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Dive into the research topics where Ekhson Holmuhamedov is active.

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Featured researches published by Ekhson Holmuhamedov.


ACS Nano | 2008

Bactericidal efficacy of nitric oxide-releasing silica nanoparticles.

Evan M. Hetrick; Jae Ho Shin; Nathan A. Stasko; C. Bryce Johnson; Daniel A. Wespe; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Mark H. Schoenfisch

The utility of nitric oxide (NO)-releasing silica nanoparticles as novel antibacterial agents is demonstrated against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Nitric oxide-releasing nanoparticles were prepared via co-condensation of tetraalkoxysilane with aminoalkoxysilane modified with diazeniumdiolate NO donors, allowing for the storage of large NO payloads. Comparison of the bactericidal efficacy of the NO-releasing nanoparticles to 1-[2-(carboxylato)pyrrolidin-1-yl]diazen-1-ium-1,2-diolate (PROLI/NO), a small molecule NO donor, demonstrated enhanced bactericidal efficacy of nanoparticle-derived NO and reduced cytotoxicity to healthy cells (mammalian fibroblasts). Confocal microscopy revealed that fluorescently labeled NO-releasing nanoparticles associated with the bacterial cells, providing rationale for the enhanced bactericidal efficacy of the nanoparticles. Intracellular NO concentrations were measurable when the NO was delivered from nanoparticles as opposed to PROLI/NO. Collectively, these results demonstrate the advantage of delivering NO via nanoparticles for antimicrobial applications.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2010

Closure of VDAC causes oxidative stress and accelerates the Ca2+-induced mitochondrial permeability transition in rat liver mitochondria

Andrey P. Tikunov; C. Bryce Johnson; Peter Pediaditakis; Nikolai Markevich; Jeffrey M. Macdonald; John J. Lemasters; Ekhson Holmuhamedov

The electron transport chain of mitochondria is a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which play a critical role in augmenting the Ca(2+)-induced mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT). Mitochondrial release of superoxide anions (O(2)(-)) from the intermembrane space (IMS) to the cytosol is mediated by voltage dependent anion channels (VDAC) in the outer membrane. Here, we examined whether closure of VDAC increases intramitochondrial oxidative stress by blocking efflux of O(2)(-) from the IMS and sensitizing to the Ca(2+)-induced MPT. Treatment of isolated rat liver mitochondria with 5microM G3139, an 18-mer phosphorothioate blocker of VDAC, accelerated onset of the MPT by 6.8+/-1.4min within a range of 100-250microM Ca(2+). G3139-mediated acceleration of the MPT was reversed by 20microM butylated hydroxytoluene, a water soluble antioxidant. Pre-treatment of mitochondria with G3139 also increased accumulation of O(2)(-) in mitochondria, as monitored by dihydroethidium fluorescence, and permeabilization of the mitochondrial outer membrane with digitonin reversed the effect of G3139 on O(2)(-) accumulation. Mathematical modeling of generation and turnover of O(2)(-) within the IMS indicated that closure of VDAC produces a 1.55-fold increase in the steady-state level of mitochondrial O(2)(-). In conclusion, closure of VDAC appears to impede the efflux of superoxide anions from the IMS, resulting in an increased steady-state level of O(2)(-), which causes an internal oxidative stress and sensitizes mitochondria toward the Ca(2+)-induced MPT.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Inhibition of Mitochondrial Respiration as a Source of Adaphostin-induced Reactive Oxygen Species and Cytotoxicity

Son B. Le; M. Katie Hailer; Sarah A. Buhrow; Qi Wang; Karen S. Flatten; Peter Pediaditakis; Keith C. Bible; Lionel D. Lewis; Edward A. Sausville; Yuan Ping Pang; John J. Lemasters; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Scott H. Kaufmann

Adaphostin is a dihydroquinone derivative that is undergoing extensive preclinical testing as a potential anticancer drug. Previous studies have suggested that the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) plays a critical role in the cytotoxicity of this agent. In this study, we investigated the source of these ROS. Consistent with the known chemical properties of dihydroquinones, adaphostin simultaneously underwent oxidation to the corresponding quinone and generated ROS under aqueous conditions. Interestingly, however, this quinone was not detected in intact cells. Instead, high performance liquid chromatography demonstrated that adaphostin was concentrated by up to 300-fold in cells relative to the extracellular medium and that the highest concentration of adaphostin (3000-fold over extracellular concentrations) was detected in mitochondria. Consistent with a mitochondrial site for adaphostin action, adaphostin-induced ROS production was diminished by >75% in MOLT-4 rho0 cells, which lack mitochondrial electron transport, relative to parental MOLT-4 cells. In addition, inhibition of oxygen consumption was observed when intact cells were treated with adaphostin. Loading of isolated mitochondria to equivalent adaphostin concentrations caused inhibition of uncoupled oxygen consumption in mitochondria incubated with the complex I substrates pyruvate and malate or the complex II substrate succinate. Further analysis demonstrated that adaphostin had no effect on pyruvate or succinate dehydrogenase activity. Instead, adaphostin inhibited reduced decylubiquinone-induced cytochrome c reduction, identifying complex III as the site of inhibition by this agent. Moreover, adaphostin enhanced the production of ROS by succinate-charged mitochondria. Collectively, these observations demonstrate that mitochondrial respiration rather than direct redox cycling of the hydroquinone moiety is a source of adaphostin-induced ROS and identify complex III as a potential target for antineoplastic agents.


Nitric Oxide | 2010

Reduced ischemia/reperfusion injury via glutathione-initiated nitric oxide-releasing dendrimers.

Timothy A. Johnson; Nathan A. Stasko; Jessica L. Matthews; Wayne E. Cascio; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; C. Bryce Johnson; Mark H. Schoenfisch

We report the therapeutic potential of S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine-derivatized generation-4 polyamidoamine dendrimers (G4-SNAP) for reducing ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in an isolated, perfused rat heart. The use of this dendrimer scaffold to deliver the nitrosothiol therapeutic did not inhibit NO donor activity as the required dose of G4-SNAP to minimize I/R injury (31nM corresponding to 2microM SNAP) was consistent with the optimum concentration of small molecule SNAP alone. An exploration of G4-SNAP NO release kinetics in the presence of physiologically relevant concentrations of glutathione (GSH) indicated enhanced NO release (t[NO]=1.28microM NO/mg) at 500microM GSH. Reperfusion experiments conducted with 500microM GSH further lowered the optimal therapeutic G4-SNAP dose to 230pM (i.e., 15nM SNAP). The unique combination of G4-SNAP dendrimer and glutathione trigger represents a novel strategy with possible clinical relevance toward salvaging ischemic tissue.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2009

Ethanol exposure decreases mitochondrial outer membrane permeability in cultured rat hepatocytes

Ekhson Holmuhamedov; John J. Lemasters

Mitochondrial metabolism depends on movement of hydrophilic metabolites through the mitochondrial outer membrane via the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC). Here we assessed VDAC permeability of intracellular mitochondria in cultured hepatocytes after plasma membrane permeabilization with 8 microM digitonin. Blockade of VDAC with Koenigs polyanion inhibited uncoupled and ADP-stimulated respiration of permeabilized hepatocytes by 33% and 41%, respectively. Tenfold greater digitonin (80 microM) relieved KPA-induced inhibition and also released cytochrome c, signifying mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization. Acute ethanol exposure also decreased respiration and accessibility of mitochondrial adenylate kinase (AK) of permeabilized hepatocytes membranes by 40% and 32%, respectively. This inhibition was reversed by high digitonin. Outer membrane permeability was independently assessed by confocal microscopy from entrapment of 3 kDa tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated dextran (RhoDex) in mitochondria of mechanically permeabilized hepatocytes. Ethanol decreased RhoDex entrapment in mitochondria by 35% of that observed in control cells. Overall, these results demonstrate that acute ethanol exposure decreases mitochondrial outer membrane permeability most likely by inhibition of VDAC.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2013

Minocycline and doxycycline, but not other tetracycline-derived compounds, protect liver cells from chemical hypoxia and ischemia/reperfusion injury by inhibition of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter.

Justin Schwartz; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Xun Zhang; Gregory L. Lovelace; Charles D. Smith; John J. Lemasters

Minocycline, a tetracycline-derived compound, mitigates damage caused by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. Here, 19 tetracycline-derived compounds were screened in comparison to minocycline for their ability to protect hepatocytes against damage from chemical hypoxia and I/R injury. Cultured rat hepatocytes were incubated with 50μM of each tetracycline-derived compound 20 min prior to exposure to 500μM iodoacetic acid plus 1mM KCN (chemical hypoxia). In other experiments, hepatocytes were incubated in anoxic Krebs-Ringer-HEPES buffer at pH6.2 for 4h prior to reoxygenation at pH7.4 (simulated I/R). Tetracycline-derived compounds were added 20 min prior to reperfusion. Ca(2+) uptake was measured in isolated rat liver mitochondria incubated with Fluo-5N. Cell killing after 120 min of chemical hypoxia measured by propidium iodide (PI) fluorometry was 87%, which decreased to 28% and 42% with minocycline and doxycycline, respectively. After I/R, cell killing at 120 min decreased from 79% with vehicle to 43% and 49% with minocycline and doxycycline. No other tested compound decreased killing. Minocycline and doxycycline also inhibited mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake and suppressed the Ca(2+)-induced mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), the penultimate cause of cell death in reperfusion injury. Ru360, a specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), also decreased cell killing after hypoxia and I/R and blocked mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake and the MPT. Other proposed mechanisms, including mitochondrial depolarization and matrix metalloprotease inhibition, could not account for cytoprotection. Taken together, these results indicate that minocycline and doxycycline are cytoprotective by way of inhibition of MCU.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Regulation of Mitochondrial Function by Voltage Dependent Anion Channels in Ethanol Metabolism and the Warburg Effect

John J. Lemasters; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Christoph Czerny; Zhi Zhong; Eduardo N. Maldonado

Voltage dependent anion channels (VDAC) are highly conserved proteins that are responsible for permeability of the mitochondrial outer membrane to hydrophilic metabolites like ATP, ADP and respiratory substrates. Although previously assumed to remain open, VDAC closure is emerging as an important mechanism for regulation of global mitochondrial metabolism in apoptotic cells and also in cells that are not dying. During hepatic ethanol oxidation to acetaldehyde, VDAC closure suppresses exchange of mitochondrial metabolites, resulting in inhibition of ureagenesis. In vivo, VDAC closure after ethanol occurs coordinately with mitochondrial uncoupling. Since acetaldehyde passes through membranes independently of channels and transporters, VDAC closure and uncoupling together foster selective and more rapid oxidative metabolism of toxic acetaldehyde to nontoxic acetate by mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase. In single reconstituted VDAC, tubulin decreases VDAC conductance, and in HepG2 hepatoma cells, free tubulin negatively modulates mitochondrial membrane potential, an effect enhanced by protein kinase A. Tubulin-dependent closure of VDAC in cancer cells contributes to suppression of mitochondrial metabolism and may underlie the Warburg phenomenon of aerobic glycolysis. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: VDAC structure, function, and regulation of mitochondrial metabolism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Ethanol suppresses ureagenesis in rat hepatocytes: role of acetaldehyde.

Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Christoph Czerny; Craig Beeson; John J. Lemasters

Background: Ethanol oxidation alters mitochondrial metabolism in rat hepatocytes. Results: Ethanol via acetaldehyde formation closes mitochondrial voltage-dependent anions channels (VDAC) and decreases outer membrane permeability. Conclusion: Acetaldehyde, derived from ethanol oxidation, suppresses ureagenesis by inhibiting exchange of mitochondrial substrates across the outer membrane. Significance: Acetaldehyde-mediated VDAC closure is an early adaptive event in ethanol metabolism that may contribute to alcoholic liver disease. We proposed previously that closure of voltage-dependent anion channels (VDAC) in the mitochondrial outer membrane after ethanol exposure leads to suppression of mitochondrial metabolite exchange. Because ureagenesis requires extensive mitochondrial metabolite exchange, we characterized the effect of ethanol and its metabolite, acetaldehyde (AcAld), on total and ureagenic respiration in cultured rat hepatocytes. Ureagenic substrates increased cellular respiration from 15.8 ± 0.9 nmol O2/min/106 cells (base line) to 29.4 ± 1.7 nmol O2/min/106 cells in about 30 min. Ethanol (0–200 mm) suppressed extra respiration after ureagenic substrates (ureagenic respiration) by up to 51% but not base line respiration. Urea formation also declined proportionately. Inhibition of alcohol dehydrogenase, cytochrome P450 2E1, and catalase with 4-methylpyrazole, trans-1,2-dichloroethylene, and 3-amino-1,2,3-triazole restored ethanol-suppressed ureagenic respiration by 46, 37, and 66%, respectively. By contrast, inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase with phenethyl isothiocyanate increased the inhibitory effect of ethanol on ureagenic respiration by an additional 60%. AcAld, an intermediate product of ethanol oxidation, suppressed ureagenic respiration with an apparent IC50 of 125 μm. AcAld also inhibited entry of 3-kDa rhodamine-conjugated dextran in the mitochondrial intermembrane space of digitonin-permeabilized hepatocytes, indicative of VDAC closure. In conclusion, AcAld, derived from ethanol metabolism, suppresses ureagenesis in hepatocytes mediated by closure of VDAC.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2006

Adaphostin and other anticancer drugs quench the fluorescence of mitochondrial potential probes

Son B. Le; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Ven L. Narayanan; Edward A. Sausville; Scott H. Kaufmann

Fluorescent dyes are widely used to monitor changes in mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm). When MitoTracker Red CMXRos, tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester (TMRM), and 3,3′dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC6(3)) were utilized to examine the effects of the experimental anticancer drug adaphostin on intact cells or isolated mitochondria, decreased fluorescence was observed. In contrast, measurement of tetraphenylphosphonium uptake by the mitochondria using an ion-selective microelectrode failed to show any effect of adaphostin on ΔΨm. Instead, further experiments demonstrated that adaphostin quenches the fluorescence of the mitochondrial dyes. Structure–activity analysis revealed that the adamantyl and p-aminobenzoic acid moieties of adaphostin are critical for this quenching. Anticancer drugs containing comparable structural motifs, including mitoxantrone, aminoflavone, and amsacrine, also quenched the mitochondrial probes. These results indicate the need for caution when mitochondrial dyes are utilized to examine the effects of xenobiotics on ΔΨm and suggest that some previously reported direct effects of anticancer drugs on mitochondria might need re-evaluation.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Decline of Phosphotransfer and Substrate Supply Metabolic Circuits Hinders ATP Cycling in Aging Myocardium.

Emirhan Nemutlu; Anu Gupta; Song Zhang; Maria Viqar; Ekhson Holmuhamedov; Andre Terzic; Arshad Jahangir; Petras P. Dzeja

Integration of mitochondria with cytosolic ATP-consuming/ATP-sensing and substrate supply processes is critical for muscle bioenergetics and electrical activity. Whether age-dependent muscle weakness and increased electrical instability depends on perturbations in cellular energetic circuits is unknown. To define energetic remodeling of aged atrial myocardium we tracked dynamics of ATP synthesis-utilization, substrate supply, and phosphotransfer circuits through adenylate kinase (AK), creatine kinase (CK), and glycolytic/glycogenolytic pathways using 18O stable isotope-based phosphometabolomic technology. Samples of intact atrial myocardium from adult and aged rats were subjected to 18O-labeling procedure at resting basal state, and analyzed using the 18O-assisted HPLC-GC/MS technique. Characteristics for aging atria were lower inorganic phosphate Pi[18O], γ-ATP[18O], β-ADP[18O], and creatine phosphate CrP[18O] 18O-labeling rates indicating diminished ATP utilization-synthesis and AK and CK phosphotransfer fluxes. Shift in dynamics of glycolytic phosphotransfer was reflected in the diminished G6P[18O] turnover with relatively constant glycogenolytic flux or G1P[18O] 18O-labeling. Labeling of G3P[18O], an indicator of G3P-shuttle activity and substrate supply to mitochondria, was depressed in aged myocardium. Aged atrial myocardium displayed reduced incorporation of 18O into second (18O2), third (18O3), and fourth (18O4) positions of Pi[18O] and a lower Pi[18O]/γ-ATP[18 O]-labeling ratio, indicating delayed energetic communication and ATP cycling between mitochondria and cellular ATPases. Adrenergic stress alleviated diminished CK flux, AK catalyzed β-ATP turnover and energetic communication in aging atria. Thus, 18O-assisted phosphometabolomics uncovered simultaneous phosphotransfer through AK, CK, and glycolytic pathways and G3P substrate shuttle deficits hindering energetic communication and ATP cycling, which may underlie energetic vulnerability of aging atrial myocardium.

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John J. Lemasters

Medical University of South Carolina

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Peter Pediaditakis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Arshad Jahangir

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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C. Bryce Johnson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Andrey P. Tikunov

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jeffrey M. Macdonald

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Mahek Mirza

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zhi Zhong

Medical University of South Carolina

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Farhan Rizvi

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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