School Of Basic And Applied Sciences
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Item Organophosphate-pesticides induced survival mechanisms and APE1-mediated Nrf2 regulation in non-small-cell lung cancer cells(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2020-10-20T00:00:00) Thakur, Shweta; Sarkar, Bibekananda; Dhiman, Monisha; Mantha, Anil K.Epidemiological and molecular studies have indicated that environmental exposure to organophosphate pesticides (OPPs) is associated with increased cancer risk; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms still need to be explained. Increasing cancer incidence is linked�to OPPs-induced oxidative stress (OS). Our study evaluates monocrotophos (MCP) and chlorpyrifos (CP)-induced OS responses and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) role in human non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. Our prior study has implicated OPPs-induced base excision repair (BER)-pathway dysregulation and APE1-mediated regulation of transcription factor (TF) c-jun in A549 cells. We further investigated the effects of MCP and CP on apoptosis, proliferation, and APE1's redox-regulation of nuclear factor-like 2 (Nrf2). Data demonstrates that MCP and CP at subtoxic concentrations induced reactive oxygen species generation and oxidative DNA base damage 8-oxo-dG lesions in NCI-H1299 cells. CP moderately upregulated�the apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) in A549 cells, however, it did not trigger other pro-apoptotic factors viz. caspase-9 and caspase-3, suggesting early caspase-independent apoptosis. However, dose-dependent AIF-downregulation was observed for MCP treatment. Furthermore, CP and MCP treatments upregulated proliferating cell nuclear antigen levels. Immunofluorescent confocal imaging showed the colocalization of APE1 with Nrf2 in 10 �M CP- and MCP-treated NCI-H1299 cells. Immunoprecipitation confirmed that APE1 and Nrf2 physically interacted, indicating the role of APE1-mediated Nrf2 activation following OPPs treatment. This study suggests that low concentration MCP and CP exposure generates OS along with DNA damage, and modulates apoptosis, and APE1-mediated Nrf2 activation, which might be considered as the possible mechanism promoting lung cancer cell survival, suggesting that APE1 may have the potential to become a therapeutic target for the treatment of NSCLC. � 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLCItem Organophosphate-pesticides induced survival mechanisms and APE1-mediated Nrf2 regulation in non-small-cell lung cancer cells(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2020-10-20T00:00:00) Thakur, Shweta; Sarkar, Bibekananda; Dhiman, Monisha; Mantha, Anil K.Epidemiological and molecular studies have indicated that environmental exposure to organophosphate pesticides (OPPs) is associated with increased cancer risk; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms still need to be explained. Increasing cancer incidence is linked�to OPPs-induced oxidative stress (OS). Our study evaluates monocrotophos (MCP) and chlorpyrifos (CP)-induced OS responses and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) role in human non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. Our prior study has implicated OPPs-induced base excision repair (BER)-pathway dysregulation and APE1-mediated regulation of transcription factor (TF) c-jun in A549 cells. We further investigated the effects of MCP and CP on apoptosis, proliferation, and APE1's redox-regulation of nuclear factor-like 2 (Nrf2). Data demonstrates that MCP and CP at subtoxic concentrations induced reactive oxygen species generation and oxidative DNA base damage 8-oxo-dG lesions in NCI-H1299 cells. CP moderately upregulated�the apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) in A549 cells, however, it did not trigger other pro-apoptotic factors viz. caspase-9 and caspase-3, suggesting early caspase-independent apoptosis. However, dose-dependent AIF-downregulation was observed for MCP treatment. Furthermore, CP and MCP treatments upregulated proliferating cell nuclear antigen levels. Immunofluorescent confocal imaging showed the colocalization of APE1 with Nrf2 in 10 �M CP- and MCP-treated NCI-H1299 cells. Immunoprecipitation confirmed that APE1 and Nrf2 physically interacted, indicating the role of APE1-mediated Nrf2 activation following OPPs treatment. This study suggests that low concentration MCP and CP exposure generates OS along with DNA damage, and modulates apoptosis, and APE1-mediated Nrf2 activation, which might be considered as the possible mechanism promoting lung cancer cell survival, suggesting that APE1 may have the potential to become a therapeutic target for the treatment of NSCLC. � 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLCItem Oxidative stress stimulates invasive potential in rat C6 and human U-87 MG glioblastoma cells via activation and cross-talk between PKM2, ENPP2 and APE1 enzymes.(Springer, 2018) Cholia, Ravi P.; Dhiman, Monisha; Kumar, Raj; Mantha, Anil K.Maintaining genomic integrity is essential for cell survival and viability. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction results in oxidative stress leading to the genomic instability via generation of small base lesions in DNA and these unrepaired DNA damages lead to various cellular consequences including cancer. Recent data support the concept "oxidative stress is an indispensable participant in fostering proliferation, survival, and migration" in various cancer cell types including glioblastoma cells. In this study we demonstrate that treatment of non-cytotoxic doses of oxidants such as amyloid beta [Aβ(25-35)] peptide, glucose oxidase (GO), and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for 24 h and 48 h time points found to increase the expression level and activity of a multifunctional enzyme Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE1), a key enzyme of base excision repair (BER) pathway which takes care of base damages; and also resulted in modulation in the expression levels of downstream BER-pathway enzymes viz. PARP-1, XRCC1, DNA polβ, and ligase IIIα was observed upon oxidative stress in C6 and U-87 MG cells. Oxidants treatment to the C6 and U-87 MG cells also resulted in an elevation in the intracellular expression of glycolytic pathway enzyme Pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) and the metastasis inducer protein Ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 2 (ENPP2) as analyzed using Western blotting and Immunofluorescence microscopic studies. Our study also reports that oxidative stress induced for 24 h and 48 h in C6 and U-87 MG cells resulted in extracellular secretion of APE1 and ENPP2 as analyzed using Western blotting in conditioned media. However, the biological significance of extracellular secreted APE1 remains elusive. Oxidative stress also elevated the ENPP2's LysoPLD activity in conditioned media of C6 and U-87 MG cells. Our results also demonstrate that oxidative stress affects the expression level and localization of APE1, PKM2, and ENPP2 in C6 and U-87 MG cells. As evidenced by the colocalization pattern at 24 h and 48 h time points, it can be attributed that oxidative stress mediates crosstalk between APE1, PKM2, and ENPP2. In addition, when C6 and U-87 MG cells were treated with lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), a bioactive lipid that negatively regulates ENPP2's LysoPLD activity at 10 μM concentration, demonstrated strong migratory potential in C6 and U-87 MG cells, and also induced migration upon oxidative stress. Altogether, the findings demonstrate the potential of C6 and U-87 MG cells to utilize three proteins viz. APE1, PKM2, and ENPP2 towards migration and survival of gliomas. Thus the knowledge on oxidative stress induced APE1's interaction with PKM2 and ENPP2 opens a new channel for the therapeutic target(s) for gliomas.Item APE1: A Molecule of Focus with Neuroprotective and Anti-Cancer Properties(OMICS Publishing Group, 2013) Mantha, Anil K.Apurinic/Apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE1) is a multi-functional, central enzyme of base excision repair (BER) pathway that takes care of oxidized base damage (AP sites and strand breaks) caused by both endogenous and exogenous oxidative DNA damaging agents. In repair function, APE1 exhibits majorly abasic (AP) endonuclease activity and stable interaction(s) with BER-pathway participant proteins. Second function of APE1 is redox activation of various transcription factors (TFs e.g., c-jun, NF-kB, p53 and HIF1α) and also named as redox effector factor 1(Ref-1). In redox function, APE1 reductively activates TFs involved in regulation of gene expression for cell survival mechanisms through stable pair-wise interaction(s). Recent studies have indicated that APE1 also possesses other distinct functions such as RNA metabolism, riboendonuclease activity and protein-protein interaction for maintaining cellular homeostasis. Altered APE1 expression has been reported in various cancers and neurodegenerative diseases. Taken together such findings advocates the necessity to delineate the underlying molecular mechanism(s) for understanding its role in various biological functions, that could be translated to its application in therapeutics against human diseases like cancer, neurodegenerative diseases and other pathologies such as cardiovascular diseases.