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Dive into the research topics where György Báthori is active.

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Featured researches published by György Báthori.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Ca2+-dependent Control of the Permeability Properties of the Mitochondrial Outer Membrane and Voltage-dependent Anion-selective Channel (VDAC)

György Báthori; György Csordás; Cecilia Garcia-Perez; Erika Davies; György Hajnóczky

Cell function depends on the distribution of cytosolic and mitochondrial factors across the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM). Passage of metabolites through the OMM has been attributed to the voltage-dependent anion-selective channel (VDAC), which can form a large conductance and permanently open a channel in lipid bilayers. However, recent data indicate that the transport of metabolites through the OMM is controlled in the cells. Recognizing that the bilayer studies had been commonly conducted at supraphysiological [Ca2+] and [K+], we determined the effect of Ca2+ on VDAC activity. In liposomes, the purified VDAC displays Ca2+-dependent control of the molecular cut-off size and shows Ca2+-regulated Ca2+ permeability in the physiological [Ca2+] range. In bilayer experiments, at submicromolar [Ca2+], the purified VDAC or isolated OMM does not show sustained large conductance but rather exhibits gating between a nonconducting state and various subconductance states. Ca2+ addition causes a reversible increase in the conductance and may evoke channel opening to full conductance. Furthermore, single cell imaging data indicate that Ca2+ may facilitate the cation and ATP transport across the OMM. Thus, the VDAC gating is dependent on the physiological concentrations of cations, allowing the OMM to control the passage of ions and some small molecules. The OMM barrier is likely to decrease during the calcium signal.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Porin Is Present in the Plasma Membrane Where It Is Concentrated in Caveolae and Caveolae-related Domains

György Báthori; Isabella Parolini; Francesco Tombola; Ildikò Szabò; Angela Messina; Marta Oliva; Vito De Pinto; Michael P. Lisanti; Massimo Sargiacomo; Mario Zoratti

Mitochondrial porin, or voltage-dependent anion channel, is a pore-forming protein first discovered in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Later investigations have provided indications for its presence also in other cellular membranes, including the plasma membrane, and in caveolae. This extra-mitochondrial localization is debated and no clear-cut conclusion has been reached up to now. In this work, we used biochemical and electrophysiological techniques to detect and characterize porin within isolated caveolae and caveolae-like domains (low density Triton-insoluble fractions). A new procedure was used to isolate porin from plasma membrane. The outer surface of cultured CEM cells was biotinylated by an impermeable reagent. Low density Triton-insoluble fractions were prepared from the labeled cells and used as starting material to purify a biotinylated protein with the same electrophoretic mobility and immunoreactivity of mitochondrial porin. In planar bilayers, the porin from these sources formed slightly anion-selective pores with properties indistinguishable from those of mitochondrial porin. This work thus provides a strong indication of the presence of porin in the plasma membrane, and specifically in caveolae and caveolae-like domains.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2012

Liposome-induced complement activation and related cardiopulmonary distress in pigs: factors promoting reactogenicity of Doxil and AmBisome

Janos Szebeni; Zoltán Rozsnyay; Zsoka Weiszhar; Rudolf Urbanics; László Rosivall; Rivka Cohen; Olga B. Garbuzenko; György Báthori; Miklós Tóth; Rolf Bünger; Yechezkel Barenholz

UNLABELLED Hypersensitivity reactions to liposomal drugs, often observed with Doxil and AmBisome, can arise from activation of the complement (C) system by phospholipid bilayers. To understand the mechanism of this adverse immune reaction called C activation-related pseudoallergy (CARPA), we analyzed the relationship among liposome features, C activation in human serum in vitro, and liposome-induced cardiovascular distress in pigs, a model for human CARPA. Among the structural variables (surface charge, presence of saturated, unsaturated, and PEGylated phospholipids, and cisplatin vs. doxorubicin inside liposomes), high negative surface charge and the presence of doxorubicin were significant contributors to reactogenicity both in vitro and in vivo. Morphological analysis suggested that the effect of doxorubicin might be indirect, via distorting the sphericity of liposomes and, if leaked, causing aggregation. The parallelism among C activation, cardiopulmonary reactions in pigs, and high rate of hypersensitivity reactions to Doxil and AmBisome in humans strengthens the utility of the applied tests in predicting the risk of CARPA. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR The authors studied complement activation-related pseudoallergy (CARPA) in a porcine model and demonstrate that high negative surface charge and drug effects leading to distortion of liposome sphericity might be the most critical factors leading to CARPA. The applied tests might be used to predict CARPA in humans.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2007

Cholesterol Potentiates ABCG2 Activity in a Heterologous Expression System: Improved in Vitro Model to Study Function of Human ABCG2

Ákos Pál; Dóra Méhn; Éva Molnár; Szilvia Gedey; P. Mészáros; Tünde Nagy; Hristos Glavinas; Tamás Janáky; O. Von Richter; György Báthori; Lajos Szente; Péter Krajcsi

ABCG2, a transporter of the ATP-binding cassette family, is known to play a prominent role in the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of xenobiotics. Drug-transporter interactions are commonly screened by high-throughput systems using transfected insect and/or human cell lines. The determination of ABCG2-ATPase activity is one method to identify ABCG2 substrate and inhibitors. We demonstrate that the ATPase activities of the human ABCG2 transfected Sf9 cell membranes (MXR-Sf9) and ABCG2-overexpressing human cell membranes (MXR-M) differ. Variation due to disparity in the glycosylation level of the protein had no effect on the transporter. The influence of cholesterol on ABCG2-ATPase activity was investigated because the lipid compositions of insect and human cells are largely different from each other. Differences in cholesterol content, shown by cholesterol loading and depletion experiments, conferred the difference in stimulation of basal ABCG2-ATPase of the two cell membranes. Basal ABCG2-ATPase activity could be stimulated by sulfasalazine, prazosin, and topotecan, known substrates of ABCG2 in cholesterol-loaded MXR-Sf9 and MXR-M cell membranes. In contrast, ABCG2-ATPase could not be stimulated in MXR-Sf9 or in cholesterol-depleted MXR-M membranes. Moreover, cholesterol loading significantly improved the drug transport into inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from MXR-Sf9 cells. MXR-M and cholesterol-loaded MXR-Sf9 cell membranes displayed similar ABCG2-ATPase activity and vesicular transport. Our study indicates an essential role of membrane cholesterol for the function of ABCG2.


The FASEB Journal | 1998

Double-stranded DNA can be translocated across a planar membrane containing purified mitochondrial porin

Ildikò Szabò; György Báthori; Francesco Tombola; Angelina Coppola; Ibolya Schmehl; Marisa Brini; Alexandre Ghazi; Vito De Pinto; Mario Zoratti

The transport of genetic material across biomembranes is a process of great relevance for several fields of study. However, much remains to be learned about the mechanisms underlying transport, one of which implies the involvement of proteic DNA‐conducting pores. Entry of genetic material into mitochondria has been observed under both physiological and pathological conditions. We report here that double‐stranded DNA can move through a planar bilayer membrane containing isolated mitochondrial porin (voltage‐dependent anion channel). The transport is driven by the applied electrical field, and the presence of DNA is associated with a decrease of current conduction by the pores. The passage of DNA does not take place if the bilayer has not been doped with any protein or in the presence of both reconstituted porin and anti‐porin antibody. Translocation does not occur if the bilayer contains Shigella sonnei maltoporin, gramicidin A channels, or a 30 pS anion‐selective channel plus other proteins. These results show that mitochondrial porin is capable of mediating the transport of genetic material, revealing a new property of this molecule and futher confirming the idea that DNA can move through proteic pores.—Szabò, I., Bàthori, G., Tombola, F., Coppola, A., Schmehl, I., Brini, M., Ghazi, A., De Pinto, V., Zoratti, M. Double‐stranded DNA can be translocated across a planar membrane containing purified mitochondrial porin. FASEB J. 12, 495–502 (1998)


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

DNA TRANSLOCATION ACROSS PLANAR BILAYERS CONTAINING BACILLUS SUBTILIS ION CHANNELS

Ildikò Szabò; György Báthori; Francesco Tombola; Marisa Brini; Angelina Coppola; Mario Zoratti

The mechanisms by which genetic material crosses prokaryotic membranes are incompletely understood. We have developed a new methodology to study the translocation of genetic material via pores in a reconstituted system, using techniques from electrophysiology and molecular biology. We report here that planar bilayer membranes become permeable to double-stranded DNA (kilobase range) if Bacillus subtilis membrane vesicles containing high conductance channels have been fused into them. The translocation is an electrophoretic process, since it does not occur if a transmembrane electrical field opposing the movement of DNA, a polyanion, is applied. It is not an aspecific permeation through the phospholipid bilayer, since it does not take place if no proteins have been incorporated into the membrane. The transport is also not due simply to the presence of polypeptides in the membrane, since it does not occur if the latter contains gramicidin A or a eukaryotic, multi-protein vesicle fraction exhibiting 30-picosiemens anion-selective channel activity. The presence of DNA alters the behavior of the bacterial channels, indicating that it interacts with the pores and may travel through their lumen. These results support the idea that DNA translocation may take place through proteic pores and suggest that some of the high conductance bacterial channels observed in electrophysiological experiments may be constituents of the DNA translocating machinery in these organisms.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2000

Extramitochondrial porin: Facts and hypotheses

György Báthori; Isabella Parolini; Ildikò Szabò; Francesco Tombola; Angela Messina; Marta Oliva; Massimo Sargiacomo; Vito De Pinto; Mario Zoratti

Mitochondrial porin, or VDAC, is a pore-forming protein abundant in the outer mitochondrialmembrane. Several publications have reported extramitochondrial localizations as well, butthe evidence was considered insufficient by many, and the presence of porin in nonmitochondrialcellular compartments has remained in doubt for a long time. We have now obtained newdata indicating that the plasma membrane of hematopoietic cells contains porin, probablylocated mostly in caveolae or caveolae-like domains. Porin was purified from the plasmamembrane of intact cells by a procedure utilizing the membrane-impermeable labeling reagentNH-SS-biotin and streptavidin affinity chromatography, and shown to have the same propertiesas mitochondrial porin. A channel with properties similar to that of isolated VDAC wasobserved by patch-clamping intact cells. This review discusses the evidence supportingextramitochondrial localization, the putative identification of the plasma membrane porin with the“maxi” chloride channel, the hypothetical mechanisms of sorting porin to various cellularmembrane structures, and its possible functions.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

ABCG2 (breast cancer resistance protein/mitoxantrone resistance-associated protein) ATPase assay: a useful tool to detect drug-transporter interactions.

Hristos Glavinas; Emese Kis; Ákos Pál; Rita Kovács; Márton Jani; Erika Vági; Éva Molnár; Száva Bánsághi; Zoltán Kele; Tamás Janáky; György Báthori; Oliver von Richter; G. J. Koomen; Péter Krajcsi

The ATPase assay using membrane preparations from recombinant baculovirus-infected Spodoptera frugiperda ovarian (Sf9) cells is widely used to detect the interaction of compounds with different ATP-binding cassette transporters. However, Sf9 membrane preparations containing the wild-type ABCG2 transporter show an elevated baseline vanadate-sensitive ATPase activity, which cannot be further stimulated by substrates of ABCG2. Therefore, this assay system cannot be used for the detection of ABCG2 substrates. To overcome this difficulty we 1) purified membranes from a selected human cell line expressing wild-type ABCG2, and 2) inhibited the baseline ATPase activity with different inhibitors. In our modified assay, ABCG2 substrates were able to stimulate the baseline ATPase activity of ABCG2 expressed in membranes of human cells. Furthermore, using the specific ABCG2 inhibitors Ko143 or Ko134 allowed us to suppress the baseline vanadate-sensitive ATPase activity. Substrates of ABCG2 could stimulate this suppressed baseline ATPase, resulting in a better signal-to-background ratio and a robust assay to detect substrates of the ABCG2 transporter. The ATPase assay and the direct vesicular transport measurements for estrone-3-sulfate were in good accordance.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2009

Multidrug Resistance Protein 2-Mediated Estradiol-17β-D-glucuronide Transport Potentiation : In Vitro-in Vivo Correlation and Species Specificity

K. Herédi-Szabó; Hristos Glavinas; Emese Kis; Dóra Méhn; György Báthori; Zsuzsa Veres; László Kóbori; O. von Richter; Katalin Jemnitz; Péter Krajcsi

Multidrug resistance protein 2 (MRP2) is a multispecific organic anion transporter expressed at important pharmacological barriers, including the canalicular membrane of hepatocytes. At this location it is involved in the elimination of both endogenous and exogenous waste products, mostly as conjugates, to the bile. Estradiol-17β-d-glucuronide (E217βG), a widely studied endogenous substrate of MRP2, was shown earlier to recognize two binding sites of the transporter in vesicular transport assays. MRP2 modulators (substrates and nonsubstrates) potentiate the transport of E217βG by MRP2. We correlated data obtained from studies of different complexities and investigated the species-specific differences between rat and human MRP2-mediated transport. We used vesicular transport assays, sandwich-cultured primary hepatocytes, and in vivo biliary efflux in rats. Our results demonstrate that the rat Mrp2 transporter, unlike the human MRP2, transports E217βG according to Michaelis-Menten type kinetics. Nevertheless, in the presence of modulator drugs E217βG transport mediated by the rat transporter also shows cooperative kinetics as potentiation of E217βG transport was observed in the vesicular transport assay. We also demonstrated that the potentiation exists both in rat and in human hepatocytes and in vivo in rats.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1995

The high-conductance channel of porin-less yeast mitochondria

Ildikò Szabò; György Báthori; Daniel Wolff; Tanja Starc; Carmen Cola; Mario Zoratti

Patch-clamp and planar bilayer experiments on porin-less yeast mitochondria have allowed the characterization of a cationic channel activated at matrix-side positive (unphysiological) potentials. In voltage-pulse experiments, inactivation was a faster process than activation and the time constant for inactivation was more steeply dependent on voltage than the one for activation. The channel exhibited various conductance states whose occupancy depended on the applied transmembrane potential. In bilayer experiments, the presence of the pCOx-IV leader peptide induced fast gating in a voltage-dependent manner. A comparison with previously described activities suggests that the pore may coincide with the peptide-sensitive channel (PSC) (Thieffry et al. (1988) EMBO J. 7, 1449-1454) as well as with two other activities (Dihanich et al. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 181, 703-708; Tedeschi et al. (1987) J. Membr. Biol. 97, 21-29) assigned to the mitochondrial outer membrane. The possible relationship of this channel to the mitochondrial megachannel is discussed.

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Hristos Glavinas

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Emese Kis

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tünde Nagy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Lajos Szente

National Institutes of Health

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András Váradi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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