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Dive into the research topics where Gabriella Fábián is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriella Fábián.


Lipids in Health and Disease | 2010

Polyunsaturated fatty acids synergize with lipid droplet binding thalidomide analogs to induce oxidative stress in cancer cells.

László G. Puskás; Liliána Z. Fehér; Csaba Vizler; Ferhan Ayaydin; Erzsébet Rásó; Eszter Molnár; István Magyary; Iván Kanizsai; Márió Gyuris; Ramóna Madácsi; Gabriella Fábián; Klaudia Farkas; Péter Hegyi; Ferenc Baska; Béla Ózsvári; Klára Kitajka

BackgroundCytoplasmic lipid-droplets are common inclusions of eukaryotic cells. Lipid-droplet binding thalidomide analogs (2,6-dialkylphenyl-4/5-amino-substituted-5,6,7-trifluorophthalimides) with potent anticancer activities were synthesized.ResultsCytotoxicity was detected in different cell lines including melanoma, leukemia, hepatocellular carcinoma, glioblastoma at micromolar concentrations. The synthesized analogs are non-toxic to adult animals up to 1 g/kg but are teratogenic to zebrafish embryos at micromolar concentrations with defects in the developing muscle. Treatment of tumor cells resulted in calcium release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), ER stress and cell death. Antioxidants could partially, while an intracellular calcium chelator almost completely diminish ROS production. Exogenous docosahexaenoic acid or eicosapentaenoic acid induced calcium release and ROS generation, and synergized with the analogs in vitro, while oleic acid had no such an effect. Gene expression analysis confirmed the induction of ER stress-mediated apoptosis pathway components, such as GADD153, ATF3, Luman/CREB3 and the ER-associated degradation-related HERPUD1 genes. Tumor suppressors, P53, LATS2 and ING3 were also up-regulated in various cell lines after drug treatment. Amino-phthalimides down-regulated the expression of CCL2, which is implicated in tumor metastasis and angiogenesis.ConclusionsBecause of the anticancer, anti-angiogenic action and the wide range of applicability of the immunomodulatory drugs, including thalidomide analogs, lipid droplet-binding members of this family could represent a new class of agents by affecting ER-membrane integrity and perturbations of ER homeostasis.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2011

High-Density Real-Time PCR-Based in Vivo Toxicogenomic Screen to Predict Organ-Specific Toxicity

Gabriella Fábián; Nóra Faragó; Liliána Z. Fehér; Lajos Nagy; Sándor Kulin; Klára Kitajka; Tamás Bitó; Vilmos Tubak; Róbert Katona; László Tiszlavicz; László G. Puskás

Toxicogenomics, based on the temporal effects of drugs on gene expression, is able to predict toxic effects earlier than traditional technologies by analyzing changes in genomic biomarkers that could precede subsequent protein translation and initiation of histological organ damage. In the present study our objective was to extend in vivo toxicogenomic screening from analyzing one or a few tissues to multiple organs, including heart, kidney, brain, liver and spleen. Nanocapillary quantitative real-time PCR (QRT-PCR) was used in the study, due to its higher throughput, sensitivity and reproducibility, and larger dynamic range compared to DNA microarray technologies. Based on previous data, 56 gene markers were selected coding for proteins with different functions, such as proteins for acute phase response, inflammation, oxidative stress, metabolic processes, heat-shock response, cell cycle/apoptosis regulation and enzymes which are involved in detoxification. Some of the marker genes are specific to certain organs, and some of them are general indicators of toxicity in multiple organs. Utility of the nanocapillary QRT-PCR platform was demonstrated by screening different references, as well as discovery of drug-like compounds for their gene expression profiles in different organs of treated mice in an acute experiment. For each compound, 896 QRT-PCR were done: four organs were used from each of the treated four animals to monitor the relative expression of 56 genes. Based on expression data of the discovery gene set of toxicology biomarkers the cardio- and nephrotoxicity of doxorubicin and sulfasalazin, the hepato- and nephrotoxicity of rotenone, dihydrocoumarin and aniline, and the liver toxicity of 2,4-diaminotoluene could be confirmed. The acute heart and kidney toxicity of the active metabolite SN-38 from its less toxic prodrug, irinotecan could be differentiated, and two novel gene markers for hormone replacement therapy were identified, namely fabp4 and pparg, which were down-regulated by estradiol treatment.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Curcumin Analog C-150, Influencing NF-κB, UPR and Akt/Notch Pathways Has Potent Anticancer Activity In Vitro and In Vivo

László Hackler; Béla Ózsvári; Márió Gyuris; Péter Sipos; Gabriella Fábián; Eszter Molnár; Annamária Marton; Nóra Faragó; József Mihály; Lajos Nagy; Tibor Szénási; Andrea Diron; Árpád Párducz; Iván Kanizsai; László G. Puskás

C-150 a Mannich-type curcumin derivative, exhibited pronounced cytotoxic effects against eight glioma cell lines at micromolar concentrations. Inhibition of cell proliferation by C-150 was mediated by affecting multiple targets as confirmed at transcription and protein level. C-150 effectively reduced the transcription activation of NFkB, inhibited PKC-alpha which are constitutively over-expressed in glioblastoma. The effects of C-150 on the Akt/ Notch signaling were also demonstrated in a Drosophila tumorigenesis model. C-150 reduced the number of tumors in Drosophila with similar efficacy to mitoxantrone. In an in vivo orthotopic glioma model, C-150 significantly increased the median survival of treated nude rats compared to control animals. The multi-target action of C-150, and its preliminary in vivo efficacy would render this curcumin analogue as a potent clinical candidate against glioblastoma.


Lipids in Health and Disease | 2013

Lipid droplet binding thalidomide analogs activate endoplasmic reticulum stress and suppress hepatocellular carcinoma in a chemically induced transgenic mouse model

Lajos Nagy; Eszter Molnár; Iván Kanizsai; Ramóna Madácsi; Béla Ózsvári; Liliána Z. Fehér; Gabriella Fábián; Annamária Marton; Csaba Vizler; Ferhan Ayaydin; Klára Kitajka; László Hackler; Lajos Mátés; Ferenc Deák; Ibolya Kiss; László G. Puskás

BackgroundHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most frequent and aggressive primary tumor of the liver and it has limited treatment options.ResultsIn this study, we report the in vitro and in vivo effects of two novel amino-trifluoro-phtalimide analogs, Ac-915 and Ac-2010. Both compounds bind lipid droplets and endoplasmic reticulum membrane, and interact with several proteins with chaperone functions (HSP60, HSP70, HSP90, and protein disulfide isomerase) as determined by affinity chromatography and resonant waveguide optical biosensor technology. Both compounds inhibited protein disulfide isomerase activity and induced cell death of different HCC cells at sub or low micromolar ranges detected by classical biochemical end-point assay as well as with real-time label-free measurements. Besides cell proliferation inhibiton, analogs also inhibited cell migration even at 250 nM. Relative biodistribution of the analogs was analysed in native tissue sections of different organs after administration of drugs, and by using fluorescent confocal microscopy based on the inherent blue fluorescence of the compounds. The analogs mainly accumulated in the liver. The effects of Ac-915 and Ac-2010 were also demonstrated on the advanced stages of hepatocarcinogenesis in a transgenic mouse model of N-nitrosodiethylamine (DEN)-induced HCC. Significantly less tumor development was found in the livers of the Ac-915- or Ac-2010-treated groups compared with control mice, characterized by less liver tumor incidence, fewer tumors and smaller tumor size.ConclusionThese results imply that these amino-trifluoro-phthalimide analogs could serve potent clinical candidates against HCC alone or in combination with dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids.


Molecules | 2013

Combination of small molecule microarray and confocal microscopy techniques for live cell staining fluorescent dye discovery.

Eszter Molnár; Soujanya Kuntam; Pradeep Kumar Reddy Cingaram; Begüm Peksel; Bhavyashree Suresh; Gabriella Fábián; Liliána Z. Fehér; Attila Bokros; Ágnes Medgyesi; Ferhan Ayaydin; László G. Puskás

Discovering new fluorochromes is significantly advanced by high-throughput screening (HTS) methods. In the present study a combination of small molecule microarray (SMM) prescreening and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) was developed in order to discover novel cell staining fluorescent dyes. Compounds with high native fluorescence were selected from a 14,585-member library and further tested on living cells under the microscope. Eleven compartment-specific, cell-permeable (or plasma membrane-targeted) fluorochromes were identified. Their cytotoxicity was tested and found that between 1–10 micromolar range, they were non-toxic even during long-term incubations.


Pathology & Oncology Research | 2017

The Expression of Checkpoint and DNA Repair Genes in Head and Neck Cancer as Possible Predictive Factors

Orsolya Rusz; Margit Pál; Éva Szilágyi; László Rovó; Z. Varga; Bernadett Tomisa; Gabriella Fábián; Levente Kovács; Olga Nagy; Petra Mozes; Zita Reisz; László Tiszlavicz; Péter Deák; Zsuzsanna Kahán

DNA damage response failure may influence the efficacy of DNA-damaging treatments. We determined the expression of 16 genes involved in distinct DNA damage response pathways, in association with the response to standard therapy. Twenty patients with locoregionally advanced, squamous cell head and neck carcinoma were enrolled. The treatment included induction chemotherapy (iChT) with docetaxel, cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil followed by concomitant chemoradiotherapy (ChRT) or radiotherapy (RT) alone. The volumetric metabolic therapeutic response was determined by [18F]FDG-PET/CT. In the tumor and matched normal tissues collected before treatment, the gene expressions were examined via the quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). The down-regulation of TP53 was apparently associated with a poor response to iChT, its up-regulation with complete regression in 2 cases. 7 cases with down-regulated REV1 expression showed complete regression after ChRT/RT, while 1 case with REV1 overexpression was resistant to RT. The overexpression of WRN was an independent predictor of tumor relapse. Our results suggest that an altered expression of REV1 predicts sensitivity to RT, while WRN overexpression is an unfavorable prognostic factor.


Pharmacological Research | 2016

Protection of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes against radiation-induced damage with agonists of growth hormone-releasing hormone

Laura Kiscsatári; Z. Varga; Andrew V. Schally; Renáta Gáspár; Csilla Terézia Nagy; Zoltán Giricz; Péter Ferdinandy; Gabriella Fábián; Zsuzsanna Kahán; Anikó Görbe

Despite the great clinical significance of radiation-induced cardiac damage, experimental investigation of its mechanisms is an unmet need in medicine. Beneficial effects of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) agonists in regeneration of the heart have been demonstrated. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the potential of modern GHRH agonistic analogs in prevention of radiation damage in an in vitro cardiac myocyte-based model. Cultures of cardiac myocytes isolated from newborn rats (NRVM) were exposed to a radiation dose of 10Gy. The effects of the agonistic analogs, JI-34 and MR-356, of human GHRH on cell viability, proliferation, their mechanism of action and the protein expression of the GHRH/SV1 receptors were studied. JI-34 and MR-356, had no effect on cell viability or proliferation in unirradiated cultures. However, in irradiated cells JI-34 showed protective effects on cell viability at concentrations of 10 and 100nM, and MR-356 at 500nM; but no such protective effect was detected on cell proliferation. Both agonistic analogs decreased radiation-induced ROS level and JI-34 interfered with the activation of SAFE/RISK pathways. Using Western blot analysis, a 52kDa protein isoform of GHRHR was detected in the samples in both irradiated and unirradiated cells. Since GHRH agonistic analogs, JI-34 and MR-356 alleviated radiation-induced damage of cardiac myocytes, they should be tested in vivo as potential protective agents against radiogenic heart damage.


Circulation | 2013

Q50, an Iron-Chelating and Zinc-Complexing Agent, Improves Cardiac Function in Rat Models of Ischemia/Reperfusion-Induced Myocardial Injury

Sevil Korkmaz; Eniko Barnucz; Sivakkanan Loganathan; Shiliang Li; Tamás Radovits; Peter Hegedüs; Alina Zubarevich; Kristóf Hirschberg; Alexander Weymann; László G. Puskás; Béla Ózsvári; Nóra Faragó; Iván Kanizsai; Gabriella Fábián; Márió Gyuris; Béla Merkely; Matthias Karck; Csaba Szabó; Gábor Szabó


Archive | 2001

Heterotrimeric G-proteins and their role in opioid receptor function

Gabriella Fábián


in Vivo | 2016

High-dose Radiation Induced Heart Damage in a Rat Model

Laura Kiscsatári; Márta Sárközy; Bence Kővári; Z. Varga; Kamilla Gömöri; Nikolett Morvay; István Leprán; Hargita Hegyesi; Gabriella Fábián; Bálint Cserni; Gábor Cserni; Tamás Csont; Zsuzsanna Kahán

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László G. Puskás

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Liliána Z. Fehér

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ferhan Ayaydin

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Klára Kitajka

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Csaba Vizler

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Nóra Faragó

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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