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Dive into the research topics where Jiří Liberda is active.

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Featured researches published by Jiří Liberda.


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2000

Sperm surface proteins in mammalian fertilization

Věra Jonáková; Pavla Maňásková; Marek Kraus; Jiří Liberda; Marie Tichá

Boar seminal plasma was separated into five protein fractions (I–V) (>100, 55, 45, 30, 5–15 kDa) by gel chromatography on Sephadex G‐75 SF at pH 7.2. RP‐HPLC of protein fractions I–V and N‐terminal sequencing of their individual components revealed that the high‐molecular‐weight aggregates consisted mainly of DQH sperm surface protein and AQN, AWN, PSP II spermadhesins, whereas fraction IV consisted of heterodimers of PSP spermadhesins only. Spermadhesins as monomers were present in seminal plasma in a very low amount. Aggregates containing the DQH protein and AWN spermadhesins as well as HPLC‐separated monomeric proteins interacted strongly with acidic polysaccharides. The strongest interaction was observed between biotinylated glycoproteins of porcine zona pellucida and AWN 1–containing aggregates and separated proteins. PSP II interacted with some acidic polysaccharides, whereas the fraction IV corresponding to heterodimer PSP I/PSP II did not show any binding to acidic polysaccharides and zona pellucida. Aggregates containing AWN, AQN, DQH, PSP II proteins, and their separated monomeric forms (fractions I–III) interacted with phosphorylcholine. Fractions I–III showed affinity to cholesterol. Biotinylated aggregates containing AWN, AQN, DQH, and PSP proteins (fractions I–IV) bound stronger to boar epididymal spermatozoa than to ejaculated spermatozoa. These results suggest that under physiological conditions, the aggregates of seminal plasma proteins (DQH, AQN, AWN, PSP II) rather than the individual proteins might take part in coating the sperm surface, in sperm capacitation, and in primary binding of spermatozoa to zona pellucida of the ovum. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 56:275–277, 2000.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2002

Immobilization of l-glyceryl phosphorylcholine: isolation of phosphorylcholine-binding proteins from seminal plasma

Jiří Liberda; Pavla Maňásková; M Švesták; Věra Jonáková; Marie Tichá

The preparation of an affinity sorbent containing immobilized L-glyceryl phosphorylcholine for affinity chromatography of phosphorylcholine-binding proteins from seminal plasma is described. The ligand was coupled either after its maleinylation to poly(acrylamide-allyl amine) copolymer or directly to divinyl sulfone-activated Sepharose. The prepared phosphorylcholine derivative coupled to Sepharose was used for affinity chromatography of phosphorylcholine-binding proteins from bull and boar seminal plasma. Adsorbed proteins were specifically eluted with phosphorylcholine solution. Isolated phosphorylcholine-binding proteins were characterized by SDS electrophoresis and HPLC with reversed phase. Composition of the boar phosphorylcholine-binding fraction obtained by affinity chromatography on immobilized L-glyceryl phosphorylcholine was compared with that eluted from immobilized heparin by the phosphorylcholine solution. No phosphorylcholine-binding proteins were found in human seminal plasma.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2002

Isolation of non-heparin-binding and heparin-binding proteins of boar prostate

Pavla Maňásková; Jiří Liberda; Marie Tichá; Věra Jonáková

Proteins of boar prostate secretion were separated by affinity chromatography on heparin-polyacrylamide to non-heparin-binding (H) and heparin-binding (H+) protein fractions. H- and H+ fractions were then subjected to RP HPLC. Elution profiles of H-and H+ fractions of prostate secretion were compared with those of seminal plasma and the amounts of corresponding proteins were compared. Besides, the isolated proteins were characterized by SDS-PAGE. In the H- fraction of prostate secretion, PSP I and PSP II spermadhesins and in the H+ fraction AQN 2 and AWN 1 spermadhesins were found in substantially lower amounts than in seminal plasma. On the contrary, beta-microseminoprotein was identified in abundant amounts both in H- and H+ fractions of boar prostate secretion. AQN 2 and AWN 1 spermadhesins were proved by their antibodies. Some seminal plasma proteins originating mainly in seminal vesicles could also be secreted by the prostatic gland. beta-Microseminoprotein was found to be produced mainly by the prostate.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2002

Affinity chromatography of bull seminal proteins on mannan-Sepharose.

Jiří Liberda; Helena Ryšlavá; Petra Jelı́nková; Věra Jonáková; Marie Tichá

The interaction of bull seminal plasma proteins and sperm with mannan was investigated using an enzyme-linked binding assay (ELBA). A high mannan-binding activity was found in the protein fraction interacting with heparin. Mannan binding to seminal plasma proteins was inhibited by D-mannose and D-fructose, but not by D-mannose-6-phosphate, D-glucose-6-phosphate, ovalbumin and ovomucoid. Mannan inhibited the binding of bovine zona pellucida glycoproteins both to bull sperm and seminal plasma proteins. Yeast mannan immobilized to divinyl sulfone-activated Sepharose was used for the isolation of mannan-binding proteins. The protein components of this fraction were identified on the basis of relative molecular mass determination and N-terminal amino acid sequencing: RNAase dimer, PDC-109 and a protein homologous to BSP-30K (relative molecular mass 14,500). The isolated proteins were characterized by a high zona pellucida binding activity.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 2009

3-aminobenzanthrone, a human metabolite of the carcinogenic environmental pollutant 3-nitrobenzanthrone, induces biotransformation enzymes in rat kidney and lung.

Marie Stiborová; Helena Dračínská; Marketa Martinkova; Jana Mizerovská; Jiří Hudeček; Petr Hodek; Jiří Liberda; Eva Frei; Heinz H. Schmeiser; David H. Phillips; Volker M. Arlt

3-aminobenzanthrone (3-ABA) is the metabolite of the carcinogenic air pollutant 3-nitrobenzanthrone (3-NBA). 3-ABA was investigated for its ability to induce cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1) and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) in kidney and lung of rats, and for the influence of such induction on DNA adduct formation by 3-ABA and 3-NBA. NQO1 is the enzyme that reduces 3-NBA to N-hydroxy-3-aminobenzanthrone (N-OH-3-ABA) and CYP1A enzymes oxidize 3-ABA to the same intermediate. When activated by cytosolic and and/or microsomal fractions isolated from rat lung, the target organ for 3-NBA carcinogenicity, and kidney, both compounds generated the same DNA-adduct pattern, consisting of five adducts. When pulmonary cytosols isolated from rats that had been treated i.p. with 40 mg/kg bw of 3-ABA were incubated with 3-NBA, DNA adduct formation was up to 1.7-fold higher than in incubations with cytosols from control animals. This increase corresponded to an increase in protein level and enzymatic activity of NQO1. In contrast, no induction of NQO1 expression by 3-ABA treatment was found in the kidney. Incubations of 3-ABA with renal and pulmonary microsomes of 3-ABA-treated rats led to an increase of up to a 4.5-fold in DNA-adduct formation relative to controls. The stimulation of DNA-adduct formation correlated with a higher protein expression and activity of CYP1A1 induced by 3-ABA. These results show that by inducing lung and kidney CYP1A1 and NQO1, 3-ABA increases its own enzymatic activation as well as that of the environmental pollutant, 3-NBA, thereby enhancing the genotoxic and carcinogenic potential of both compounds.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2014

The antimicrobial action of histones in the reproductive tract of cow.

Tomáš Dráb; Jana Kračmerová; Eva Hanzlíková; Tereza Cerna; Rozálie Litváková; Alžběta Pohlová; Marie Tichá; Petr Přikryl; Jiří Liberda

An infection of any part of female reproductive tract can severely interfere with fertility and reproduction. The fluids and epithelium from the lumen of the female reproductive tract (uterus, oviduct and ovarian follicle) are a known source of antimicrobial action in several species. In this study, we compared the antimicrobial properties of fluids from the reproductive tract of a cow. After removal of small molecules, we demonstrated that there is an antimicrobial activity connected with a fraction of compounds with a molecular mass range between 3500 and 30,000. The most probable candidates responsible for the observed antimicrobial effect were subsequently identified by mass spectroscopy as histones H2A type 2-C, H2B type 1-K, H3.3, and H4. The antimicrobial role of histone H2B was further confirmed by using an antibody against this histone.


Electrophoresis | 2011

Native Red Electrophoresis – A new method suitable for separation of native proteins

Tomáš Dráb; Jana Kračmerová; Ivana Tichá; Eva Hanzlíková; Marie Tichá; Helena Ryšlavá; Veronika Doubnerová; Pavla Maňásková-Postlerová; Jiří Liberda

A new type of native electrophoresis was developed to separate and characterize proteins. In this modification of the native blue electrophoresis, the dye Ponceau Red S is used instead of Coomassie Brilliant Blue to impose uniform negative charge on proteins to enable their electrophoretic separation according to their relative molecular masses. As Ponceau Red S binds less tightly to proteins, in comparison with Coomassie Blue, it can be easily removed after the electrophoretic separation and a further investigation of protein properties is made possible (e.g. an enzyme detection or electroblotting). The tested proteins also kept their native properties (enzyme activity or aggregation state).


Journal of Separation Science | 2011

Native polyacrylamide electrophoresis in the presence of Ponceau Red to study oligomeric states of protein complexes

Tomáš Dráb; Jana Kračmerová; Ivana Tichá; Eva Hanzlíková; Marie Tichá; Jiří Liberda

Native polyacrylamide electrophoresis in the presence of two reversible protein anionic stains (Ponceau S and Ponceau 2R) was used to study the oligomeric states of soluble proteins. A mild binding of the used protein stains to nondissociated protein oligomers imposed a charge shift on the proteins resulting into separation of protein species according to their size under physiological conditions. Adsorbed stains could be easily removed after electrophoresis by washing of polyacrylamide gel with buffer and protein complexes could be visualized either by the detection of their enzyme activity or by using a nonspecific protein stain. The specific detection of enzyme activity of glycosidases, lactate dehydrogenase, or phosphatases was shown as an example.


Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2006

Saccharide-mediated interactions of boar sperm surface proteins with components of the porcine oviduct

Jiří Liberda; Pavla Maňásková; Lucie Prelovská; Marie Tichá; Věra Jonáková


Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2004

Mannan-binding proteins from boar seminal plasma.

Petra Jelı́nková; Jiří Liberda; Pavla Maňásková; Helena Ryšlavá; Věra Jonáková; Marie Tichá

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Marie Tichá

Charles University in Prague

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Věra Jonáková

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Helena Ryšlavá

Charles University in Prague

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Pavla Maňásková

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Tomáš Dráb

Charles University in Prague

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Eva Hanzlíková

Charles University in Prague

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Jana Kračmerová

Charles University in Prague

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Petra Jelı́nková

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Ivana Tichá

Charles University in Prague

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Marie Stiborová

Charles University in Prague

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