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Dive into the research topics where Károly Módos is active.

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Featured researches published by Károly Módos.


Blood | 2011

Detection and isolation of cell-derived microparticles are compromised by protein complexes resulting from shared biophysical parameters

Bence György; Károly Módos; Éva Pállinger; Krisztina Pálóczi; Mária Pásztói; Petra Misják; Mária A. Deli; Áron Sipos; Anikó Szalai; István Voszka; Anna Polgár; K. Tóth; Mária Csete; György Nagy; András Falus; Ágnes Kittel; Edit I. Buzás

Numerous diseases, recently reported to associate with elevated microvesicle/microparticle (MP) counts, have also long been known to be characterized by accelerated immune complex (IC) formation. The goal of this study was to investigate the potential overlap between parameters of protein complexes (eg, ICs or avidin-biotin complexes) and MPs, which might perturb detection and/or isolation of MPs. In this work, after comprehensive characterization of MPs by electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, dynamic light-scattering analysis, and flow cytometry, for the first time, we drive attention to the fact that protein complexes, especially insoluble ICs, overlap in biophysical properties (size, light scattering, and sedimentation) with MPs. This, in turn, affects MP quantification by flow cytometry and purification by differential centrifugation, especially in diseases in which IC formation is common, including not only autoimmune diseases, but also hematologic disorders, infections, and cancer. These data may necessitate reevaluation of certain published data on patient-derived MPs and contribute to correct the clinical laboratory assessment of the presence and biologic functions of MPs in health and disease.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Isolation of Exosomes from Blood Plasma: Qualitative and Quantitative Comparison of Ultracentrifugation and Size Exclusion Chromatography Methods.

Tamás Baranyai; Kata Herczeg; Zsófia Onódi; István Voszka; Károly Módos; Nikolett Marton; György Nagy; Imre Mäger; Matthew J.A. Wood; Samir El Andaloussi; Zoltán Pálinkás; Vikas Kumar; Peter D. Nagy; Ágnes Kittel; Edit I. Buzás; Péter Ferdinandy; Zoltán Giricz

Background Exosomes are emerging targets for biomedical research. However, suitable methods for the isolation of blood plasma-derived exosomes without impurities have not yet been described. Aim Therefore, we investigated the efficiency and purity of exosomes isolated with potentially suitable methods; differential ultracentrifugation (UC) and size exclusion chromatography (SEC). Methods and Results Exosomes were isolated from rat and human blood plasma by various UC and SEC conditions. Efficiency was investigated at serial UC of the supernatant, while in case of SEC by comparing the content of exosomal markers of various fractions. Purity was assessed based on the presence of albumin. We found that the diameter of the majority of isolated particles fell into the size range of exosomes, however, albumin was also present in the preparations, when 1h UC at 4°C was applied. Furthermore, with this method only a minor fraction of total exosomes could be isolated from blood as deduced from the constant amount of exosomal markers CD63 and TSG101 detected after serial UC of rat blood plasma samples. By using UC for longer time or with shorter sedimentation distance at 4°C, or UC performed at 37°C, exosomal yield increased, but albumin impurity was still observed in the isolates, as assessed by transmission electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering and immunoblotting against CD63, TSG101 and albumin. Efficiency and purity were not different in case of using further diluted samples. By using SEC with different columns, we have found that although a minor fraction of exosomes can be isolated without significant albumin content on Sepharose CL-4B or Sephacryl S-400 columns, but not on Sepharose 2B columns, the majority of exosomes co-eluted with albumin. Conclusion Here we show that it is feasible to isolate exosomes from blood plasma by SEC without significant albumin contamination albeit with low vesicle yield.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2003

Validation of Phage T7 Biological Dosimeter by Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction Using Short and Long Segments of Phage T7 DNA

M. Hegedüs; Károly Módos; Gy. Ronto; Andrea Fekete

Abstract Phage T7 can be used as a biological dosimeter; its reading, the biologically effective dose (BED), is proportional to the inactivation rate |ln (n/n0)|. For the measurement of DNA damage in phage T7 dosimeter, a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) methodology has been developed using 555 and 3826 bp fragments of phage T7 DNA. Both optimized reactions are so robust that an equally good amplification was obtained when intact phage T7 was used in the reaction mixture. In the biologically relevant dose range a good correlation was obtained between the BED of the phage T7 dosimeter and the amount of ultraviolet (UV) photoproducts determined by QPCR with both fragments under the effect of five various UV sources. A significant decrease in the yield of photoproducts was detected by QPCR in isolated T7 DNA and in heated phage compared with intraphage DNA with all irradiation sources. Because the yield of photoproducts was the same in B, C and A conformational states of T7 DNA, a possible explanation for modulation of photoproduct frequency in intraphage T7 DNA is that the presence of bound phage proteins induces an alteration in DNA structure that can result in increased induction of photoproducts.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2008

Comparison of the efficiency and the specificity of DNA-bound and free cationic porphyrin in photodynamic virus inactivation

Kristóf Zupán; Marianna Egyeki; Katalin Tóth; Andrea Fekete; Levente Herényi; Károly Módos; Gabriella Csík

The risk of transmitting infections by blood transfusion has been substantially reduced. However, alternative methods for inactivation of pathogens in blood and its components are needed. Application of photoactivated cationic porphyrins can offer an approach to remove non-enveloped viruses from aqueous media. Here we tested the virus inactivation capability of meso-Tetrakis(4-N-methylpyridyl)porphyrin (TMPyP) and meso-Tri-(4-N-methylpyridyl)monophenylporphyrin (TMPyMPP) in the dark and upon irradiation. T7 bacteriophage, as a surrogate on non-enveloped viruses was selected as a test system. TMPyP and TMPyMPP reduce the viability of T7 phage already in the dark, which can be explained by their selective binding to nucleic acid. Both compounds proved to be efficient photosensitizers of virus inactivation. The binding of porphyrin to phage DNA was not a prerequisite of phage photosensitization, moreover, photoinactivation was more efficiently induced by free than by DNA bound porphyrin. As optical melting studies and agarose gel electrophoresis of T7 nucleoprotein revealed, photoreactions of TMPyP and TMPyMPP affect the structural integrity of DNA and also of viral proteins, despite their selective DNA binding.


European Biophysics Journal | 2004

Maximum-entropy decomposition of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy data: application to liposome–human serum albumin association

Károly Módos; Rita Galántai; Irén Bárdos-Nagy; Malte Wachsmuth; Katalin Tóth; Judit Fidy; Jörg Langowski

Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy was used to measure the diffusion behavior of a mixture of DMPC or DMPC/DMPG liposomes with human serum albumin (HSA) and mesoporphyrin (MP), which was used as the fluorescent label for liposomes and HSA as well. For decomposing the fluorescence intensity autocorrelation function (ACF) into components corresponding to a liposome population, HSA and MP, we used a maximum entropy procedure that computes a distribution of diffusion times consistent with the ACF data. We found that a simple parametric non-linear fit with a discrete set of decay components did not converge to a stable parameter set. The distribution calculated with the maximum entropy method was stable and the average size of the particles calculated from the effective diffusion time was in good agreement with the data determined using the discrete-component fit.


European Biophysics Journal | 1982

Temperature dependent structural changes of intraphage T7 DNA.

Andrea Fekete; Gy. Rontó; L.A. Feigin; V. V. Tikhonychev; Károly Módos

The phenomena connected with the first phase transition step of the native T7 phage at 40‡C–65‡ C have been studied using various methods. In this temperature range a) the optical melting curve shows an absorption decrease, b) the maximum of the small-angle X-ray scattering characteristic for DNA packing disappears, c) there is a drop of biological activity and d) there are changes in the structure of the difference absorption spectra of native phages versus isolated DNA. All data are interpreted assuming a structural change of the DNA due to the release of its protein coat towards the end of the first phase transition step (at 60‡–65‡ C in the case of M9 buffer). Above this temperature the intraphage DNA packing appears to be destroyed and the DNA structure seems to be similar to that in DNA solution.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

The Loops Facing the Active Site of Prolyl Oligopeptidase are Crucial Components in Substrate Gating and Specificity.

Zoltán Szeltner; Tünde Juhász; Ilona Szamosi; Dean Rea; Vilmos Fülöp; Károly Módos; Luiz Juliano; László Polgár

Prolyl oligopeptidase (POP) has emerged as a drug target for neurological diseases. A flexible loop structure comprising loop A (res. 189-209) and loop B (res. 577-608) at the domain interface is implicated in substrate entry to the active site. Here we determined kinetic and structural properties of POP with mutations in loop A, loop B, and in two additional flexible loops (the catalytic His loop, propeller Asp/Glu loop). POP lacking loop A proved to be an inefficient enzyme, as did POP with a mutation in loop B (T590C). Both variants displayed an altered substrate preference profile, with reduced ligand binding capacity. Conversely, the T202C mutation increased the flexibility of loop A, enhancing the catalytic efficiency beyond that of the native enzyme. The T590C mutation in loop B increased the preference for shorter peptides, indicating a role in substrate gating. Loop A and the His loop are disordered in the H680A mutant crystal structure, as seen in previous bacterial POP structures, implying coordinated structural dynamics of these loops. Unlike native POP, variants with a malfunctioning loop A were not inhibited by a 17-mer peptide that may bind non-productively to an exosite involving loop A. Biophysical studies suggest a predominantly closed resting state for POP with higher flexibility at the physiological temperature. The flexible loop A, loop B and His loop system at the active site is the main regulator of substrate gating and specificity and represents a new inhibitor target.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1999

Influence of phage proteins on formation of specific UV DNA photoproducts in phage T7

Andrea Fekete; A.A. Vink; S. Gáspár; Károly Módos; A. Bérces; Gy. Rontó; L. Roza

Abstract— Phage T7 can be used as a biological UV dosimeter. Its reading is proportional to the inactivation rate expressed in HT7 units. To understand the influence of phage proteins on the formation of DNA UV photoproducts, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and (6–4)photoproducts ((6–4)PD) were determined in T7 DNA exposed to UV radiation under different conditions: intraphage T7 DNA, isolated T7 DNA and heated phage. To investigate the effects of various wavelengths, seven different UV sources have been used. The CPD and (6–4)PD were determined by lesion‐specific antibodies in an immunodotblot assay. Both photoproducts were HT7 dose‐dependently produced in all three objects by every irradiation source in the biologically relevant UV dose range (1–10 HT7). The CPD to (6–4)PD ratios increased with the increasing effective wavelength of the irradiation source and were similar in intraphage T7 DNA, isolated DNA and heated phage with all irradiation sources. However, a significant decrease in the yield of both photoproducts was detected in isolated T7 DNA and in heated phage compared to intraphage DNA, the decrease was dependent on the irradiation source. Both photoproducts were affected the same way in isolated T7 DNA and heated phage, respectively. The yield of CPD and (6–4)PD was similar in B, C‐like and A conformational states of isolated T7 DNA, indicating that the conformational switch in the DNA is not the decisive factor in photoproduct formation. The most likely explanation for modulation of photoproduct frequency in intraphage T7 DNA is that the presence of bound phage proteins induces an alteration in DNA structure that can result in an increased rate of dimerization and (6–4)PD production of adjacent bases in intraphage T7 DNA.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1989

Action spectra for photoinduced inactivation of bacteriophage T7 sensitized by 8-methoxypsoralen and angelicin

Györgyi Rontó; Andrea Fekete; S. Gáspár; Károly Módos

The action spectrum (240-300 nm) for photoinactivation of unsensitized phage T7 and the action spectra (310-380 nm) for photoinactivation of phage T7 sensitized with 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) and angelicin were measured by an automated method. For unsensitized phage T7 the action spectrum is in good agreement with the absorption spectrum. For sensitization with angelicin the action spectrum is similar to the absorption spectrum, but for sensitization with 8-MOP the spectra are different. The agreement between the T7 absorption and action spectra in the far-UV region is due to photodamage of DNA, leading to phage inactivation. The similarity in the action and absorption spectra in the near-UV region for sensitization with angelicin seems to be in accordance with the monofunctional photobinding of angelicin to DNA. The action spectrum for sensitization with 8-MOP has a maximum at about 320 nm and this suggests that, in addition to the monoadducts, the biadducts play a role in the inactivation of phage T7. Taking the number of bound furocoumarin molecules into consideration, the quantum efficiencies were estimated. Furocoumarin increases the quantum efficiency in the near-UV region and the values are similar to those obtained in far-UV light without psoralens.


Mathematical and Computational Methods in Physiology#R##N#Satellite Symposium of the 28th International Congress of Physiological Sciences, Budapest, Hungary, 1980 | 1981

COMPLEX METHOD FOR THE DETERMINATION OF THE PHYSIOLOGICAL PARAMETERS OF BACTERIUM–PHAGE SYSTEMS

S. Gáspár; Károly Módos; Gy. Rontó

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the comparison of three experimental methods and the connected theoretical ones developed for the determination of the physiological parameters of bacterium–phage complexes. The first method was applied to a continuous culture, the second one to a batch culture, and the third one was an automatized evaluating system. The methodics presented for E. coli B–T7 phage systems are applicable for the analysis and quantitative description of any physical, chemical effects on bacteria, phages, and phage–bacterium systems. This chapter discusses what information can be obtained from the determined parameters and from their changes. The parameters remain stable only if the physiological conditions of the culture remain constant for a long time. This stability can be ensured with a chemostat. From the properties of the chemostat follows the formation of a self-regulating system of bacteria that keeps a fixed doubling rate in spite of various substrates and influencing agents. This means that in the chemostat within certain limits, the influence of external effects can be totally compensated.

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H. Lammer

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Gy. Ronto

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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G. Kovács

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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