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Dive into the research topics where Lakshmishri Lahiry is active.

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Featured researches published by Lakshmishri Lahiry.


Cancer Research | 2007

Tumor-Induced Oxidative Stress Perturbs Nuclear Factor-κB Activity-Augmenting Tumor Necrosis Factor-α–Mediated T-Cell Death: Protection by Curcumin

Sankar Bhattacharyya; Debaprasad Mandal; Gouri Sankar Sen; Suman Pal; Shuvomoy Banerjee; Lakshmishri Lahiry; James H. Finke; Charles S. Tannenbaum; Tanya Das; Gaurisankar Sa

Cancer patients often exhibit loss of proper cell-mediated immunity and reduced effector T-cell population in the circulation. Thymus is a major site of T-cell maturation, and tumors induce thymic atrophy to evade cellular immune response. Here, we report severe thymic hypocellularity along with decreased thymic integrity in tumor bearer. In an effort to delineate the mechanisms behind such thymic atrophy, we observed that tumor-induced oxidative stress played a critical role, as it perturbed nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activity. Tumor-induced oxidative stress increased cytosolic IkappaBalpha retention and inhibited NF-kappaB nuclear translocation in thymic T cells. These NF-kappaB-perturbed cells became vulnerable to tumor-secreted tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha (TNF-alpha)-mediated apoptosis through the activation of TNF receptor-associated protein death domain-associated Fas-associated protein death domain and caspase-8. Interestingly, TNF-alpha-depleted tumor supernatants, either by antibody neutralization or by TNF-alpha-small interfering RNA transfection of tumor cells, were unable to kill T cell effectively. When T cells were overexpressed with NF-kappaB, the cells became resistant to tumor-induced apoptosis. In contrast, when degradation-defective IkappaBalpha (IkappaBalpha super-repressor) was introduced into T cells, the cells became more vulnerable, indicating that inhibition of NF-kappaB is the reason behind such tumor/TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis. Curcumin could prevent tumor-induced thymic atrophy by restoring the activity of NF-kappaB. Further investigations suggest that neutralization of tumor-induced oxidative stress and restoration of NF-kappaB activity along with the reeducation of the TNF-alpha signaling pathway can be the mechanism behind curcumin-mediated thymic protection. Thus, our results suggest that unlike many other anticancer agents, curcumin is not only devoid of immunosuppressive effects but also acts as immunorestorer in tumor-bearing host.


FEBS Letters | 2010

Theaflavins retard human breast cancer cell migration by inhibiting NF-κB via p53-ROS cross-talk

Arghya Adhikary; Suchismita Mohanty; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Dewan Md Sakib Hossain; Samik Chakraborty; Tanya Das

MINT‐7295816: p53 (uniprotkb:P04637) physically interacts (MI:0915) with IKK beta (uniprotkb:O14920) by anti bait coimmunoprecipitation (MI:0006)


Apoptosis | 2008

Contribution of p53-mediated Bax transactivation in theaflavin-induced mammary epithelial carcinoma cell apoptosis

Lakshmishri Lahiry; Baisakhi Saha; Juni Chakraborty; Sankar Bhattacharyya; Sreya Chattopadhyay; Shuvomoy Banerjee; Tathagata Choudhuri; Debaprasad Mandal; Arindam Bhattacharyya; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das

Theaflavins, the bioactive flavonoids of black tea, have been demonstrated to inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in a variety of cancer cells. However, the contribution of p53 in mammary epithelial carcinoma cell apoptosis by theaflavins remains unclear. It has been reported that p53 triggers apoptosis by inducing mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization through transcription-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Using wild-type and mutant p53-expressing as well as p53-null cells we found a strong correlation between p53 status and theaflavin-induced breast cancer cell apoptosis. Apoptogenic effect was more pronounced in functional p53-expressing cells in which theaflavins raised p53 protein levels that harmonized with Bax up-regulation and migration to mitochondria. However, in the same cells, when p53-mediated transactivation was inhibited by pifithrin-α, theaflavins not only failed to increase transcription but also to induce apoptosis although p53 up-regulation was not altered. In contrast, Bax over-expression restored back theaflavin-induced apoptosis in pifithrin-α-inhibited/dominant-negative p53-expressing cells. Inhibition of Bax by RNA-interference also reduced theaflavin-induced apoptosis. These results not only indicated the requirement of p53-mediated transcriptional activation of Bax but also its role as down-stream effecter in theaflavin-induced apoptosis. Bax up-regulation resulted in mitochondrial transmembrane potential loss and cytochrome c release followed by activation of caspase cascade. In contrast, mitochondrial translocation of p53 and its interaction with Bcl-2 family proteins or activation of caspase-8 could not be traced thereby excluding the involvement of p53-mediated transcription-independent pathways. Together these findings suggest that in breast cancer cells, p53 promotes theaflavin-induced apoptosis in a transcription-dependent manner through mitochondrial death cascade.


Carcinogenesis | 2010

Theaflavins target Fas/caspase-8 and Akt/pBad pathways to induce apoptosis in p53-mutated human breast cancer cells

Lakshmishri Lahiry; Baisakhi Saha; Juni Chakraborty; Arghya Adhikary; Suchismita Mohanty; Dewan Md Sakib Hossain; Shuvomoy Banerjee; Kaushik Das; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das

The most common alterations found in breast cancer are inactivation or mutation of tumor suppressor gene p53. The present study revealed that theaflavins induced p53-mutated human breast cancer cell apoptosis. Pharmacological inhibition of caspase-8 or expression of dominant-negative (Dn)-caspase-8/Fas-associated death domain (FADD) partially inhibited apoptosis, whereas caspase-9 inhibitor completely blocked the killing indicating involvement of parallel pathways that converged to mitochondria. Further studies demonstrated theaflavin-induced Fas upregulation through the activation of c-jun N-terminal kinase, Fas-FADD interaction in a Fas ligand-independent manner, caspase-8 activation and t-Bid formation. A search for the parallel pathway revealed theaflavin-induced inhibition of survival pathway, mediated by Akt deactivation and Bcl-xL/Bcl-2-associated death promoter dephosphorylation. These well-defined routes of growth control converged to a common process of mitochondrial transmembrane potential loss, cytochrome c release and activation of the executioner caspase-9 and -3. Overexpression of either constitutively active myristylated-Akt (Myr-Akt) or Dn-caspase-8 partially blocked theaflavin-induced mitochondrial permeability transition and apoptosis of p53-mutated cells, whereas cotransfection of Myr-Akt and Dn-caspase-8 completely abolished theaflavin effect thereby negating the possibility of existence of third pathways. These results and other biochemical correlates established the concept that two distinct signaling pathways were regulated by theaflavins to induce mitochondrial death cascade, eventually culminating to apoptosis of p53-mutated human breast cancer cells that are strongly resistant to conventional therapies.


International Journal of Cancer | 2005

Black tea induces tumor cell apoptosis by Bax translocation, loss in mitochondrial transmembrane potential, cytochrome c release and caspase activation.

Arindam Bhattacharyya; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Debaprasad Mandal; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das

Recently the anti‐cancer role of black tea has gained immense importance. Nevertheless, the signaling pathways underlying black tea‐induced tumor cell death are still unknown. Previously we reported that black tea induces Ehrlichs ascites carcinoma (EAC) cell apoptosis by changing the balance between pro‐and anti‐apoptotic proteins. It is now well accepted that many cell death pathways converge at the mitochondria to decrease mitochondrial transmembrane potential (MTP) thereby releasing apoptogenic proteins and resulting in the activation of effecter caspases responsible for the biochemical and morphological alterations associated with apoptosis. The role of pro‐apoptotic protein, Bax, in initiating mitochondrial death cascade has also been established. Here we demonstrate that in culture black tea extract induces EAC apoptosis in a dose‐dependent manner – with IC50 at 100 μg/ml. At this dose, intracellular Bax level increases in EAC followed by its translocation from cytosol to mitochondria resulting in loss in MTP. A search for the downstream pathway further reveals that black tea induces mitochondrial cytochrome c release and activates caspases 9 and 3 by 2 pathways, a) independent of and b) dependent on MTP loss. Interestingly, Black tea‐induced death signal might probably be amplified through mitochondrial membrane depolarization via a feedback activation loop from caspase 3. All these findings indicate that black tea initiates mitochondrial death cascade in EAC cells and thereby results in EAC apoptosis.


Nutrition and Cancer | 2007

Black Tea-Induced Decrease in IL-10 and TGF-β of Tumor Cells Promotes Th1/Tc1 Response in Tumor Bearer

Debaprasad Mandal; Sankar Bhattacharyya; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Sreya Chattopadhyay; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das

Abstract Several lines of evidence support that impairment of host immune function by tumor may be related to several strategies of tumor escape from immunosurveillance. We found that in Ehrlichs ascites carcinoma (EAC)-bearing mice, the tumor cells secrete immunosuppressive cytokines, transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) and interleukin-10 (IL-10) that induce a general T helper cells type 2 (Th2) dominance dampening the T cytotoxic cells type 1 (Tc1) population. Interestingly, black tea at the antitumor dose of 2.5% significantly reduced TGF-β and IL-10 in tumor cells in vivo, thereby preventing Th2 dominance in the tumor bearers and initiating a Th1/Tc1 response. Thus, apart from its anticancer activity, this popular beverage also rejuvenates cancer immunosurveillance by modulating cytokine profiles and establishing Th1/Tc1 dominance in the tumor-bearing host.


Cancer Letters | 2004

Black tea protects immunocytes from tumor-induced apoptosis by changing Bcl-2/Bax ratio

Arindam Bhattacharyya; Debaprasad Mandal; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das


Journal of Environmental Pathology Toxicology and Oncology | 2007

Black Tea-Induced Amelioration of Hepatic Oxidative Stress through Antioxidative Activity in EAC-Bearing Mice

Arindam Bhattacharyya; Deba Prasad Mandal; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Sankar Bhattacharyya; Sreya Chattopadhyay; Uttam K. Ghosh; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das


International Immunopharmacology | 2006

Tumor-induced thymic involution via inhibition of IL-7Rα and its JAK-STAT signaling pathway: Protection by black tea

Debaprasad Mandal; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Arindam Bhattacharyya; Sankar Bhattacharyya; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das


Life Sciences | 2005

Failure in peripheral immuno-surveillance due to thymic atrophy: importance of thymocyte maturation and apoptosis in adult tumor-bearer.

Debaprasad Mandal; Arindam Bhattacharyya; Lakshmishri Lahiry; Tathagata Choudhuri; Gaurisankar Sa; Tanya Das

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Deba Prasad Mandal

West Bengal State University

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