis ◽  
Ella Hartenian ◽  
Valeria King ◽  
Britt A Glaunsinger

RNA abundance is generally sensitive to perturbations in decay and synthesis rates, but crosstalk between RNA polymerase II transcription and cytoplasmic mRNA degradation often leads to compensatory changes in gene expression. Here, we reveal that widespread mRNA decay during early apoptosis represses RNAPII transcription, indicative of positive (rather than compensatory) feedback. This repression requires active cytoplasmic mRNA degradation, which leads to impaired recruitment of components of the transcription preinitiation complex to promoter DNA. Importin a/b-mediated nuclear import is critical for this feedback signaling, suggesting that proteins translocating between the cytoplasm and nucleus connect mRNA decay to transcription. We also show that an analogous pathway activated by viral nucleases similarly depends on nuclear protein import. Collectively, these data demonstrate that accelerated mRNA decay leads to the repression of mRNA transcription, thereby amplifying the shutdown of gene expression. This highlights a conserved gene regulatory mechanism by which cells respond to threats.


2021 ◽  
Vol Volume 14 ◽  
pp. 3943-3944
Author(s):  
Tian-quan Yang ◽  
Min Chen ◽  
Yong-qiang Wang ◽  
Wei Xu ◽  
Yong Han ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jintao Han ◽  
Zhusong Mei ◽  
Chunyang Lu ◽  
Jing Qian ◽  
Yulan Liang ◽  
...  

Ultra-high dose rate FLASH irradiation (FLASH-IR) has got extensive attention since it may provide better protection on normal tissues while maintain tumor killing effect compared with conventional dose rate irradiation. The FLASH-IR induced protection effect on normal tissues is exhibited as radio-resistance of the irradiated normal cells, and is suggested to be related to oxygen depletion. However, the detailed cell death profile and pathways are still unclear. Presently normal mouse embryonic fibroblast cells were FLASH irradiated (∼109 Gy/s) at the dose of ∼10–40 Gy in hypoxic and normoxic condition, with ultra-fast laser-generated particles. The early apoptosis, late apoptosis and necrosis of cells were detected and analyzed at 6, 12, and 24 h post FLASH-IR. The results showed that FLASH-IR induced significant early apoptosis, late apoptosis and necrosis in normal fibroblast cells, and the apoptosis level increased with time, in either hypoxic or normoxic conditions. In addition, the proportion of early apoptosis, late apoptosis and necrosis were significantly lower in hypoxia than that of normoxia, indicating that radio-resistance of normal fibroblast cells under FLASH-IR can be enhanced by hypoxia. To further investigate the apoptosis related profile and potential pathways, mitochondria dysfunction cells resulting from loss of cytochrome c (cyt c–/–) were also irradiated. The results showed that compared with irradiated normal cells (cyt c+/+), the late apoptosis and necrosis but not early apoptosis proportions of irradiated cyt c–/– cells were significant decreased in both hypoxia and normoxia, indicating mitochondrial dysfunction increased radio-resistance of FLASH irradiated cells. Taken together, to our limited knowledge, this is the first report shedding light on the death profile and pathway of normal and cyt c–/– cells under FLASH-IR in hypoxic and normoxic circumstances, which might help us improve the understanding of the FLASH-IR induced protection effect in normal cells, and thus might potentially help to optimize the future clinical FLASH treatment.


Author(s):  
Pranab Chandra Saha ◽  
Tapas Bera ◽  
Tanima Chatterjee ◽  
Jayeeta Samanta ◽  
Arunima Sengupta ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yan-Li Sun ◽  
Xue-Lin Wang ◽  
Lei-Lei Yang ◽  
Zhao-Jia Ge ◽  
Yong Zhao ◽  
...  

Paraquat (PQ) is a widely used non-selective and oxidizing herbicide in farmland, orchards, flower nursery, and grassland. Overuse of PQ will accumulate in the body and affect the reproduction in mammals. In this study, we found that PQ could reduce the female fertility by oral administration for 21 days in mice. PQ exposure could impair the nuclear maturation by perturbing the spindle assembly and kinetochore–microtubule attachment to cause the misaligned chromosomes during meiosis. In the meantime, PQ exposure disturbed the mitochondrial distribution and enhanced the level of reactive oxygen species and early apoptosis, which thereby deteriorated the early embryo development. Also, PQ administration could cause some changes in epigenetic modifications such as the level of H3K9me2 and H3K27me3. Therefore, PQ administration reduces the female fertility by impairing the nuclear and cytoplasmic maturation of oocytes in mice.


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