Search results for " Mitochondrial"

showing 10 items of 492 documents

Cytotoxicity of isoflavones and biflavonoids from Ormocarpum kirkii towards multi-factorial drug resistant cancer.

2019

Abstract Background While incidences of cancer are continuously increasing, drug resistance of malignant cells is observed towards almost all pharmaceuticals. Several isoflavonoids and flavonoids are known for their cytotoxicity towards various cancer cells. Purpose The aim of this study was to determine the cytotoxicity of isoflavones: osajin (1), 5,7-dihydroxy-4ˈ-methoxy-6,8-diprenylisoflavone (2) and biflavonoids: chamaejasmin (3), 7,7″-di-O-methylchamaejasmin (4) and campylospermone A (5), a dimeric chromene [diphysin(6)] and an ester of ferullic acid with long alkyl chain [erythrinasinate (7)] isolated from the stem bark and roots of the Kenyan medicinal plant, Ormocarpum kirkii. The m…

Pharmaceutical ScienceApoptosisPlant Roots03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryCytotoxic T cellBiflavonoidsHumansddc:610Cytotoxicity030304 developmental biologyPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationMembrane Potential Mitochondrial0303 health sciencesBiflavonoidsPlants MedicinalPlant ExtractsCell CycleBiflavonoidFabaceaeIsoflavonesMolecular biologyAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicIsoflavonesKenyaDrug Resistance MultipleComplementary and alternative medicinechemistryCell cultureApoptosisDrug Resistance Neoplasm030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCaspasesCancer cellPlant BarkMolecular MedicineInstitut für ChemieReactive Oxygen SpeciesPhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
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Cytotoxic Compounds from the Fruits of Uapaca togoensis towards Multifactorial Drug-Resistant Cancer Cells

2014

Cancer cells may rapidly acquire multidrug resistance, mainly due to the presence of adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette transporters, epidermal growth factor receptor, or mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor gene. This work was designed to assess the cytotoxicity of the methanol crude extracts and compounds from the fruits of Uapaca togoensis, namely, β-amyryl acetate (1), 11-oxo-α-amyryl acetate (2), lupeol (3), pomolic acid (4), futokadsurin B (5), arborinin (6), and 3-O-β-D-glucopyranosyl sitosterol (7) against nine drug sensitive and multidrug-resistant cancer cell lines. The resazurin reduction assay was used to evaluate the cytotoxicity of the fruits of U. togoensis and compound…

Pharmaceutical ScienceBiologyLignansAnalytical ChemistryInhibitory Concentration 50chemistry.chemical_compoundCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryHumansCytotoxic T cellOleanolic AcidCytotoxicityLupeolMembrane Potential MitochondrialPharmacologyMolecular StructurePlant ExtractsAlkaloidOrganic ChemistryEuphorbiaceaeCell cycleAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicDrug Resistance MultipleTriterpenesComplementary and alternative medicinechemistryBiochemistryDoxorubicinDrug Resistance NeoplasmApoptosisCell cultureCancer cellAcridinesMolecular MedicineDrug Screening Assays AntitumorPentacyclic TriterpenesReactive Oxygen SpeciesPlanta Medica
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Mitochondrial Toxicity in HAART: An Overview of In Vitro Evidence

2011

The combined antiretroviral therapeutic approach currently employed for the treatment of HIV infection, known as Higly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART), has dramatically reduced AIDS-related morbidity and mortality. However, the adverse reactions associated with the long term use of this therapy have now become a major issue and researchers have focused on understanding the cellular mechanisms underlying these drug-induced detrimental effects which englobe a large list of different events including rash and hypersensibility reactions, hepatotoxicity, metabolic disturbances including lipodystrophy, and other metabolic syndrome-like disturbances such as hyperlactatemia, hyperlipedimia, i…

PharmacologyMitochondrial DNAAnti-HIV AgentsMitochondrionBiologyPharmacologymedicine.diseaseDNA MitochondrialReverse transcriptaseMitochondriaMitochondrial toxicityInsulin resistancePharmacotherapyAntiretroviral Therapy Highly ActiveDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansDrug Therapy CombinationHyperlactatemiaLipodystrophyCurrent Pharmaceutical Design
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Explaining the phenomenon of nitrate tolerance.

2005

During the last century, nitroglycerin has been the most commonly used antiischemic and antianginal agent. Unfortunately, after continuous application, its therapeutic efficacy rapidly vanishes. Neurohormonal activation of vasoconstrictor signals and intravascular volume expansion constitute early counter-regulatory responses (pseudotolerance), whereas long-term treatment induces intrinsic vascular changes, eg, a loss of nitrovasodilator-responsiveness (vascular tolerance). This is caused by increased vascular superoxide production and a supersensitivity to vasoconstrictors secondary to a tonic activation of protein kinase C. NADPH oxidase(s) and uncoupled endothelial nitric oxide synthase …

PhysiologyVasodilator AgentsPharmacologymedicine.disease_causeNitric OxideProstacyclin synthaseNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundNitroglycerinSuperoxidesPeroxynitrous AcidmedicineCyclic GMP-Dependent Protein KinasesAnimalsHumansBiotransformationchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesNADPH oxidasebiologyChemistrySuperoxidePhosphoric Diester HydrolasesAldehyde Dehydrogenase MitochondrialDrug ToleranceAldehyde DehydrogenaseCyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases Type 1VasodilationOxidative StressBiochemistryVasoconstrictioncardiovascular systembiology.proteinEndothelium VascularCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineSoluble guanylyl cyclaseReactive Oxygen SpeciesPeroxynitriteOxidative stressSignal TransductionCirculation research
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Bioactivity of fractions and constituents of Piper capense fruits towards a broad panel of cancer cells.

2020

Abstract Ethnopharmacological relevance Piper capense is a medicinal spice whose fruits are traditionally used as aqueous decoction to heal several ailments such as trypanosomiasis, helminthic infections, and cancer. Aim of the study. (1) To perform phytochemical investigation of the methanol extract of Piper capense; (2) to evaluate the cytotoxicity of botanicals (PCF, fractions PCFa-e), isolated phytochemicals on a broad panel of animal and human cancer cell lines; (3) to evaluate the induction of apoptosis of the most active samples. Material and methods Resazurin reduction assay (RRA) was used to determine the cytotoxicity of the studied samples. Cell cycle distribution (PI staining), a…

PhytochemicalsDecoctionApoptosisPharmacologyLignans03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryAnimalsHumansCytotoxicityOleanolic acid030304 developmental biologyLupeolPharmacologyMembrane Potential Mitochondrial0303 health sciencesNitidineValinomycinPlant ExtractsCell CycleHydrogen PeroxideAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicchemistryPhytochemicalApoptosisDoxorubicinDrug Resistance Neoplasm030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCaspasesFruitCancer cellReactive Oxygen SpeciesPiperJournal of ethnopharmacology
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Return flight to the Canary Islands – The key role of peripheral populations of Afrocanarian blue tits (Aves: Cyanistes teneriffae) in multi-gene rec…

2012

Abstract Afrocanarian blue tits (Cyanistes teneriffae) have a scattered distribution on the Canary Islands and on the North African continent. To date, the Canary Islands have been considered the species’ main Pleistocene evolutionary center, but their colonization pathways remain uncertain. We set out to reconstruct a dated multi-gene phylogeny and ancestral ranges for Cyanistes tit species including the currently unstudied, peripheral Libyan population of C. t. cyrenaicae. In all reconstructions the most easterly and westerly peripheral populations (in Libya and on La Palma) represented basal offshoots of C. teneriffae. These two peripheral populations shared all four major indels and dif…

PleistoceneRange (biology)PopulationDNA MitochondrialBirdsAfrica NorthernGeneticsAnimalsColonizationeducationMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsgeographyeducation.field_of_studygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyCyanistesCyanistes teneriffaebiology.organism_classificationPhylogeographyGenetics PopulationSpainArchipelagoAnimal MigrationMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Mitochondrial dysfunction and host immune response during pneumococcal pneumonia : impact of mechanical ventilation?

2020

Lung damage induced by mechanical ventilation (MV) worsens the prognosis of pneumonia. Mitochondrial dysfunctions could account for such deleterious effects. Accordingly, data obtained from both in vitro and in vivo experimental studies, as well as in ventilated patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, show that mitochondrial alarmins, especially mitochondrial DNA, are released in the alveolar compartment as a result of the cyclic stretch, and could thus represent one link between the mechanical insult and the sterile inflammation leading to VILI (ventilator-induced lung injury). In rabbits, we show herein that adverse and prolonged MV worsens the prognosis of pneumococcal pneumon…

Pneumopathie[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologyStreptococcus pneumoniaeMechanical ventilationBiogénèse mitochondrialeMitochondrial biogenesisVentilation mécaniqueMitophagyDysfonction mitochondrialePneumoniaMitochondrial dysfunctionMitophagie[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology
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Cracking the nut: Geographical adjacency of sister taxa supports vicariance in a polytomic salamander clade in the absence of node support

2008

The urodelan genus Lyciasalamandra, which inhabits a relatively small area along the southern Turkish coast and some Aegean islands, provides an outstanding example of a diverse but phylogenetically unresolved taxon. Molecular trees contain a single basal polytomy that could be either soft or hard. We here use the information of nuclear (allozymes) and mitochondrial (fractions of the 16S rRNA and ATPase genes) datasets in combination with area relationships of lineages to resolve the phylogenetic relationships among Lyciasalamandra species in the absence of sufficient node support. We can show that neither random processes nor introgressive hybridization can be invoked to explain that the m…

PolytomyLineage (evolution)LyciasalamandraUrodelaLyciasalamandraDNA Mitochondrialsalamandersvicariancesoft polytomyGeneticsVicarianceAnimalsInbreedingCladeMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAdenosine TriphosphatasesCell NucleusamphibiansGeographynode supportbiologyPhylogenetic treeEcologybiology.organism_classificationgeographical adjacency of sister taxaMitochondriaTaxonHaplotypesSister groupEvolutionary biologyhard polytomy
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Phylogenetic relationship among genera of Polymorphidae (Acanthocephala), inferred from nuclear and mitochondrial gene sequences.

2013

Abstract Acanthocephalans of the family Polymorphidae Meyer, 1931 are obligate endoparasites with complex life cycles. These worms use vertebrates (marine mammals, fish-eating birds and waterfowl) as definitive hosts and invertebrates (amphipods, decapods and euphausiids) as intermediate hosts to complete their life cycle. Polymorphidae has a wordwide distribution, containing 12 genera, with approximately 127 species. The family is diagnosed by having a spinose trunk, bulbose proboscis, double-walled proboscis receptacle, and usually four to eight tubular cement glands. To conduct a phylogenetic analysis, in the current study sequences of the small (18S) and large-subunit (28S) ribosomal RN…

ProfilicollisZoologyBiologyAcanthocephalaPolymorphidaeElectron Transport Complex IVEvolution MolecularMonophylyPhylogeneticsRNA Ribosomal 28SGeneticsRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGenes HelminthPhylogenyLikelihood FunctionsPhylogenetic treeModels GeneticBayes Theorembiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyGenes MitochondrialCladogramRNA HelminthAcanthocephalaMultilocus Sequence TypingMolecular phylogenetics and evolution
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Cytotoxicity and apoptosis induction by Fumaria officinalis extracts in leukemia and multiple myeloma cell lines

2021

Abstract Ethnopharmacological relevance Fumaria officinalis (Fumariaceae) is recorded in the Kurdish ethnobotany for various health problems. Aim of the study: In this study, the cytotoxic activity of F. officinalis extracts on two leukemia and nine multiple myeloma (MM) cell lines was investigated. Materials and methods: The cytotoxic and ferroptotic activity were examined by resazurin reduction assay. Flow cytometry, immunoblotting assay and fluorescence microscopy were used to measure cell cycle distribution, apoptosis, induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), loss integrity of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and autophagy. LC-ESI/MS was used to identify chemical constituents p…

Programmed cell deathApoptosisFlow cytometryInhibitory Concentration 5003 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryAutophagymedicineHumansCytotoxicity030304 developmental biologyMembrane Potential MitochondrialPharmacology0303 health sciencesLeukemiamedicine.diagnostic_testbiologyPlant ExtractsChemistryCell growthFumariaFumaria officinalisCell cyclebiology.organism_classificationAntineoplastic Agents PhytogenicMolecular biologyApoptosis030220 oncology & carcinogenesisOfficinalisMultiple MyelomaReactive Oxygen SpeciesJournal of Ethnopharmacology
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