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Dive into the research topics where Georg Krupitza is active.

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Featured researches published by Georg Krupitza.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2002

Maintenance of ATP favours apoptosis over necrosis triggered by benzamide riboside

Michael Grusch; Doris Polgar; S Gfatter; K Leuhuber; S Huettenbrenner; Gerhard Fuhrmann; F Kassie; H Steinkellner; K Smid; Godefridus J. Peters; Hiremagalur N. Jayaram; W Klepal; Thomas Szekeres; S Knasmüller; Georg Krupitza

A new synthetic drug, benzamide riboside (BR) exhibited strong oncolytic activity against leukemic cells in the 5–10 μM range. Higher BR-concentrations (20 μM) predominantly induced necrosis which correlated with DNA strand breaks and subsequent depletion of ATP- and dATP levels. Replenishment of the ATP pool by addition of adenosine prevented necrosis and favoured apoptosis. This effect was not a pecularity of BR-treatment, but was reproduced with high concentrations of all trans-retinoic acid (120 μM) and cyanide (20 mM). Glucose was also capable to suppress necrosis and to favour apoptosis of HL-60 cells, which had been treated with necrotic doses of BR and cyanide. Apoptosis eliminates unwanted cells without affecting the microenvironment, whereas necrosis causes severe inflammation of surrounding tissues due to spillage of cell fluids into the peri-cellular space. Thus, the monitoring and maintenance of cellular energy pools during therapeutic drug treatment may help to minimize nonspecific side effects and to improve attempted drug effects.


Mutation Research-reviews in Mutation Research | 2003

The evolution of cell death programs as prerequisites of multicellularity

Simone Huettenbrenner; Susanne Maier; Doris Polgar; Stephan Strasser; Michael Grusch; Georg Krupitza

One of the hallmarks of multicellularity is that the individual cellular fate is sacrificed for the benefit of a higher order of life-the organism. The accidental death of cells in a multicellular organism results in swelling and membrane-rupture and inevitably spills cell contents into the surrounding tissue with deleterious effects for the organism. To avoid this form of necrotic death the cells of metazoans have developed complex self-destruction mechanisms, collectively called programmed cell death, which see to an orderly removal of superfluous cells. Since evolution never invents new genes but plays variations on old themes by DNA mutations, it is not surprising, that some of the genes involved in metazoan death pathways apparently have evolved from homologues in unicellular organisms, where they originally had different functions. Interestingly some unicellular protozoans have developed a primitive form of non-necrotic cell death themselves, which could mean that the idea of an altruistic death for the benefit of genetically identical cells predated the invention of multicellularity. The cell death pathways of protozoans, however, show no homology to those in metazoans, where several death pathways seem to have evolved in parallel. Mitochondria stands at the beginning of several death pathways and also determines, whether a cell has sufficient energy to complete a death program. However, the endosymbiotic bacterial ancestors of mitochondria are unlikely to have contributed to the recent mitochondrial death machinery and therefore, these components may derive from mutated eukaryotic precursors and might have invaded the respective mitochondrial compartments. Although there is no direct evidence, it seems that the prokaryotic-eukaryotic symbiosis created the space necessary for sophisticated death mechanisms on command, which in their distinct forms are major factors for the evolution of multicellular organisms.


Mutation Research-reviews in Mutation Research | 1999

The MYC dualism in growth and death.

Gerhard Fuhrmann; Georg Rosenberger; Michael Grusch; Nikolas Klein; Johannes Hofmann; Georg Krupitza

Over-expression of the transcription factor c-Myc immortalizes primary cells and transforms in co-operation with activated ras. Therefore, c-myc is considered a proto-oncogene. Since its discovery c-Myc has been shown to render cells growth factor independent, accelerates passage through G1 of the cell cycle, inhibits differentiation and elicits apoptosis. Whereas the effects on immortalization, proliferation and inhibition of differentiation are in conceivable accordance with gain of function, as it is defined for a proto-oncogene, its pro-apoptotic activity disables a straight forward explanation of the physiological role of c-Myc and suggests a highly complex contribution during development. The recent accomplishments in c-Myc research shed some light on the difficile regulatory network which keeps check on c-Myc activity such as by binding to proteins some of which are transcription factors for non-c-Myc targets. Moreover, it was shown that genes are targeted by c-Myc depending on the sequence of flanking regions adjacent to the E-box or in dependence on the availability of binding partners which is most probably specific to the cellular context. Cdc25A and ornithine decarboxylase, both described to be c-Myc targets, have been brought forward as downstream effectors in the induction of proliferation under serum rich conditions, or in the induction of apoptosis when serum factors are limited. These genes seem to be regulated by c-Myc in a cell type-specific manner. H-ferritin, IRP2 and telomerase are the most recently discovered direct targets of c-Myc. The regulation of H-ferritin and IRP2 might explain the potential of c-Myc to promote proliferation and the regulation of telomerase could be responsible for the immortalizing properties of c-Myc. In the future, H-ferritin and telomerase have to be analyzed whether or not these genes are also Myc targets in other cell systems. Although the intense research efforts regarding the function of c-Myc last already two decades the role of this gene is still enigmatic.


Experimental Hematology | 2001

Activation of caspases and induction of apoptosis by novel ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors amidox and didox

Michael Grusch; Monika Fritzer-Szekeres; Gerhard Fuhrmann; Georg Rosenberger; Cornelia Luxbacher; Howard L. Elford; Kees Smid; Godefridus J. Peters; Thomas Szekeres; Georg Krupitza

OBJECTIVE Amidox and didox are two polyhydroxy-substituted benzohydroxamic acid derivatives that belong to a new class of ribonucleotide reductase (RR) inhibitors. RR is the rate-limiting enzyme for de novo deoxyribonucleotide synthesis, and its activity is significantly increased in tumor cells in proportion to the proliferation rate. Therefore, RR is a target for antitumor therapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS HL-60 and K562 leukemia cells were treated with increasing doses of amidox and didox. Thereafter, the mode of cytotoxic drug action was determined by Hoechst 33258/propidium iodide (HO/PI) double staining, annexin binding, DNA fragmentation, and caspase activation. This was correlated to the decrease in dNTP levels. Staining with HO/PI and binding of fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated annexin V to externalized phosphatidylserine were used to quantify apoptosis. RESULTS Low doses of amidox or didox resulted in an increase of apoptotic HL-60 cells within 48 hours. Higher doses (50 microM amidox or 250 microM didox) led to rapid induction of apoptosis, which could be detected as early as 4 hours after treatment. After 48 hours with these concentrations, almost 100% of the HL-60 cells died by apoptosis without an increase in necrosis. K562 cells were found to be resistant to amidox but not to didox. In HL-60 cells, upstream caspase 8 is processed in response to didox, whereas caspases 8 and 9 are processed upon amidox treatment. Didox-induced apoptosis, but not amidox-induced apoptosis, can be correlated with the decrease in dNTP levels. The results suggests that amidox induces several apoptosis mechanisms in HL-60 cells. In contrast, only caspase 9 is activated by didox in K562 cells, and because amidox hardly induces apoptosis in this cell line, no caspase cleavage is observed. CONCLUSIONS Didox triggers distinct apoptosis pathways in HL-60 and K562 cells.


British Journal of Cancer | 1996

Genes related to growth and invasiveness are repressed by sodium butyrate in ovarian carcinoma cells.

Georg Krupitza; Sara Grill; Hanna Harant; Wolfgang Hulla; Th. Szekeres; Heinz Huber; Ch Dittrich

Down-regulation of oncogene expression is one of the hallmarks of the process whereby transformed cells are forced into differentiation and/or growth arrest by potent inducers and therefore can represent an interim end point in cancer treatment. The differentiation inducer sodium butyrate (NaB) arrested growth of N.1 ovarian carcinoma cells and repressed expression of cyclin D1/prad1 and the invasiveness-related protease plasminogen activator-urokinase (plau). This was accompanied by the acquisition of a differentiated morphology, all of which characteristics were maintained as long as N.1 cells were exposed to the inducer. In accordance with a differentiated phenotype was the finding that fibronectin expression was increased significantly. Recently, it was shown that NaB represses the transcription factor c-myc by blocking Ca2+ signals and modulating serine threonine kinase activity. We wanted to investigate NaB-mediated interference on signals contributing to the expression on prad1, plau and growth arrest-specific 6 (gas6). Protein kinase A (PKA) inactivation de-repressed prad1 and plau transcript levels. NaB had onlygeneral but no specific influence on PKA-modulated prad1 and plau expression however. Protein kinase C activation up-regulated plau transcript levels, but not that of prad1. Prad1 expression seemed to depend on Ca2+-triggered signals. Constitutive plau expression was insensitive to additional Ca2+-mediated signals, but it became responsive upon NaB treatment.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2002

Trimidox, an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase, synergistically enhances the inhibition of colony formation by Ara-C in HL-60 human promyelocytic leukemia cells

Monika Fritzer-Szekeres; Alexandra Salamon; Michael Grusch; Zsuzsanna Horvath; Thomas Höchtl; Richard Steinbrugger; Walter Jäger; Georg Krupitza; Howard L. Elford; Thomas Szekeres

Ribonucleotide reductase is the rate-limiting enzyme for the de novo synthesis of deoxynucleoside triphosphates and therefore represents a good target for cancer chemotherapy. Trimidox (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzamidoxime) was identified as a potent inhibitor of this enzyme and was shown to significantly decrease deoxycytidine triphosphate (dCTP) pools in HL-60 leukemia cells. We now investigated the ability of trimidox to increase the antitumor effect of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl cytosine (Ara-C). Ara-C is phosphorylated by deoxycytidine kinase, which is subject to negative allosteric regulation by dCTP. Therefore, a decrease of dCTP may cause increased Ara-C phosphorylation and enhanced incorporation of Ara-C into DNA. Ara-C incorporation indeed increased 1.51- and 1.89-fold after preincubation with 75 and 100 microM trimidox, respectively. This was due to the significantly increased 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl cytosine triphosphate pools (1.9- and 2.5-fold) after preincubation with trimidox. We also investigated the effects of a combination of trimidox and Ara-C on the colony formation of HL-60 cells. A synergistic potentiation of the effect of Ara-C could be observed, when trimidox was added. Trimidox, which decreases intracellular deoxynucleoside triphosphate concentrations thus leading to apoptosis, enhanced the induction of apoptosis caused by Ara-C. We conclude, that trimidox is capable of synergistically enhancing the effects of Ara-C and therefore this drug combination might be further tested in animals.


British Journal of Cancer | 1993

Retinoic acid receptors in retinoid responsive ovarian cancer cell lines detected by polymerase chain reaction following reverse transcription.

Hanna Harant; I. Korschineck; Georg Krupitza; B. Fazeny; Christian Dittrich; T. W. Grunt

The growth inhibitory effects of all-trans and 13-cis retinoic acid (RA) and of the synthetic retinoids TTNPB, TTNPB-ethylester and TTNN were studied on seven human epithelial ovarian cancer cell lines and one ovarian teratocarcinoma cell line. Six of seven ovarian adenocarcinoma cell lines were inhibited in their growth by RA and by synthetic retinoids in a dose dependent manner. No response to these substances was observed for the ovarian teratocarcinoma cell line. The knowledge that RA and retinoids exert their action on the cells via nuclear receptors led us to examine the expression of RAR-alpha, -beta and -gamma mRNA by these cell lines by polymerase chain reaction following reverse transcription. All cell lines expressed RAR-alpha and -gamma mRNA and six of the eight cell lines were found to express additionally RAR-beta mRNA, among them the ovarian teratocarcinoma cell line. Our data indicate that there was no direct association between the presence of RAR subtype transcripts and the response to retinoids in ovarian cancer cell lines.


Life Sciences | 2000

The ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor trimidox induces c-myc and apoptosis of human ovarian carcinoma cells

Georg Rosenberger; Gerhard Fuhrmann; Michael Grusch; Sandra Fassl; Howard L. Elford; Kees Smid; Godefridus J. Peters; Thomas Szekeres; Georg Krupitza

Trimidox (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzohydroxamidoxime), a recently synthesized inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase (RR), was shown to exert anti-proliferative activities in HL-60 and K562 human leukemia cell lines and to prolong the life span of mice inoculated with L1210 mouse leukemia cells. Here we test whether trimidox also exhibits anti-neoplastic properties in ovarian carcinoma cells. Since the mode of action of trimidox on cell fate has not been investigated so far, we addressed this unresolved item and find that this polyhydroxybenzoic acid derivative induces apoptosis of N.1 human ovarian carcinoma cells when tested in growth factor deprived medium. Utilizing an improved analysis, based on Hoechst 33258/propidium iodide double staining, apoptosis is quantified and discriminated from necrosis. Trimidox induces c-myc expression, which is indispensible for apoptosis of N.1 cells, and expression of plasminogen activator/urokinase type (upa), which supports the apoptotic process under more physiological conditions. Surprisingly, trimidox does not block dNTP synthesis in N.1 cells at the concentrations tested and, therefore, trimidox induces apoptosis independent of RR-inhibition. Like TNFalpha or benzamide riboside, which are also inducers of apoptosis of N.1 cells, trimidox also down-regulates the G1 cell cycle phosphatase cdc25A, whereas cyclin D1 becomes up-regulated. This report shows that trimidox destroys human ovarian carcinoma cells by inducing them to undergo apoptosis as well as corroborating previous investigations which demonstrated that apoptosis of these cells depends on c-myc over-expression when survival factors are withdrawn.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 1999

Benzamide riboside induces apoptosis independent of Cdc25A expression in human ovarian carcinoma N.1 cells

Michael Grusch; Georg Rosenberger; Gerhard Fuhrmann; Katja Braun; Birgit Titscher; Thomas Szekeres; Monika Fritzer-Skekeres; Georg Oberhuber; Karsten Krohn; Markus Hengstschlaeger; Georg Krupitza; Hiremagalur N. Jayaram

One of the mechanisms of action of a new oncolytic agent, benzamide riboside (BR) is by inhibiting inosine 5′-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) which catalyzes the formation of xanthine 5′-monophosphate from inosine 5′-monophosphate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, thereby restricting the biosynthesis of guanylates. In the present study BR (10–20 μM) induced apoptosis in a human ovarian carcinoma N.1 cell line (a monoclonal derivative of its heterogenous parent line HOC-7). This was ascertained by DNA fragmentation, TUNEL assay, [poly(ADP)ribose polymerase]-cleavage and alteration in cell morphology. Apoptosis was accompanied by sustained c-Myc expression, concurrent down-regulation of cdc25A mRNA and protein, and by inhibition of Cdk2 activity. Both Cdk2 and cdc25A are G1 phase specific genes and Cdk2 is the target of Cdc25A. These studies demonstrate that BR exhibits dual mechanisms of action, first by inhibiting IMPDH, and second by inducing apoptosis, which is associated with repression of components of the cell cycle that are downstream of constitutive c-Myc expression.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2004

Subcellular localisation of Cdc25A determines cell fate

Georg Rosenberger; S Maier; Gerhard Fuhrmann; Michael Grusch; S Strasser; S Huettenbrenner; S Fassl; Doris Polgar; S Krieger; C Cerni; R Hofer-Warbinek; R deMartin; Georg Krupitza

AbstractCell division cycle 25A (Cdc25A) was shown to colocalise both with nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. Recently, we have demonstrated that overexpressed Cdc25A promoted the survival of rat 423 cells through indirect activation of PKB-protein kinase B. Using a Cdc25A:ER fusion protein, which can be shuttled from the cytoplasm into the nucleus, the present investigation evidences that the antiapoptotic effect of Cdc25A was restricted to its cytoplasmic localisation in rat 423 cells. In contrast, nuclear Cdc25A overexpression caused dephosphorylation and nuclear retention of the proapoptotic transcription factor Forkhead in rhabdomyosarcoma-like 1 (FKHRL1) in human N.1 ovarian carcinoma cells. This resulted in the increased constitutive expression of the FKHRL1 targets Fas ligand and Bim, and promoted apoptosis. Thus, the Cdc25A oncogene, which was found to be frequently overexpressed in certain human cancers, can increase or decrease the susceptibility to apoptosis depending on the cell-type-specific subcellular distribution.

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Michael Grusch

Medical University of Vienna

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Thomas Szekeres

Medical University of Vienna

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Heinz Huber

University of California

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