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Dive into the research topics where Marianna Sikorska is active.

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Featured researches published by Marianna Sikorska.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1979

The regulation of cell proliferation by calcium and cyclic AMP.

James F. Whitfield; Alton L. Boynton; John P. MacManus; Marianna Sikorska; B. K. Tsang

Calcium, in partnership with cyclic AMP, controls the proliferation of non-tumorigenic cells in vitro and in vivo. While it does not seem to be involved in the proliferative activation of cells such as hepatocytes (in vivo) or small lymphocytes (in vitro), it does control two later stages of prereplicative (G1) development. It must be one of the very many regulatory and permissive factors affecting early prereplicative development, because severe calcium deprivation reversibly arrests some types of cell early in the G1 phase of their growth-division cycle in vitro. However, calcium more specifically and much more often regulates a later (mid or late G1) stage of prereplicative development. Thus, regardless of its severity or the type of cell, calcium deprivation in vitro or in vivo reversibly stops proliferative development at that part of the G1 phase in which the cellular cyclic AMP content transiently rises and the synthesis of the four deoxyribonucleotides begins. The evidence points to calcium and the cyclic AMP surge being co-generators of the signal committing the cell to DNA synthesis. The evidence is best explained so far by the cyclic AMP surge causing a surge of calcium ions which combine with molecules of the multi-purpose, calcium-dependent, regulator protein calmodulin (CDR) somewhere between the cell surface and the cytosol. The resulting Ca-calmodulin complexes then stimulate many different (and possibly membrane-associated) enzymes such as protein kinases, one of which produces the DNA-synthetic initiator. Calcium has little or no influence on the proliferation of tumor cells. Some possible explanations of this very important loss of control are considered.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1980

THE ROLES OF CALCIUM AND CYCLIC AMP IN CELL PROLIFERATION

James F. Whitfield; Alton L. Boynton; John P. MacManus; R. H. Rixon; Marianna Sikorska; B. K. Tsang; P. R. Walker; S. H. H. Swierenga

Besides activating eggs and triggering muscle contraction, calcium and the three hormones (calcitonin, la , 25(OHh vitamin D,, parathyroid hormone) controlling its level in the blood are important regulators of DNA synthesis and mitotic activity in the bone marrow, liver and thymus of the rat.’-’’ Calcium also controls the proliferation of nontumorigenic epithelial and mesenchymaUy derived cells in ~itro,’~-~~ but it has little or no influence on corresponding tumor cells.~7-m, 4 a. 25-28


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Sequential DNA methylation of the Nanog and Oct-4 upstream regions in human NT2 cells during neuronal differentiation.

Paromita Deb-Rinker; Dao Ly; Anna Jezierski; Marianna Sikorska; P. Roy Walker

Human NT2 cells, which differentiate into neurons and astrocytes, initially express and then permanently down-regulate Nanog and Oct-4 (POU5F1). We investigated the relationship between the expression of these genes and the methylation state of their 5′-flanking regions. Gene expression and DNA methylation were assayed with quantitative polymerase chain reaction and bisulfite genomic sequencing, respectively. Retinoic acid-induced differentiation of NT2 cells to neurons is accompanied by a sequential decrease in the expression of both genes, paralleled by sequential epigenetic modification of their upstream regions. This is the first report demonstrating changes in DNA methylation in the promoter regions of Nanog and Oct-4 in a human cell line.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2005

Role of mitochondria in neuronal cell death induced by oxidative stress; neuroprotection by Coenzyme Q10.

M. Somayajulu; S. McCarthy; M. Hung; Marianna Sikorska; Henryk Borowy-Borowski; Siyaram Pandey

Neuronal cells depend on mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation for most of their energy needs and therefore are at a particular risk for oxidative stress. Mitochondria play an important role in energy production and oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. In the present study, we have demonstrated that external oxidative stress induces mitochondrial dysfunction leading to increased ROS generation and ultimately apoptotic cell death in neuronal cells. Furthermore, we have investigated the role of Coenzyme Q10 as a neuroprotective agent. Coenzyme Q10 is a component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain and a potent anti-oxidant. Our results indicate that total cellular ROS generation was inhibited by Coenzyme Q10. Further, pre-treatment with Coenzyme Q10 maintained mitochondrial membrane potential during oxidative stress and reduced the amount of mitochondrial ROS generation. Our study suggests that water-soluble Coenzyme Q10 acts by stabilizing the mitochondrial membrane when neuronal cells are subjected to oxidative stress. Therefore, Coenzyme Q10 has the potential to be used as a therapeutic intervention for neurodegenerative diseases.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1991

The direct measurement of protein kinase C (PKC) activity in isolated membranes using a selective peptide substrate

Balu Chakravarthy; Alexandra Bussey; James F. Whitfield; Marianna Sikorska; Ross E. Williams; Jon P. Durkin

A protein kinase C (PKC)-selective peptide substrate was used to develop a method for measuring PKC activity directly and quantitatively in isolated cell membranes without prior detergent extraction and reconstitution of the enzyme with phosphatidylserine and TPA in the presence of excess Ca2+. This simple and rapid method can reliably measure changes in membrane-associated PKC activity induced by various bioactive compounds such as hormones and growth factors. Also, this method, which measures PKC activity in its native membrane-associated state, has the advantage of being able to distinguish between active and inactive PKC associated with cell membranes.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2010

Differentiation of mouse Neuro 2A cells into dopamine neurons.

Roger Tremblay; Marianna Sikorska; Jagdeep K. Sandhu; Patricia Lanthier; Maria Ribecco-Lutkiewicz; Mahmud Bani-Yaghoub

Neuro 2A (N2a) is a mouse neural crest-derived cell line that has been extensively used to study neuronal differentiation, axonal growth and signaling pathways. A convenient characteristic of these cells is their ability to differentiate into neurons within a few days. However, most differentiation methods reported for N2a cells do not provide information about the neuronal types obtained after each treatment. In this study, we evaluated the generation of N2a dopamine neurons following treatment with a number of factors known to induce neuronal differentiation. Our results showed that N2a cells express Nurr-related factor 1 (Nurr1) and produce low levels of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine. Both TH and dopamine levels were significantly enhanced in the presence of dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (dbcAMP), as evidenced by Western blot, immunocytochemistry and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). In contrast to dbcAMP, other factors such as transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF beta 1), bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4), glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and retinoic acid (RA) did not increase TH expression. Further investigation confirmed that the effect of dbcAMP on production of TH-positive neurons was mediated through cyclic AMP (cAMP) responsive element binding protein (CREB) and it was antagonized by RA. Thus, although various treatments can be used to generate N2a neurons, only dbcAMP significantly enhanced the formation of dopamine neurons. Taken together, this study provided a simple and reliable method to generate dopamine neurons for rapid and efficient physiological and pharmacological assays.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2003

Molecular mechanisms of glutamate neurotoxicity in mixed cultures of NT2-derived neurons and astrocytes: protective effects of coenzyme Q10.

Jagdeep K. Sandhu; Siyaram Pandey; Maria Ribecco-Lutkiewicz; Robert Monette; Henryk Borowy-Borowski; P. Roy Walker; Marianna Sikorska

Although glutamate excitotoxicity has long been implicated in neuronal cell death associated with a variety of neurological disorders, the molecular mechanisms underlying this process are not yet fully understood. In part, this is due to the lack of relevant experimental cell systems recapitulating the in vivo neuronal environment, mainly neuronal–glial interactions. To explore these mechanisms, we have analyzed the cytotoxic effects of glutamate on mixed cultures of NT2/N neurons and NT2/A astrocytes derived from human NT2/D1 cells. In these cultures, the neurons were resistant to glutamate alone (up to 2 mM for 24–48 hr), but they responded to a simultaneous exposure to 0.5 mM glutamate and 6 hr of hypoxia. Neuronal cell death occurred during subsequent periods of reoxygenation (>30% within 24 hr). This was associated with a marked decrease of intracellular ATP, a significant increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and downregulation of glutamate uptake by astrocytes. Thus, under energy failure and high levels of ROS production, only the neurons from these mixed cultures succumbed to glutamate neurotoxicity; the astrocytic cells remained unaffected by the treatment. Taken together, our data suggested that glutamate excitotoxicity might be due to the energy failure and oxidative stress affecting the properties of the NMDA glutamate receptors and causing impairment of glutamate transporters. Cells pretreated for 72 hr with 10 μg/ml of coenzyme Q10 (functions both as a ROS scavenger and co‐factor of mitochondrial electron transport), were protected, suggesting a useful role for coenzyme Q10 in treatments of neurological diseases associated with glutamate excitotoxicity. A model of the complex interactions between neurons and astrocytes in regulating glutamate metabolism is presented.


Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 1987

Calcium, cyclic AMP and protein kinase C — partners in mitogenesis

James F. Whitfield; Jon P. Durkin; Douglas J. Franks; Leonard P. Kleine; Leda Raptis; R. H. Rixon; Marianna Sikorska; P. Roy Walker

SummaryEvidence is steadily mounting that the proto-oncogenes, whose products organize and start the programs that drive normal eukaryotic cells through their chromosome replication/mitosis cycles, are transiently stimulated by sequential signals from a multi-purpose, receptor-operated mechanism (consisting of internal surges of Ca2+ and bursts of protein kinase C activity resulting from phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate breakdown and the opening of membrane Ca2+ channels induced by receptor-associated tyrosine-protein kinase activity) and bursts of cyclic AMP-dependent kinase activity. The bypassing or subversion of the receptor-operated Ca2+/phospholipid breakdown/protein kinase C signalling mechanism is probably the basis of the freeing of cell proliferation from external controls that characterizes all neoplastic transformations.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2009

Astrocyte-secreted GDNF and glutathione antioxidant system protect neurons against 6OHDA cytotoxicity

Jagdeep K. Sandhu; Mossa Gardaneh; Rafal Iwasiow; Patricia Lanthier; Sandhya Gangaraju; Maria Ribecco-Lutkiewicz; Roger Tremblay; Kazutoshi Kiuchi; Marianna Sikorska

In recent years, GDNF has emerged as a protective and restorative agent in several models of neurodegeneration; however, the exact molecular mechanisms responsible for these effects are not yet fully understood. Here we examined the effects of astrocytes secreting GDNF on neurons subjected to 6OHDA toxicity using in vitro neuron-astroglia co-cultures. Astrocytes were transduced with lentiviral vectors carrying the GDNF gene under the control of either human glial fibrillary acidic protein or cytomegalovirus promoters. The overexpression of GDNF, regardless of the promoter employed, had no obvious adverse effects on astroglia and the engineered cells stably produced and secreted GDNF for extended periods of time (> or =3 weeks). These astrocytes very effectively protected neurons against 6OHDA, in both mouse and human co-culture systems. The neuroprotective effects were mediated not only by GDNF, but also by the antioxidant GSH since its depletion reduced the level of GDNF protection. Furthermore, neurons and astrocytes expressed different components of GDNF signaling complex, suggesting that they might utilize separate pathways to mediate autocrine and paracrine effects of GDNF.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1980

REGULATION OF PROLIFERATION OF NORMAL AND NEOPLASTIC RAT LIVER CELLS BY CALCIUM AND CYCLIC AMP

S. H. H. Swierenga; James F. Whitfield; Alton L. Boynton; John P. MacManus; R. H. Rixon; Marianna Sikorska; B. K. Tsang; P. R. Walker

Calcium and cyclic AMP control the proliferation of nontumorigenic liver cells. These agents seem to be cogenerators of a signal to start synthesizing deoxyribonucleotides, the earliest of the DNA synthetic processes. By contrast, calcium has little or no effect on the proliferation of tumorigenic cells in vitro. Some possible reasons for this loss of control are presented, and the usefulness of this property as a tool for the detection of carcinogens is discussed.

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P. Roy Walker

National Research Council

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Brandon Smith

National Research Council

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Caroline Sodja

National Research Council

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Anna Jezierski

National Research Council

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