Alicja Winczura
Polish Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Alicja Winczura.
Free Radical Research | 2012
Alicja Winczura; Daria Zdżalik; Barbara Tudek
Abstract Oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation (LPO) accompanying infections and chronic inflammation may induce several human cancers. LPO products are characterized by carbohydrate chains of different length, reactive aldehyde groups and double bonds, which make these molecules reactive to nucleic acids, proteins and cellular thiols. LPO-derived adducts to DNA bases form etheno-type and propano-type exocyclic rings, which have profound mutagenic potential, and are elevated in several cancer-prone diseases. Adducts of long chain LPO products to DNA bases inhibit transcription. Elimination from DNA of LPO-induced lesions is executed by several repair systems: base excision repair (BER), direct reversal by AlkB family proteins, nucleotide excision repair (NER) and recombination. Modifications of proteins with LPO products may regulate cellular processes like apoptosis, cell signalling and senescence. This review summarizes consequences of LPO products’ presence in cell, particularly 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal, in terms of genomic stability.
International Journal of Cancer | 2014
Tomasz Dziaman; Zbigniew Banaszkiewicz; Krzysztof Roszkowski; Daniel Gackowski; Ewa Wisniewska; Rafal Rozalski; Marek Foksinski; Agnieszka Siomek; Elżbieta Speina; Alicja Winczura; Andrzej Marszałek; Barbara Tudek; Ryszard Olinski
The aim of this work was to answer the question whether the broad range of parameters which describe oxidative stress and oxidatively damaged DNA and repair are appropriate prognosis factors of colon cancer (CRC) patients survival? The following parameters were analyzed for 89 CRC patients: concentration of uric acid and vitamins A, E, C in plasma; levels of 8‐oxodGuo (8‐oxo‐7,8‐dihydro‐2′‐deoxyguanosine) in DNA of leukocyte and colon tissues; urinary excretion rates of 8‐oxodGuo and 8‐oxoGua (8‐oxo‐7,8‐dihydroguanine); the activity and mRNA or protein level of repair enzymes OGG1, APE1, ANPG, TDG and PARP1. All DNA modifications and plasma antioxidants were analyzed using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or HPLC/gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry techniques. Expression of repair proteins was analyzed by QPCR, Western or immunohistochemistry methods. Longer survival coincided with low levels of 8‐oxodGuo/8oxoGua in urine and 8‐oxodGuo in DNA as well as with high concentration of uric acid plasma level. In contrast to expectations, longer survival coincided with lower mRNA level in normal colon tissue of the main 8‐oxoGua DNA glycosylase, OGG1, but no association was found for PARP‐1 expression. When analyzing simultaneously two parameters the discriminating power increased significantly. Combination of low level of urinary 8‐oxoGua together with low level of 8‐oxodGuo in leukocyte (both below median value) or high concentration of plasma uric acid (above median value) have the best prediction power. Since prediction value of these parameters seems to be comparable to conventional staging procedure, they could possibly be used as markers to predict clinical success in CRC treatment.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Tomasz Dziaman; Hubert Ludwiczak; Jaroslaw M. Ciesla; Zbigniew Banaszkiewicz; Alicja Winczura; Mateusz Chmielarczyk; Ewa Wisniewska; Andrzej Marszałek; Barbara Tudek; Ryszard Olinski
The ethiology of colon cancer is largely dependent on inflammation driven oxidative stress. The analysis of 8-oxodeoxyguanosine (8-oxodGuo) level in leukocyte DNA of healthy controls (138 individuals), patients with benign adenomas (AD, 137 individuals) and with malignant carcinomas (CRC, 169 individuals) revealed a significant increase in the level of 8-oxodGuo in leukocyte DNA of AD and CRC patients in comparison to controls. The counteracting mechanism is base excision repair, in which OGG1 and PARP-1 play a key role. We investigated the level of PARP-1 and OGG1 mRNA and protein in diseased and marginal, normal tissues taken from AD and CRC patients and in leukocytes taken from the patients as well as from healthy subjects. In colon tumors the PARP-1 mRNA level was higher than in unaffected colon tissue and in polyp tissues. A high positive correlation was found between PARP-1 and OGG1 mRNA levels in all investigated tissues. This suggests reciprocal influence of PARP-1 and OGG1 on their expression and stability, and may contribute to progression of colon cancer. PARP-1 and OGG1 proteins level was several fold higher in polyps and CRC in comparison to normal colon tissues. Individuals bearing the Cys326Cys genotype of OGG1 were characterized by higher PARP-1 protein level in diseased tissues than the Ser326Cys and Ser326Ser genotypes. Aforementioned result may suggest that the diseased cells with polymorphic OGG1 recruit more PARP protein, which is necessary to remove 8-oxodGuo. Thus, patients with decreased activity of OGG1/polymorphism of the OGG1 gene and higher 8-oxodGuo level may be more susceptible to treatment with PARP-1 inhibitors.
DNA Repair | 2014
Alicja Winczura; Alicja Czubaty; Kinga Winczura; Katarzyna Masłowska; Matylda Nałęcz; Dominika Dudzińska; Murat Saparbaev; Krzysztof Staroń; Barbara Tudek
Oxidative-stress-driven lipid peroxidation (LPO) is involved in the pathogenesis of several human diseases, including cancer. LPO products react with cellular proteins changing their properties, and with DNA bases to form mutagenic etheno-DNA adducts, removed from DNA mainly by the base excision repair (BER) pathway. One of the major reactive aldehydes generated by LPO is 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE). We investigated the effect of HNE on BER enzymes in human cells and in vitro. K21 cells pretreated with physiological HNE concentrations were more sensitive to oxidative and alkylating agents, H2O2 and MMS, than were untreated cells. Detailed examination of the effects of HNE on particular stages of BER in K21 cells revealed that HNE decreases the rate of excision of 1,N(6)-ethenoadenine (ɛA) and 3,N(4)-ethenocytosine (ɛC), but not of 8-oxoguanine. Simultaneously HNE increased the rate of AP-site incision and blocked the re-ligation step after the gap-filling by DNA polymerases. This suggested that HNE increases the number of unrepaired single-strand breaks (SSBs) in cells treated with oxidizing or methylating agents. Indeed, preincubation of cells with HNE and their subsequent treatment with H2O2 or MMS increased the number of nuclear poly(ADP-ribose) foci, known to appear in cells in response to SSBs. However, when purified BER enzymes were exposed to HNE, only ANPG and TDG glycosylases excising ɛA and ɛC from DNA were inhibited, and only at high HNE concentrations. APE1 endonuclease and 8-oxoG-DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) were not inhibited. These results indicate that LPO products exert their promutagenic action not only by forming DNA adducts, but in part also by compromising the BER pathway.
Toxicology and Industrial Health | 2016
Katarzyna Urbanek-Olejnik; Monika Liszewska; Alicja Winczura; Grażyna Kostka
We investigated the relationship between dibutyl phthalate (DBP)-induced hypomethylation of the c-Myc promoter region (as evident in our early study) and the expression of c-Myc and DNMT1 genes (at messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein level) in the rat liver. Male Wistar rats received DBP in 1, 3, or 14 daily doses of 1800 mg kg−1 body weight. Levels of DNMT1, c-Myc mRNA, and proteins were detected using real-time polymerase chain reaction and Western blot analysis, respectively. Our findings indicate that DBP caused an increase in mRNA levels of c-Myc at all time points. The results showed that protein levels of c-Myc in rat liver also increased significantly by DBP treatment, which were more pronounced at last time point (after 14 doses). Furthermore, overexpression of DNMT1gene have been found after one dose of DBP, which was confirmed at the protein level by Western blot analysis. Reduced levels of DNMT1mRNA and proteins (3 and 14 doses) were coordinated with depletion DNA synthesis (reported previously). Based on our previous results and those presented here, the following conclusion could be drawn: (1) DBP exerted biological activity through epigenetic modulation of c-Myc gene expression; (2) it seems possible that DBP-induced active demethylation of c-Myc gene through mechanism(s) linked to generation of reactive oxygen species by activated c-Myc; and (3) control of DNA replication was not directly dependent on c-Myc transcriptional activity and we attribute this finding to DNMT1gene expression which was tightly coordinated with DNA synthesis.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2014
Artur Biela; Franck Coste; Françoise Culard; Martine Guérin; Stephane Goffinont; Karola Gasteiger; Jarosław M. Cieśla; Alicja Winczura; Zygmunt Kazimierczuk; Didier Gasparutto; Thomas Carell; Barbara Tudek; Bertrand Castaing
DNA glycosylases from the Fpg/Nei structural superfamily are base excision repair enzymes involved in the removal of a wide variety of mutagen and potentially lethal oxidized purines and pyrimidines. Although involved in genome stability, the recent discovery of synthetic lethal relationships between DNA glycosylases and other pathways highlights the potential of DNA glycosylase inhibitors for future medicinal chemistry development in cancer therapy. By combining biochemical and structural approaches, the physical target of 2-thioxanthine (2TX), an uncompetitive inhibitor of Fpg, was identified. 2TX interacts with the zinc finger (ZnF) DNA binding domain of the enzyme. This explains why the zincless hNEIL1 enzyme is resistant to 2TX. Crystal structures of the enzyme bound to DNA in the presence of 2TX demonstrate that the inhibitor chemically reacts with cysteine thiolates of ZnF and induces the loss of zinc. The molecular mechanism by which 2TX inhibits Fpg may be generalized to all prokaryote and eukaryote ZnF-containing Fpg/Nei-DNA glycosylases. Cell experiments show that 2TX can operate in cellulo on the human Fpg/Nei DNA glycosylases. The atomic elucidation of the determinants for the interaction of 2TX to Fpg provides the foundation for the future design and synthesis of new inhibitors with high efficiency and selectivity.
Environmental Toxicology | 2014
Grażyna Kostka; Katarzyna Urbanek-Olejnik; Monika Liszewska; Alicja Winczura
The aim of the study was to investigate the early effect of acute dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) exposure on the methylation status of the promoter region of two tumor suppressor genes: p53 and p16INK4a (p16) in rat liver. We analyzed their transcript and protein expression profiles concurrently with the examination of transcriptional and protein expression levels of DNA (cytosine‐5)‐methyltransferase 1 (Dnmt1). Male Wistar rats were treated with a single dose of DDT (57 mg kg−1 of body weight) and the methylation status of p53 and p16 genes was examined after 24 h using methylation‐sensitive restriction analysis—MSRA. The obtained results indicate that DDT induced alternations in methylation of the promoter region in both p53 and p16 genes. In all the tested samples, the promoter CpG islands of p53 (−261, −179, and −450) were methylated within 100% as compared to control samples (0%). The methylation status of the p16 promoter (−11 and +77) was also altered due to exposure to DDT. Methylated cytosines were detectable in 75% of the tested DNA samples. The Real‐time PCR and western blot analyses showed a decrease in mRNA and protein levels of p53, respectively, which was related to the increase in DNA synthesis. These relationships were also observed for mRNA and protein expressions of p16, although to a slighter extent. We also showed that hypermethylation in the promoter region of both tumor suppressor genes was consistent with an increased Dnmt1 mRNA level, and this relationship was further confirmed at the protein level of DNMT1. Concluding, our data suggests that epigenetically mediated changes in gene expression may play an important role in the mechanism of DDT toxicity, including carcinogenic action.
American Journal of Translational Research | 2010
Barbara Tudek; Alicja Winczura; Justyna Janik; Agnieszka Siomek; Marek Foksinski; Ryszard Olinski
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010
Tomasz Obtułowicz; Alicja Winczura; Elżbieta Speina; Maja Swoboda; Justyna Janik; Beata Janowska; Jarosław M. Cieśla; Paweł Kowalczyk; Arkadiusz Jawień; Daniel Gackowski; Zbigniew Banaszkiewicz; Ireneusz W. Krasnodębski; Andrzej Chaber; Ryszard Olinski; Jagadesaan Nair; Helmut Bartsch; Thierry Douki; Jean Cadet; Barbara Tudek
Tetrahedron Letters | 2016
Adam Mieczkowski; Milena Bażlekowa; Maciej Baginski; Jacek Wójcik; Alicja Winczura; Agnieszka Miazga; Somayeh Shahmoradi Ghahe; Roman Gajda; Krzysztof Woźniak; Barbara Tudek