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Dive into the research topics where Katalin Jemnitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Katalin Jemnitz.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Predicting P-Glycoprotein-Mediated Drug Transport Based On Support Vector Machine and Three-Dimensional Crystal Structure of P-glycoprotein

Zsolt Bikádi; Istvan Hazai; David Malik; Katalin Jemnitz; Zsuzsa Veres; Péter Hári; Zhanglin Ni; Tip W. Loo; David M. Clarke; Eszter Hazai; Qingcheng Mao

Human P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an ATP-binding cassette multidrug transporter that confers resistance to a wide range of chemotherapeutic agents in cancer cells by active efflux of the drugs from cells. P-gp also plays a key role in limiting oral absorption and brain penetration and in facilitating biliary and renal elimination of structurally diverse drugs. Thus, identification of drugs or new molecular entities to be P-gp substrates is of vital importance for predicting the pharmacokinetics, efficacy, safety, or tissue levels of drugs or drug candidates. At present, publicly available, reliable in silico models predicting P-gp substrates are scarce. In this study, a support vector machine (SVM) method was developed to predict P-gp substrates and P-gp-substrate interactions, based on a training data set of 197 known P-gp substrates and non-substrates collected from the literature. We showed that the SVM method had a prediction accuracy of approximately 80% on an independent external validation data set of 32 compounds. A homology model of human P-gp based on the X-ray structure of mouse P-gp as a template has been constructed. We showed that molecular docking to the P-gp structures successfully predicted the geometry of P-gp-ligand complexes. Our SVM prediction and the molecular docking methods have been integrated into a free web server (http://pgp.althotas.com), which allows the users to predict whether a given compound is a P-gp substrate and how it binds to and interacts with P-gp. Utilization of such a web server may prove valuable for both rational drug design and screening.


Drug Metabolism Reviews | 2010

ABCC2/Abcc2: A multispecific transporter with dominant excretory functions

Katalin Jemnitz; Krisztina Herédi-Szabó; Judit Janossy; Eniko Ioja; L. Vereczkey; Péter Krajcsi

ABCC2/Abcc2 (MRP2/Mrp2) is expressed at major physiological barriers, such as the canalicular membrane of liver cells, kidney proximal tubule epithelial cells, enterocytes of the small and large intestine, and syncytiotrophoblast of the placenta. ABCC2/Abcc2 always localizes in the apical membranes. Although ABCC2/Abcc2 transports a variety of amphiphilic anions that belong to different classes of molecules, such as endogenous compounds (e.g., bilirubin-glucuronides), drugs, toxic chemicals, nutraceuticals, and their conjugates, it displays a preference for phase II conjugates. Phenotypically, the most obvious consequence of mutations in ABCC2 that lead to Dubin-Johnson syndrome is conjugate hyperbilirubinemia. ABCC2/Abcc2 harbors multiple binding sites and displays complex transport kinetics.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2008

Interspecies differences in acetaminophen sensitivity of human, rat, and mouse primary hepatocytes

Katalin Jemnitz; Zsuzsa Veres; Katalin Monostory; László Kóbori; L. Vereczkey

Most of the experiments studying acetaminophen (APAP) induced hepatotoxicity were performed using moue as model specie, right because its high sensitivity. While the toxic responses can be called forth easily in mice, the human relevancy of these results is questionable. In this study human, rat, and mouse primary hepatocytes were treated with increasing concentrations of APAP, and cell viability was measured by MTT cytotoxicity assay. Pronounced interspecies differences were obtained in cell viability following 24h of APAP treatment starting at 24h after seeding (EC50: 3.8mM, 7.6mM, and 28.2mM, in mouse, rat, and human hepatocyte culture, respectively). The longer time of culturing highly increased the resistance of hepatocytes of all species investigated. In rat hepatocyte culture EC50 values were 6.0mM, 12.5mM, and 18.8mM, when starting APAP treatment after 24, 48, and 72 h of seeding. Although N-acetylbenzoquinoneimine, a minor metabolite of APAP, which is mainly formed by CYP2E1 at high APAP concentration in every species studied, is thought to initiate the toxic processes, no correlation was found between CYP2E1 activities and hepatocyte sensitivity of different species. We conclude that the toxicity induced by APAP overdose highly depends on the animal model applied.


Toxicological Sciences | 2010

Contribution of High Basolateral Bile Salt Efflux to the Lack of Hepatotoxicity in Rat in Response to Drugs Inducing Cholestasis in Human

Katalin Jemnitz; Zsuzsa Veres; L. Vereczkey

Intrahepatic bile acid accumulation due to inhibition of the bile salt export pump (BSEP) has been proposed as a mechanism for drug-induced cholestasis. Many cholestatic drugs do not initiate hepatotoxicity in rats, although they inhibit rat Bsep and cause elevated serum bile acid concentration. In this study, we examined changes in the taurocholate (TC) transport in response to cholestatic drug treatments in human and rat sandwich-cultured hepatocytes. Our experimental setup allows studying the basolateral and canalicular efflux simultaneously, thus comparing drug-induced changes in the vectorial efflux of TC. We found that TC elimination highly differs in human and rat hepatocytes. In human hepatocytes, an equal fraction of TC(uptake) was eliminated by basolateral (34.8%) and canalicular (34.4%) transporters and remained in the cells (30.5%), while in the case of rats, the basolateral transport was dominant (71.7%) and intracellular TC accumulation was negligible (6.9%). The inhibition of BSEP/Bsep resulted in significantly higher intracellular TC(conc) in humans than in rats. The 15-fold difference in intracellular TC(conc) of control in human versus rat hepatocytes was increased 25-fold by troglitazone treatment. MK571 and indomethacin decreased the basolateral efflux and significantly increased the intracellular TC(conc) in rats. In rat hepatocytes, the highest intracellular TC(conc) was observed with cyclosporine A and glibenclamide, which inhibited TC elimination in both directions. Nevertheless, the basolateral transport remained dominant. We conclude that in rats, the higher rate of basolateral bile salt efflux represents an additional protective mechanism in cholestasis, which contributes to species differences in response to hepatotoxic drugs.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2010

BGP-15 inhibits caspase-independent programmed cell death in acetaminophen-induced liver injury

Gábor Nagy; András Szarka; Gábor Lotz; Judit Doczi; Livius Wunderlich; András Kiss; Katalin Jemnitz; Zsuzsa Veres; Gábor Bánhegyi; Zsuzsa Schaff; Balazs Sumegi; József Mandl

It has been recently shown that acute acetaminophen toxicity results in endoplasmic reticulum redox stress and an increase in cells with apoptotic phenotype in liver. Since activation of effector caspases was absent, the relevance of caspase-independent mechanisms in acetaminophen-induced programmed cell death was investigated. BGP-15, a drug with known protective actions in conditions involving redox imbalance, has been co-administered with a single sublethal dose of acetaminophen. Proapoptotic events and outcome of the injury were investigated. ER redox alterations and early ER-stress-related signaling events induced by acetaminophen, such as ER glutathione depletion, phosphorylation of eIF2alpha and JNK and induction of the transcription factor GADD153, were not counteracted by co-treatment with BGP-15. However, BGP-15 prevented AIF mitochondria-to-nucleus translocation and mitochondrial depolarization. BGP-15 co-treatment attenuated the rate of acetaminophen-induced cell death as assessed by apoptotic index and enzyme serum release. These results reaffirm that acute acetaminophen toxicity involves oxidative stress-induced caspase-independent cell death. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of AIF translocation may effectively protect against or at least delay acetaminophen-induced programmed cell death.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Comparison of Human Hepatoma HepaRG Cells with Human and Rat Hepatocytes in Uptake Transport Assays in Order to Predict a Risk of Drug Induced Hepatotoxicity

Mónika Szabó; Zsuzsa Veres; Zsolt Baranyai; Ferenc Jakab; Katalin Jemnitz

Human hepatocytes are the gold standard for toxicological studies but they have several drawbacks, like scarce availability, high inter-individual variability, a short lifetime, which limits their applicability. The aim of our investigations was to determine, whether HepaRG cells could replace human hepatocytes in uptake experiments for toxicity studies. HepaRG is a hepatoma cell line with most hepatic functions, including a considerable expression of uptake transporters in contrast to other hepatic immortalized cell lines. We compared the effect of cholestatic drugs (bosentan, cyclosporinA, troglitazone,) and bromosulfophthalein on the uptake of taurocholate and estrone-3-sulfate in human and rat hepatocytes and HepaRG cells. The substrate uptake was significantly slower in HepaRG cells than in human hepatocytes, still, in the presence of drugs we observed a concentration dependent decrease in uptake. In all cell types, the culture time had a significant impact not only on the uptake process but on the inhibitory effect of drugs too. The most significant drug effect was measured at 4 h after seeding. Our report is among the first concerning interactions of the uptake transporters in the HepaRG, at the functional level. Results of the present study clearly show that concerning the inhibition of taurocholate uptake by cholestatic drugs, HepaRG cells are closer to human hepatocytes than rat hepatocytes. In conclusion, we demonstrated that HepaRG cells may provide a suitable tool for hepatic uptake studies.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2010

Biliary efflux transporters involved in the clearance of rosuvastatin in sandwich culture of primary rat hepatocytes

Katalin Jemnitz; Zsuzsa Veres; Regina Tugyi; L. Vereczkey

Rosuvastatin (a 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitor) has been shown to be excreted mostly unchanged into the bile; interactions on the level of hepatic apical efflux transporters may represent a risk of liver toxicity. So far, controversial and insufficient data are available concerning transporters involved in the elimination process. This study was designed to elucidate, which transporters take part in the biliary clearance of rosuvastatin using sandwich-cultured primary rat hepatocytes. The canalicular efflux of rosuvastatin was measured in the presence of inhibitors: Ko 134, mitoxanthrone, novobiocin for breast cancer resistance protein (Bcrp); verapamil for multidrug resistance protein (Mdr1); benzbromarone, sulfasalazine, probenecid for multidrug resistance associated protein (Mrp 2); and cyclosporine A, glibenclamide, troglitazone for bile salt export pump (Bsep). Mrp2 inhibitors decreased the biliary efflux of rosuvastatin most potently by 78.9%, 35%, 54.1%; benzbromarone, probenecid, sulfasalazine, respectively, while Bcrp and Bsep inhibitors showed much less effect (29.1%, 23.0% ,30.0%; Ko 134, mitoxanthrone, novobiocin, respectively, and 32.6%, 29.3%, 20.6%, glibenclamide, cyclosporine A, troglitazone, respectively). The marked decline of canalicular transport by Mrp2 inhibitors suggests major role of Mrp2 in this process; however, Bcrp and Bsep might also contribute to the biliary elimination of rosuvatatin in sandwich-cultured rat hepatocytes.


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.


Hepatology Research | 2008

Modulation of sinusoidal and canalicular elimination of bilirubin‐glucuronides by rifampicin and other cholestatic drugs in a sandwich culture of rat hepatocytes

György Lengyel; Zsuzsa Veres; Regina Tugyi; L. Vereczkey; Tünde Molnár; Hristos Glavinas; Péter Krajcsi; Katalin Jemnitz

Aim:  Drug‐induced hyperbilirubinemia has been shown to often be derived from modulation of the expression and activity of hepatobiliary transporters. In this study we examined the interactions of some therapeutic agents, which have been shown to cause cholestasis, with the elimination of bilirubin‐glucuronides, in order to clarify whether these drugs modify the activity of Mrp2 and Mrp3 directly.


Pathology & Oncology Research | 2015

Ferroptosis is Involved in Acetaminophen Induced Cell Death.

Tamás Lőrincz; Katalin Jemnitz; Tamás Zoltán Kardon; József Mandl; András Szarka

The recently described form of programmed cell death, ferroptosis can be induced by agents causing GSH depletion or the inhibition of GPX4. Ferroptosis clearly shows distinct morphologic, biochemical and genetic features from apoptosis, necrosis and autophagy. Since NAPQI the highly reactive metabolite of the widely applied analgesic and antipyretic, acetaminophen induces a cell death which can be characterized by GSH depletion, GPX inhibition and caspase independency the involvement of ferroptosis in acetaminophen induced cell death has been investigated. The specific ferroptosis inhibitor ferrostatin-1 failed to elevate the viability of acetaminophen treated HepG2 cells. It should be noticed that these cells do not form NAPQI due to the lack of phase I enzyme expression therefore GSH depletion cannot be observed. However in the case of acetaminophen treated primary mouse hepatocytes the significant elevation of cell viability could be observed upon ferrostatin-1 treatment. Similar to ferrostatin-1 treatment, the addition of the RIP1 kinase inhibitor necrostatin-1 could also elevate the viability of acetaminophen treated primary hepatocytes. Ferrostatin-1 has no influence on the expression of CYP2E1 or on the cellular GSH level which suggest that the protective effect of ferrostatin-1 in APAP induced cell death is not based on the reduced metabolism of APAP to NAPQI or on altered NAPQI conjugation by cellular GSH. Our results suggest that beyond necroptosis and apoptosis a third programmed cell death, ferroptosis is also involved in acetaminophen induced cell death in primary hepatocytes.

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L. Vereczkey

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Zsuzsa Veres

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Katalin Monostory

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Mónika Szabó

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Zsuzsanna Veres

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Attila Bátai-Konczos

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Daniella Takács

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Gyorgy Hajos

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Zsuzsanna Riedl

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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