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Dive into the research topics where Arnold Garbiec is active.

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Featured researches published by Arnold Garbiec.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2012

Nanoemulsion-templated multilayer nanocapsules for cyanine-type photosensitizer delivery to human breast carcinoma cells.

Urszula Bazylińska; Jadwiga Pietkiewicz; Jolanta Saczko; Małgorzata Nattich-Rak; Joanna Rossowska; Arnold Garbiec; Kazimiera A. Wilk

There is great clinical interest in developing novel nanocarriers for hydrophobic cyanine dyes used as photosensitizing agents in photodynamic therapy (PDT). In the present study we have employed nanoemulsion-templated oil-core multilayer nanocapsules as robust nanocarriers for a cyanine-type photosensitizer IR-786. These nanoproducts were fabricated via layer-by-layer (LbL) adsorption of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes (PEs), i.e., anionic PSS and cationic PDADMAC on nanoemulsion liquid cores created by dicephalic or bulky saccharide-derived cationic surfactants. All nanocapsules, with different thicknesses of the PE shell and average size <200 nm (measured by DLS) demonstrated good capacity for IR-786 encapsulation. The nanocarriers were visualized by SEM and AFM and their photo-induced anticancer effect and cellular internalization in human breast carcinoma MCF-7/WT cells were determined. Biological response of the cell culture, expressed as dark and photocytotoxicity as well as fluorescence of drug molecules loaded in the multilayer vehicles, analyzed by the FACS and CLSM techniques, have indicated that the delivered IR-786 did not aggregate inside the cells and could, therefore, act as an effective third-generation photosensitizing agent. In vitro biological experiments demonstrated that the properties of studied nanostructures depended upon the PE type and the envelope thickness as well as on the surfactant architecture in the nanoemulsion-based templates employed for the nanocapsule fabrication. Similarity of results obtained for stored (three weeks in the dark at room temperature) and freshly-prepared nanocapsules, attests to viability of this stable, promising drug delivery system for poorly water-soluble cyanines useful in PDT.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

Cucumber metal transport protein MTP8 confers increased tolerance to manganese when expressed in yeast and Arabidopsis thaliana

Magdalena Migocka; Anna Papierniak; Ewa Maciaszczyk-Dziubinska; Piotr Poździk; Ewelina Posyniak; Arnold Garbiec; Sophie Filleur

Cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) proteins are ubiquitous divalent cation transporters that have been proved to be essential for metal homeostasis and tolerance in Archaebacteria, Bacteria, and Eukaryota. In plants, CDFs are designated as metal tolerance proteins (MTPs). Due to the lack of genomic resources, studies on MTPs in other plants, including cultivated crops, are lacking. Here, the identification and organization of genes encoding members of the MTP family in cucumber are described. The first functional characterization of a cucumber gene encoding a member of the Mn-CDF subgroup of CDF proteins, designated as CsMTP8 based on the highest homology to plant MTP8, is also presented. The expression of CsMTP8 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae led to increased Mn accumulation in yeast cells and fully restored the growth of mutants hypersensitive to Mn in Mn excess. Similarly, the overexpression of CsMTP8 in Arabidopsis thaliana enhanced plant tolerance to high Mn in nutrition media as well as the accumulation of Mn in plant tissues. When fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP), CsMTP8 localized to the vacuolar membranes in yeast cells and to Arabidopsis protoplasts. In cucumber, CsMTP8 was expressed almost exclusively in roots, and the level of gene transcript was markedly up-regulated or reduced under elevated Mn or Mn deficiency, respectively. Taken together, the results suggest that CsMTP8 is an Mn transporter localized in the vacuolar membrane, which participates in the maintenance of Mn homeostasis in cucumber root cells.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Two metal-tolerance proteins, MTP1 and MTP4, are involved in Zn homeostasis and Cd sequestration in cucumber cells

Magdalena Migocka; Anna Kosieradzka; Anna Papierniak; Ewa Maciaszczyk-Dziubinska; Ewelina Posyniak; Arnold Garbiec; Sophie Filleur

Metal-tolerance proteins (MTPs) are divalent cation transporters that have been shown to be essential for metal homeostasis and tolerance in model plants and hyperaccumulators. Due to the lack of genomic resources, studies on MTPs in cultivated crops are lacking. Here, we present the first functional characterization of genes encoding cucumber proteins homologous to MTP1 and MTP4 transporters. CsMTP1 expression was ubiquitous in cucumber plants, whereas CsMTP4 mRNA was less abundant and was not detected in the generative parts of the flowers. When expressed in yeast, CsMTP1 and CsMTP4 were able to complement the hypersensitivity of mutant strains to Zn and Cd through the increased sequestration of metals within vacuoles using the transmembrane electrochemical gradient. Both proteins formed oligomers at the vacuolar membranes of yeast and cucumber cells and localized in Arabidopsis protoplasts, consistent with their function in vacuolar Zn and Cd sequestration. Changes in the abundance of CsMTP1 and CsMTP4 transcripts and proteins in response to elevated Zn and Cd, or to Zn deprivation, suggested metal-induced transcriptional, translational, and post-translational modifications of protein activities. The differences in the organ expression and affinity of both proteins to Zn and Cd suggested that CsMTP1 and CsMTP4 may not be functionally redundant in cucumber cells.


Plant Journal | 2015

Cucumber metal tolerance protein CsMTP9 is a plasma membrane H+-coupled antiporter involved in the Mn2+ and Cd2+ efflux from root cells

Magdalena Migocka; Anna Papierniak; Anna Kosieradzka; Ewelina Posyniak; Ewa Maciaszczyk-Dziubinska; Robert Biskup; Arnold Garbiec; Tadeusz Marchewka

Members of the plant metal tolerance protein (MTP) family have been classified into three major groups - Zn-CDF, Mn-CDF and Zn/Fe-CDF - however, the selectivity of most of the MTPs has not been confirmed yet. Cucumber gene CsMTP9 encoding a putative CDF transporter homologous to members of the Mn-CDF cluster is expressed exclusively in roots. The relative abundance of CsMTP9 transcript and protein in roots is significantly increased under Mn excess and Cd. Immunolocalization with specific antibodies revealed that CsMTP9 is a plasma membrane transporter that localizes to the inner PM domain of root endodermal cells. The plasma membrane localization of CsMTP9 was confirmed by the expression of the fusion proteins of GFP (green fluorescent protein) and CsMTP9 in yeast and protoplasts prepared from Arabidopsis cells. In yeast, CsMTP9 transports Mn(2+) and Cd(2+) via a proton-antiport mechanism with an apparent Km values of approximately 10 μm and 2.5 μm for Mn(2+) and Cd(2+) , respectively. In addition, CsMTP9 expression in yeast rescues the Mn- and Cd-hypersensitive phenotypes through the enhanced efflux of Mn(2+) and Cd(2+) from yeast cells. Similarly, the overexpression of CsMTP9 in A. thaliana confers increased resistance of plants to Mn excess and Cd but not to other heavy metals and leads to the enhanced translocation of manganese and cadmium from roots to shoots. These findings indicate that CsMTP9 is a plasma membrane H(+) -coupled Mn(2+) and Cd(2+) antiporter involved in the efflux of manganese and cadmium from cucumber root cells by the transport of both metals from endodermis into vascular cylinder.


International Journal of Oncology | 2012

Photo-oxidative action in MCF-7 cancer cells induced by hydrophobic cyanines loaded in biodegradable microemulsion-templated nanocapsules.

Kazimiera A. Wilk; Katarzyna Zielińska; Jadwiga Pietkiewicz; Nina Skołucka; Anna Choromańska; Joanna Rossowska; Arnold Garbiec; Jolanta Saczko

Searching for photodynamic therapy-effective nanocarriers which enable a photosensitizer to be selectively delivered to tumor cells with enhanced bioavailability and diminished dark cytotoxicity is of current interest. We have employed a polymer-based nanoparticle approach to encapsulate the cyanine-type photosensitizer IR-780 in poly(n-butyl cyanoacrylate) (PBCA) nanocapsules. The latter were fabricated by interfacial polymerization in oil-in-water (o/w) microemulsions formed by dicephalic and gemini saccharide-derived surfactants. Nanocarriers were characterized by SEM, AFM and DLS. The efficiency of PBCA nanocapsules as a potential system of photosensitizer delivery to human breast cancer cells was established by dark and photocytotoxicity as the function of the cellular mitochondria. The photodynamic effect of cyanine IR-780 was determined by investigation of oxidative stress markers. The nanocapsules were the main focus of our studies to examine their cellular uptake and dark and photocytotoxicity as the function of the cellular mitochondria as well as oxidative stress markers (i.e., lipid peroxidation and protein damage) in MCF-7/WT cancer cells. The effects of encapsulated IR-780 were compared with those of native photosensitizer. The penetration of the nanocapsules into cancer cells was visualized by CLSM and their uptake was estimated by FACS analysis. Cyanine IR-780 delivered in PBCA nanocapsules to MCF-7/WT cells retains its sensitivity upon photoirradiation and it is regularly distributed in the cell cytoplasm. The intensity of the photosensitizer-generated oxidative stress depends on IR-780 release from the effective uptake of polymeric nanocapsules and seems to remain dependent upon the surfactant structure in o/w microemulsion-based templates applied to nanocapsule fabrication.


Arthropod Structure & Development | 2013

Differentiation and function of the ovarian somatic cells in the pseudoscorpion, Chelifer cancroides (Linnaeus, 1761) (Chelicerata: Arachnida: Pseudoscorpionida).

Izabela Jędrzejowska; Marta Mazurkiewicz-Kania; Arnold Garbiec; Janusz Kubrakiewicz

Pseudoscorpion females carry fertilized eggs and embryos in specialized brood sacs, where embryos are fed with a nutritive fluid produced and secreted by somatic ovarian cells. We used various microscopic techniques to analyze the organization of the somatic cells in the ovary of a pseudoscorpion, Chelifer cancroides. In young specimens, the ovary is a cylindrical mass of internally located germline cells (oogonia and early previtellogenic oocytes) and two types of somatic cells: the epithelial cells of the ovarian wall and the internal interstitial cells. In subsequent stages of the ovary development, the oocytes grow and protrude from the ovary into the hemocoel (opisthosomal cavity). At the same time the interstitial cells differentiate into the follicular cells that directly cover the oocyte surface, whereas some epithelial cells of the ovarian wall form the oocyte stalks - tubular structures that connect the oocytes with the ovarian tube. The follicular cells do not seem to participate in oogenesis. In contrast, the cells of the stalk presumably have a dual function. During ovulation the stalk cells appear to contribute to the formation of the external egg envelope (chorion), while in the post-ovulatory phase of ovary function they cooperate with the other cells of the ovarian wall in the production of the nutritive fluid for the developing embryos.


Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy | 2013

Cyanines in photodynamic reaction assisted by reversible electroporation--in vitro study on human breast carcinoma cells.

Joanna Wezgowiec; Malgorzata Kotulska; Jolanta Saczko; Maria B. Derylo; Justin Teissié; Marie-Pierre Rols; Julie Orio; Arnold Garbiec; Julita Kulbacka

BACKGROUND Ineffective drug delivery is a vast problem of anticancer therapies. The aim of this study was to investigate the possibility of enhancement of cyanines transport through the cell membrane by electroporation and to evaluate a photodynamic activity of these compounds. METHODS We evaluated in vitro the effectiveness of photodynamic reaction with cyanines on breast adenocarcinoma cells (MCF-7/WT) and normal Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) lacking voltage-dependent ion channels, alone and combined with electropermeabilization. Among six cyanines tested, two compounds could be indicated as good therapeutic candidates: IR-775 and IR-786. Cellular effects were assessed with MTT assay reporting cell mitochondrial activity and with SRB assay based on the measurement of cellular protein content. Cyanines localization was observed with confocal microscope. RESULTS Photodynamic reaction of MCF-7/WT cells with IR-775 and IR-786 did not result in cellular dysfunction. Electric field intensities and pulse duration, non-toxic for cells, significantly increased photocytotoxicity of the cyanines after electropermeabilization with IR-775 and IR-786. Much shorter exposure times were efficient for cyanines in photodynamic reaction assisted by electroporation (10 min instead of 24h). CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that electroporation of cancerous cells in the presence of cyanine dyes could increase the uptake of the photosensitizer, which correlates with a higher cytotoxicity in the breast adenocarcinoma cell line. Electroporation may be an attractive delivery system for photosensitizers in photodynamic therapy, enabling application of new compounds and reduction of drug dose and exposure time.


Melanoma Research | 2015

Effects of electrophotodynamic therapy in vitro on human melanoma cells--melanotic (MeWo) and amelanotic (C32).

Anna Choromańska; Julita Kulbacka; Nina Rembiałkowska; Justyna Pilat; Malgorzata Drag-Zalesinska; Teresa Wysocka; Arnold Garbiec; Malgorzata Kotulska; Jolanta Saczko

Photodynamic therapy has been considered ineffective for melanomas because of the competition between the absorbance of melanin from the melanoma and the absorbance of photosensitizers at the photosensitizer excitation light wavelength. Melanomas show considerable heterogeneity and resistance to phototherapy. The effectiveness of photodynamic therapy could be intensified by electroporation for enhanced transport of a photosensitizer by transient pores in the membrane. In this study, photodynamic therapy combined with electroporation was tested in vitro on the human melanoma cell lines melanotic melanoma (MeWo) and amelanotic melanoma (C32). Control experiments were conducted on human keratinocytes (HaCaT). Photofrin was used as a photosensitizer. Photosensitizer distribution, cloning efficacy test, comet assay, and assessment of apoptotic proteins were performed. Melanin levels were determined before and after photodynamic therapy. The experiments indicated that electroporation effectively supports the photodynamic method. It was found that photodynamic therapy with electroporation efficiently induces apoptosis in melanotic and amelanotic melanoma cells.


Arthropod Structure & Development | 2014

Differentiation of somatic cells in the ovariuteri of the apoikogenic scorpion Euscorpius italicus (Chelicerata, Scorpiones, Euscorpiidae)

Izabela Jędrzejowska; Kamil Szymusiak; Marta Mazurkiewicz-Kania; Arnold Garbiec

In apoikogenic scorpions, growing oocytes protrude from the gonad (ovariuterus) and develop in follicles exposed to the mesosomal (i.e. hemocoelic) cavity. During subsequent stages of oogenesis (previtellogenesis and vitellogenesis), the follicles are connected to the gonad surface by prominent somatic stalks. The aim of our study was to analyze the origin, structure and functioning of somatic cells accompanying protruding oocytes. We show that these cells differentiate into two morphologically distinct subpopulations: the follicular cells and stalk cells. The follicular cells gather on the hemocoelic (i.e. facing the hemocoel) surface of the oocyte, where they constitute a cuboidal epithelium. The arrangement of the follicular cells on the oocyte surface is not uniform; moreover, the actin cytoskeleton of these cells undergoes significant modifications during oocyte growth. During initial stages of the stalk formation the stalk cells elongate and form F-actin rich cytoplasmic processes by which the stalk cells are tightly connected to each other. Additionally, the stalk cells develop microvilli directed towards the growing oocyte. Our findings indicate that the follicular cells covering hemocoelic surfaces of the oocyte and the stalk cells represent two distinct subpopulations of epithelial cells, which differ in morphology, behavior and function.


Protoplasma | 2016

Asymmetry in structure of the eggshell in Osmylus fulvicephalus (Neuroptera: Osmylidae): an exceptional case of breaking symmetry during neuropteran oogenesis.

Arnold Garbiec; Janusz Kubrakiewicz; Marta Mazurkiewicz-Kania; Bożena Simiczyjew; Izabela Jędrzejowska

Ovaries of neuropterans are of meroistic-polytrophic type. The ovarian tubes, the ovarioles, are divided into two major parts: a germarium, comprised of newly formed germ cell clusters; and a vitellarium, housing linearly arranged ovarian follicles. Each ovarian follicle consists of the germ cell cluster diversified into different number of nurse cells, and the oocyte enclosed by follicular epithelium. In Osmylus fulvicephalus, a representative of Neuroptera, during consecutive stages of oogenesis, the follicular cells undergo a multistep process of diversification which leads to the appearance of several follicular cell subpopulations i.e., the main-body follicular cells, the stretched cells, the anterior centripetal cells, and posterior centripetal cells. The anterior centripetal cells occupy the anterior pole of the oocyte and in advanced oogenesis due to hypertrophy that transform into anterior fold cells. Initially, the anterior fold cells form a symmetric fold, but in advanced oogenesis, quite different from other neuropterans studied so far, they undergo uneven hypertrophic growth which results in breaking symmetry of the anterior fold that becomes shifted to the ventral side of the oocyte. Since the anterior fold cells participate in the production of the specialized chorion structure, the micropyle, asymmetric structure of the anterior fold, is reflected both in its asymmetric position and in the asymmetric construction of the micropyle. As a consequence of breaking symmetry of the anterior fold, Osmylus eggshell gains dorso-ventral polarity, which is unusual for neuropterans.

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Jolanta Saczko

Wrocław Medical University

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Anna Choromańska

Wrocław Medical University

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Joanna Rossowska

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Julita Kulbacka

Wrocław Medical University

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