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Dive into the research topics where Katalin Goda is active.

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Featured researches published by Katalin Goda.


Current Cancer Drug Targets | 2009

Multidrug resistance through the spectacle of P-glycoprotein.

Katalin Goda; Zsolt Bacsó; Gábor Szabó

P-glycoprotein (Pgp), coded for by the mdr1 gene, is one of the ABC transporters held responsible for the phenomenon of multidrug resistance (mdr), which is reflected by a rapidly escalating failure of chemotherapy with different classes of cytotoxic agents: anthracyclins, vinca alkaloids, taxanes, epipodophylotoxins. Although overcoming resistance conveyed by Pgp alone may not be sufficient for reaching effective treatment, the abundance of observations available for this paradigmatic multidrug transporter at both in vitro and in vivo setting is a tempting ground for an updated assessment of the main currents of mdr research. In this review we attempt to help keep track of the features of Pgp-mediated drug transport that serve as the major starting points for ongoing efforts of mdr reversal. We will analyze the slowly narrowing gaps that prevail between our ever increasing understanding at the protein, cell and organism level, focusing on the molecular interactions involving Pgp.


Cytometry Part A | 2004

Raft and Cytoskeleton Associations of an ABC Transporter: P-Glycoprotein

Zsolt Bacsó; Henrietta Nagy; Katalin Goda; László Bene; Ferenc Fenyvesi; János Matkó; Gábor Szabó

A novel flow cytometric assay has been described in an accompanying report (Gombos et al.,


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2008

P-glycoprotein inhibition by membrane cholesterol modulation

Ferenc Fenyvesi; Éva Fenyvesi; Lajos Szente; Katalin Goda; Zsolt Bacsó; Ildikó Bácskay; Judit Váradi; Tímea Kiss; Éva Molnár; Tamás Janáky; Gábor Szabó; Miklós Vecsernyés

P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is a transmembrane protein that actively exports lipophilic chemotherapeutics from the cells causing multidrug resistance. Pgp molecules are partially localized in TX-100-resistant rafts, and the activity of the transporter is highly sensitive to the presence of cholesterol. To better understand these relationships, the influence of membrane cholesterol content on Pgp function, as measured via calcein accumulation, was studied in correlation with changes elicited in membrane structure. Membrane cholesterol was modulated by heptakis(2,6-di-O-methyl)-beta-cyclodextrin (DIMEB) and the cholesterol inclusion complex of DIMEB (Chol-DIMEB). Changes in membrane cholesterol level were reflected by alterations in the overall lipid packing as measured by Merocyanine 540 (MC540) staining and were also accompanied by changes in the raft association of the pump. DIMEB and Chol-DIMEB treatments have also lead to increased permeability of the cell membrane in both directions, raising the possibility that the effects on pumping efficiency reflect leakage of ATP also from the non-permeabilized cells. However, the treatments did not influence the intracellular ATP levels of the non-permeabilized cells. Our data suggest that Pgp inhibition by cyclodextrin treatments arises through modulation of its membrane microenvironment, rather than as a result of concomitant cytotoxicity.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2006

Complete inhibition of p-glycoprotein by simultaneous treatment with a distinct class of modulators and the UIC2 monoclonal antibody

Katalin Goda; Ferenc Fenyvesi; Zsolt Bacsó; Henrietta Nagy; Teréz Márián; Attila Megyeri; Zoltán Krasznai; István Juhász; Miklós Vecsernyés; Gábor Szabó

P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is one of the active efflux pumps that are able to extrude a large variety of chemotherapeutic drugs from the cells, causing multidrug resistance. The conformation-sensitive UIC2 monoclonal antibody potentially inhibits Pgp-mediated substrate transport. However, this inhibition is usually partial, and its extent is variable because UIC2 binds only to 10 to 40% Pgp present in the cell membrane. The rest of the Pgp molecules become recognized by this antibody only in the presence of certain substrates or modulators, including vinblastine, cyclosporine A (CsA), and SDZ PSC 833 (valspodar). Simultaneous application of any of these modulators and UIC2, followed by the removal of the modulator, results in a completely restored steady-state accumulation of various Pgp substrates (calcein-AM, daunorubicin, and 99mTc-hexakis-2-methoxybutylisonitrile), indicating near 100% inhibition of pump activity. Remarkably, the inhibitory binding of the antibody is brought about by coincubation with concentrations of CsA or SDZ PSC 833 ∼20 times lower than what is necessary for Pgp inhibition when the modulators are applied alone. The feasibility of such a combinative treatment for in vivo multidrug resistance reversal was substantiated by the dramatic increase of daunorubicin accumulation in xenotransplanted Pgp+ tumors in response to a combined treatment with UIC2 and CsA, both administered at doses ineffective when applied alone. These observations establish the combined application of a class of modulators used at low concentrations and of the UIC2 antibody as a novel, specific, and effective way of blocking Pgp function in vivo.


Cytometry Part A | 2004

Cholesterol sensitivity of detergent resistance: A rapid flow cytometric test for detecting constitutive or induced raft association of membrane proteins

Inure Gombos; Zsolt Bacsó; Cynthia Detre; Henrietta Nagy; Katalin Goda; Márton Andrásfalvy; Gábor Szabó; János Matkó

Lipid rafts are cholesterol‐ and glycosphingolipid‐rich microdomains in the cellular plasma membranes that play critical roles in compartmentalization (concentration, coupling, and isolation) of receptors and signal molecules. Therefore, detecting constitutive or induced raft associations of such proteins is of central interest in cell biology. This has mostly been done with time‐ and cell‐consuming immunobiochemical techniques affected by several sources of artifacts. A flow cytometric analysis of immunocytochemical staining under differential circumstances of detergent treatment offers a new alternative to this method.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Interaction with the 5D3 Monoclonal Antibody Is Regulated by Intramolecular Rearrangements but Not by Covalent Dimer Formation of the Human ABCG2 Multidrug Transporter

Csilla Özvegy-Laczka; Rozália Laczkó; Csilla Hegedüs; Thomas Litman; György Várady; Katalin Goda; Tamás Hegedus; Nikolay V. Dokholyan; Brian P. Sorrentino; András Váradi; Balázs Sarkadi

Human ABCG2 is a plasma membrane glycoprotein working as a homodimer or homo-oligomer. The protein plays an important role in the protection/detoxification of various tissues and may also be responsible for the multidrug-resistant phenotype of cancer cells. In our previous study we found that the 5D3 monoclonal antibody shows a function-dependent reactivity to an extracellular epitope of the ABCG2 transporter. In the current experiments we have further characterized the 5D3-ABCG2 interaction. The effect of chemical cross-linking and the modulation of extracellular S–S bridges on the transporter function and 5D3 reactivity of ABCG2 were investigated in depth. We found that several protein cross-linkers greatly increased 5D3 labeling in ABCG2 expressing HEK cells; however, there was no correlation between covalent dimer formation, the inhibition of transport activity, and the increase in 5D3 binding. Dithiothreitol treatment, which reduced the extracellular S–S bridge-forming cysteines of ABCG2, had no effect on transport function but caused a significant decrease in 5D3 binding. When analyzing ABCG2 mutants carrying Cys-to-Ala changes in the extracellular loop, we found that the mutant C603A (lacking the intermolecular S–S bond) showed comparable transport activity and 5D3 reactivity to the wild-type ABCG2. However, disruption of the intramolecular S–S bridge (in C592A, C608A, or C592A/C608A mutants) in this loop abolished 5D3 binding, whereas the function of the protein was preserved. Based on these results and ab initio folding simulations, we propose a model for the large extracellular loop of the ABCG2 protein.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1996

Intracellular pH does not affect drug extrusion by P-glycoprotein

Katalin Goda; László Balkay; Teréz Márián; Lajos Trón; Adorjan Aszalos; Gábor Szabó

The intracellular pH (pH(i)) of cells exhibiting multidrug resistance (MDR) related to the expression of the P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is often more alkaline than that of the parental cells, as also observed for the KB-V1/KB-3-1 system in this paper. The possible role of an elevated pH(i) in Pgp-related MDR has been investigated by shifting back the pH(i) of the MDR+ cells to a more acidic value using the mobile proton ionophore carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP). The influence of CCCP-evoked delta pH(i) on relative daunorubicin (DNR) accumulation was similar in the case of several Pgp positive and negative cell lines, in view of flow cytometric and radioactive drug accumulation studies and measuring DNR levels in the medium in a flow-through system. Our data argue against a significant effect of pH(i) on Pgp pumping efficiency. However, an indirect connection between pH(i) regulation and the MDR phenotype is suggested by the fact that acidification of the external medium in the presence of verpamil could be observed exclusively in MDR+ cells.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2010

Pgp inhibition by UIC2 antibody can be followed in vitro by using tumor-diagnostic radiotracers, 99mTc-MIBI and 18FDG.

Zoárd Tibor Krasznai; Ágnes Tóth; Pál Mikecz; Zoltán Fodor; Gábor Szabó; László Galuska; Zoltán Hernádi; Katalin Goda

P-glycoprotein (Pgp, ABCB1) is one of the active efflux pumps that are able to extrude a large variety of chemotherapeutic drugs from the cells, causing the phenomenon of multidrug resistance. It has been shown earlier that the combined application of a class of Pgp modulators (e.g. cyclosporine A and SDZ PSC 833) used at low concentrations and UIC2 antibody is a novel, specific, and effective way of blocking Pgp function (Goda et al., 2007). In the present work we study the UIC2 antibody mediated Pgp inhibition in more detail measuring the accumulation of tumor diagnostic radiotracers, 2-[(18)F]fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose ((18)FDG) and [(99m)Tc]hexakis-2-methoxybutyl isonitrile ((99m)Tc-MIBI), into Pgp(+) (A2780AD) and Pgp(-) (A2780) human ovarian carcinoma cells. Co-incubation of cells with UIC2 and cyclosporine A (CSA, 2μM) increased the binding of UIC2 more than 3-fold and reverted the rhodamine 123 (R123), daunorubicin (DNR) and (99m)Tc-MIBI accumulation of the Pgp(+) 2780AD cells to approx. the same level as observed in Pgp(-) cells. Similarly, 50μM paclitaxel (Pacl) increased UIC2 binding, and consequently reinstated the uptake of R123, DNR and (99m)Tc-MIBI into the Pgp(+) cells. Blocking Pgp by combined treatments with CSA+UIC2 or Pacl+UIC2 also decreased the glucose metabolic rate of the A2780AD Pgp(+) cells measured in (18)FDG accumulation experiments suggesting that the maintenance of Pgp activity requires a considerable amount of energy. Similar treatments of the A2780 Pgp(-) cells did not result in significant change in the R123, DNR, (99m)Tc-MIBI and (18)FDG accumulation demonstrating that the above effects are Pgp-specific. Thus, combined treatment with the UIC2 antibody and Pgp modulators can completely block the function of Pgp in human ovarian carcinoma cells and this effect can be followed in vitro by using tumor-diagnostic radiotracers, (99m)Tc-MIBI and (18)FDG.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Ribonucleoprotein-masked nicks at 50-kbp intervals in the eukaryotic genomic DNA

Lóránt Székvölgyi; Zsuzsa Rákosy; Balint L. Balint; Endre Kókai; László Imre; György Vereb; Zsolt Bacsó; Katalin Goda; Sándor Varga; Margit Balázs; Viktor Dombrádi; Laszlo Nagy; Gábor Szabó

By using a microscopic approach, field inversion single-cell gel electrophoresis, we show that preformed single-strand discontinuities are present in the chromatin of resting and proliferating mammalian and yeast cells. These single-strand breaks are primarily nicks positioned at ≈50-kbp intervals throughout the entire genome that could be efficiently labeled in situ by DNA polymerase I holoenzyme but not by Klenow fragment and terminal transferase unless after ribonucleolytic treatments. The RNA molecules involved appear to comprise R-loops, recognized by the S9.6 RNA/DNA hybrid-specific antibody. By using the breakpoint cluster region of the Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL) gene as a model, we have found that the number of manifest nicks detected by FISH performed after field inversion single-cell gel electrophoresis depends on epigenetic context, but the difference between germ-line and translocated MLL alleles is abolished by protease treatment. Our data imply that the double-stranded genomic DNA is composed of contiguous rather than continuous single strands and reveal an aspect of higher-order chromatin organization with ribonucleoprotein-associated persistent nicks defining ≈50-kbp domains.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2012

Antibody binding shift assay for rapid screening of drug interactions with the human ABCG2 multidrug transporter.

Ágnes Telbisz; Csilla Hegedüs; Csilla Özvegy-Laczka; Katalin Goda; György Várady; Zoltan Takats; Eszter Szabó; Brian P. Sorrentino; András Váradi; Balázs Sarkadi

The ABCG2 multidrug transporter protein has been identified as a key player in cancer drug resistance and xenobiotic elimination, as its actively transported substrates include anticancer drugs, intermediates of heme metabolism, xenobiotics, and also drug conjugates. Several transported substrates at higher concentrations, and some anticancer agents even at low concentrations directly inhibit the ABCG2 transporter, thus it is difficult to provide estimation for pharmacologically important ABCG2-dependent interactions. In addition, as documented here, in mutant variants of the transporter, inhibitors of the wild-type ABCG2 may become actively transported substrates. In this paper we describe a rapid in vitro assay to identify transport modulation by measuring the cell surface interaction of a conformation sensitive monoclonal antibody (5D3) with ABCG2 in intact cells. As documented, in conjunction with membrane ATPase, transport and cytotoxicity measurements, this assay provides a reliable estimate of concentration-dependent modulation of ABCG2 by newly emerging pharmacophores. A high-throughput, 96-well plate assay platform is also provided.

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Gábor Szabó

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Pál Mikecz

University of Debrecen

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