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Dive into the research topics where Irina V. Odinokova is active.

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Featured researches published by Irina V. Odinokova.


Experimental Cell Research | 2009

Prosurvival Bcl-2 proteins stabilize pancreatic mitochondria and protect against necrosis in experimental pancreatitis.

Kai-Feng Sung; Irina V. Odinokova; Olga A. Mareninova; Zoltán Rakonczay; Péter Hegyi; Stephen J. Pandol; Ilya Gukovsky; Anna S. Gukovskaya

Acinar cells in pancreatitis die through apoptosis and necrosis, the roles of which are different. The severity of experimental pancreatitis correlates directly with the extent of necrosis and inversely, with apoptosis. Apoptosis is mediated by the release of cytochrome c into the cytosol followed by caspase activation, whereas necrosis is associated with the mitochondrial membrane potential (DeltaPsim) loss leading to ATP depletion. Here, we investigate the role of Bcl-2 proteins in apoptosis and necrosis in pancreatitis. We found up-regulation of prosurvival Bcl-2 proteins in pancreas in various experimental models of acute pancreatitis, most pronounced for Bcl-xL. This up-regulation translated into increased levels of Bcl-xL and Bcl-2 in pancreatic mitochondria. Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors induced DeltaPsim loss and cytochrome c release in isolated mitochondria. Corroborating the results on mitochondria, Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors induced DeltaPsim loss, ATP depletion and necrosis in pancreatic acinar cells, both untreated and hyperstimulated with CCK-8 (in vitro pancreatitis model). Together Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors and CCK induced more necrosis than either treatment alone. Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors also stimulated cytochrome c release in acinar cells leading to caspase-3 activation and apoptosis. However, different from their effect on pronecrotic signals, the stimulation by Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors of apoptotic responses was less in CCK-treated than control cells. Therefore, Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibitors potentiated CCK-induced necrosis but not apoptosis. Correspondingly, transfection with Bcl-xL siRNA stimulated necrosis but not apoptosis in the in vitro pancreatitis model. Further, in animal models of pancreatitis Bcl-xL up-regulation inversely correlated with necrosis, but not apoptosis. Results indicate that Bcl-xL and Bcl-2 protect acinar cells from necrosis in pancreatitis by stabilizing mitochondria against death signals. We conclude that Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 inhibition would aggravate acute pancreatitis, whereas Bcl-xL/Bcl-2 up-regulation presents a strategy to prevent or attenuate necrosis in pancreatitis.


Gut | 2016

Mechanism of mitochondrial permeability transition pore induction and damage in the pancreas: inhibition prevents acute pancreatitis by protecting production of ATP

Rajarshi Mukherjee; Olga A. Mareninova; Irina V. Odinokova; Wei Huang; J. A. Murphy; Michael Chvanov; M.A. Javed; Li Wen; David Booth; Matthew C Cane; Muhammad Awais; Bruno Gavillet; Rebecca M. Pruss; Sophie Schaller; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Alexei V. Tepikin; Ole Holger Petersen; Stephen J. Pandol; Ilya Gukovsky; David N. Criddle; Anna S. Gukovskaya; Robert Sutton

Objective Acute pancreatitis is caused by toxins that induce acinar cell calcium overload, zymogen activation, cytokine release and cell death, yet is without specific drug therapy. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated but the mechanism not established. Design We investigated the mechanism of induction and consequences of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) in the pancreas using cell biological methods including confocal microscopy, patch clamp technology and multiple clinically representative disease models. Effects of genetic and pharmacological inhibition of the MPTP were examined in isolated murine and human pancreatic acinar cells, and in hyperstimulation, bile acid, alcoholic and choline-deficient, ethionine-supplemented acute pancreatitis. Results MPTP opening was mediated by toxin-induced inositol trisphosphate and ryanodine receptor calcium channel release, and resulted in diminished ATP production, leading to impaired calcium clearance, defective autophagy, zymogen activation, cytokine production, phosphoglycerate mutase 5 activation and necrosis, which was prevented by intracellular ATP supplementation. When MPTP opening was inhibited genetically or pharmacologically, all biochemical, immunological and histopathological responses of acute pancreatitis in all four models were reduced or abolished. Conclusions This work demonstrates the mechanism and consequences of MPTP opening to be fundamental to multiple forms of acute pancreatitis and validates the MPTP as a drug target for this disease.


Gut | 2009

Mechanisms regulating cytochrome c release in pancreatic mitochondria

Irina V. Odinokova; Kai-Feng Sung; Olga A. Mareninova; Kip Hermann; Yuri V. Evtodienko; Alexander Andreyev; Ilya Gukovsky; Anna S. Gukovskaya

Background: Mechanisms of acinar cell death in pancreatitis are poorly understood. Cytochrome c release is a central event in apoptosis in pancreatitis. Here, we assessed the regulation of pancreatic cytochrome c release by Ca2+, mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), and reactive oxygen species (ROS), the signals involved in acute pancreatitis. We used both isolated rat pancreatic mitochondria and intact acinar cells hyperstimulated with cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8; in vitro model of acute pancreatitis). Results: Micromolar amounts of Ca2+ depolarised isolated pancreatic mitochondria through a mechanism different from the “classical” (ie, liver) mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP). In contrast with liver, Ca2+-induced mPTP opening caused a dramatic decrease in ROS and was not associated with pancreatic mitochondria swelling. Importantly, we found that Ca2+-induced depolarisation inhibited cytochrome c release from pancreatic mitochondria, due to blockade of ROS production. As a result, Ca2+ exerted two opposite effects on cytochrome c release: Ca2+ per se stimulated the release, whereas Ca2+-induced depolarisation inhibited it. This dual effect caused a non-monotonous dose-dependence of cytochrome c release on Ca2+. In intact acinar cells, cytochrome c release, caspase activation and apoptosis were all stimulated by ROS and Ca2+, and inhibited by depolarisation, corroborating the findings on isolated pancreatic mitochondria. Conclusions: These data implicate ROS as a key mediator of CCK-induced apoptotic responses. The results indicate a major role for mitochondria in the effects of Ca2+ and ROS on acinar cell death. They suggest that the extent of apoptosis in pancreatitis is regulated by the interplay between ROS, ΔΨm and Ca2+. Stabilising mitochondria against loss of ΔΨm may represent a strategy to mitigate the severity of pancreatitis.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2006

Cell death in pancreatitis: Effects of alcohol

Anna S. Gukovskaya; Olga A. Mareninova; Irina V. Odinokova; Kai-Feng Sung; Aurelia Lugea; Lars Fischer; Yan-Ling Wang; Ilya Gukovsky; Stephen J. Pandol

Pancreatitis is a severe and frequently lethal disorder, a major cause of which is alcohol abuse. Parenchymal cell death is a major complication of pancreatitis. In experimental models of (non‐alcoholic) acute pancreatitis, acinar cells have been shown to die through both necrosis and apoptosis, the two principal pathways of cell death. The severity of experimental acute pancreatitis correlates directly with the extent of necrosis and inversely with apoptosis. Thus, understanding the regulation of apoptosis and necrosis, and whether it is possible to manipulate the pattern of death responses, is becoming exceedingly important in investigations of the pathogenesis and treatment of pancreatitis. The effects of alcohol on cell death responses of pancreatitis, and the mechanisms that may mediate these effects, are just starting to be explored. This paper reviews the signaling pathways mediating the balance between apoptosis and necrosis in acute pancreatitis, and alcohol’s effects on cell death responses in pancreatitis.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2008

Mitochondrial mechanisms of death responses in pancreatitis

Irina V. Odinokova; Kai-Feng Sung; Olga A. Mareninova; Kip Hermann; Ilya Gukovsky; Anna S. Gukovskaya

Pancreatitis is a severe and frequently lethal disorder, a major cause of which is alcohol abuse. Parenchymal cell death is a major complication of pancreatitis. In experimental models of acute pancreatitis, acinar cells have been shown to die through both necrosis and apoptosis, the two principal pathways of cell death. The severity of experimental acute pancreatitis correlates directly with the extent of necrosis and inversely with apoptosis. Thus, understanding the regulation of apoptosis and necrosis is becoming exceedingly important in investigations of the pathogenesis and treatment of pancreatitis. Over the past decade, the mitochondria have emerged as a master regulator of cell death in various physiological and pathological processes. Release of mitochondrial cytochrome c into the cytosol is a central event in apoptosis, whereas mitochondrial depolarization resulting in ATP depletion leads to necrosis. The present review focuses on the mitochondrial mechanisms of death responses in pancreatitis, with emphasis on mitochondrial membrane permeabilization and its role in the balance between apoptosis and necrosis in acute pancreatitis, and alcohols effects on death responses of pancreatitis.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Inflammatory cells regulate p53 and caspases in acute pancreatitis

Yuji Nakamura; Jae Hyuk Do; Jingzhen Yuan; Irina V. Odinokova; Olga A. Mareninova; Anna S. Gukovskaya; Stephen J. Pandol

The inflammatory response during pancreatitis regulates necrotic and apoptotic rates of parenchymal cells. Neutrophil depletion by use of anti-polymorphonuclear serum (anti-PMN) increases apoptosis in experimental pancreatitis but the mechanism has not been determined. Our study was designed to investigate signaling mechanisms in pancreatic parenchymal cells regulating death responses with neutrophil depletion. Rats were neutrophil depleted with anti-PMN treatment. Then cerulein pancreatitis was induced, followed by measurements of apoptosis signaling pathways. There was greater activation of executioner caspases-3 in the pancreas with anti-PMN treatment compared with control. There were no differences between these groups of animals in mitochondrial cytochrome c release or in activities of initiator caspase-8 and -9. However, there was greater activation of caspase-2 with anti-PMN treatment during cerulein pancreatitis. The upstream regulation of caspases-2 includes p53, which was increased; the p53 negative regulator, Mdm2, was decreased by anti-PMN treatment during cerulein pancreatitis. In vitro experiments using isolated pancreatic acinar cells a pharmacological inhibitor of Mdm2 increased caspase-2/-3 activities, and an inhibitor of p53 decreased these activities during cholecystokinin-8 treatment. Furthermore, experiments using the AR42J cell line Mdm2 small interfering RNA (siRNA) increased caspase-2/-3 activities, and p53 siRNA decreased these activities during cholecystokinin-8 treatment. These results suggest that during acute pancreatitis the inflammatory response inhibits apoptosis. The mechanism of this inhibition involves caspase-2 and its upstream regulation by p53 and Mdm2. Because previous findings indicate that promotion of apoptosis decreases necrosis and severity of pancreatitis, these results suggest that strategies to inhibit Mdm2 or activate p53 will have beneficial effects for treatment of pancreatitis.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2008

Ellagic acid induces apoptosis through inhibition of nuclear factor κB in pancreatic cancer cells

Mouad Edderkaoui; Irina V. Odinokova; Izumi Ohno; Ilya Gukovsky; Vay Liang W. Go; Stephen J. Pandol; Anna S. Gukovskaya


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Rottlerin stimulates apoptosis in pancreatic cancer cells through interactions with proteins of the Bcl-2 family

Izumi Ohno; Guido Eibl; Irina V. Odinokova; Mouad Edderkaoui; Robert Damoiseaux; Moussa Yazbec; Ravinder Abrol; William A. Goddard; Osamu Yokosuka; Stephen J. Pandol; Anna S. Gukovskaya


Pancreas | 2007

Bcl-xL AND Bcl-2 PROSURVIVAL PROTEINS PROTECT AGAINST NECROSIS IN PANCREATITIS

Irina V. Odinokova; K. F. Sung; K. Hermann; O. A. Mareninova; Ilya Gukovsky; Anna S. Gukovskaya


Gastroenterology | 2009

370 Role of Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore in Pancreatitis

Olga A. Mareninova; Irina V. Odinokova; Moses A. Lee; Ilya Gukovsky; Anna S. Gukovskaya

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Stephen J. Pandol

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Ilya Gukovsky

University of California

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Kai-Feng Sung

University of California

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Izumi Ohno

University of California

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Aurelia Lugea

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Guido Eibl

University of California

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Jingzhen Yuan

University of California

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