Monika Bzowska
Jagiellonian University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Monika Bzowska.
Infection and Immunity | 2005
Renata Mężyk-Kopeć; Małgorzata Bzowska; Jan Potempa; Monika Bzowska; Natalia Jura; Aneta Sroka; Roy A. Black; Joanna Bereta
ABSTRACT Gingipains are cysteine proteinases produced by Porphyromonas gingivalis, a major causative bacterium of adult periodontitis. They consist of arginine-specific (HRgpA and RgpB) and lysine-specific (Kgp) proteinases. Gingipains strongly affect the host defense system by degrading some cytokines, components of the complement system, and several immune cell receptors. In an in vitro model, gingipains were shown to degrade soluble tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α). However, since membrane TNF-α shows strong biological activity, especially in local inflammatory lesions, it was worth investigating whether gingipains might also destroy membrane TNF-α and limit its biological activities. To avoid a possible influence of gingipains on ADAM17, the secretase of TNF-α, the majority of experiments were performed using ADAM17−/− fibroblasts stably transfected with cDNA of human pro-TNF-α (ADAM17−/− TNF+). Arginine-specific gingipains (Rgps) strongly diminished the level of TNF-α on the cell surface as measured by flow cytometry, and this process was not accompanied by an increased concentration of soluble TNF-α in the culture medium. Degradation of membrane TNF-α by Rgps correlated with a strong decrease in TNF-α-mediated biological activities of ADAM17−/− TNF+ cells. First, the activation state of transcription factor NF-κB was suppressed; second, the cells were no longer able to induce apoptosis in HL-60 cells. Kgp was also able to cleave membrane TNF-α, but its effect was much weaker than that of Rgps. Gingipains also limited the binding of native TNF-α to the target cells. Thus, gingipains are able not only to cleave soluble TNF-α but also to destroy the membrane form of the cytokine, which may additionally dysregulate the cytokine network.
Cytokine | 2009
Renata Mężyk-Kopeć; Monika Bzowska; Krystyna Stalińska; Tomasz Chełmicki; Michał Podkalicki; Jarosław Jucha; Katarzyna M. Kowalczyk; Paweł Mak; Joanna Bereta
ADAM17 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease)-deficient murine fibroblasts stably transfected with proTNF cDNA release significant amounts of biologically active soluble TNF. The enzyme responsible for this activity is a membrane protein that hydrolyzes the peptide bond Ala(76):Val(77) within proTNF. Its activity is inhibited by 1,10-phenantroline and GM6001, insusceptible to TIMP-2 (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2), and stimulated by ionomycin. These characteristics match ADAM10. The moderate silencing of ADAM10 by shRNA resulted in a significant inhibition of TNF shedding. There was no correlation between the level of ADAM10 expression and the presence of active ADAM17. Our results indicate that ADAM10 may function as the TNF sheddase in cells which lack ADAM17 activity.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2008
Monika Papież; Agnieszka Cierniak; W. Krzysciak; Monika Bzowska; Hevidar Taha; Alicja Jozkowicz; M. Piskula
Quercetin may have the opposite effect, namely anti- as well as pro-oxidant. The aim of this study was to assess the results of quercetin anti- and/or pro-oxidant activity in the bone marrow and spleen cells of rats. The experimental rats were treated daily, with quercetin in a dose of 8 or 80mg/kg b.w. by gavage for 40 days. The intracellular redox state in cells were assessed by measuring the ferric ion reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) level and malonodialdehyde concentration. HO-1 mRNA expression was examined with real-time PCR. The extent of DNA damage was determined by the alkaline-labile comet assay. A potential pro-apoptotic quercetin action was determined using the FITC-Annexin V kit. The quercetin and isorhamnetin concentrations in serum were analyzed by HPLC-ECD. MDA concentration and FRAP values, were significantly decreased in the spleen and bone marrow cells of rats treated with quercetin, in a dose of 80mg/kg b.w. in comparison with the control rats; no significant changes were observed after quercetin was administered in a dose ten times as low. Treatment with quercetin dose-dependently upregulated the expression of HO-1 mRNA in the bone marrow cells. Quercetin administration to the rats did not induce either DNA damage or apoptosis in the examined cells. The results of our study prove that changes in the antioxidant state, caused by quercetin, do not lead to DNA damage or exert any pro-apoptotic activity in vivo.
Biological Chemistry | 2005
Renata Mężyk-Kopeć; Małgorzata Bzowska; Monika Bzowska; Barbara Mickowska; Paweł Mak; Jan Potempa; Joanna Bereta
Abstract Neutrophil elastase (NE) and cathepsin G (CG), the proteolytic enzymes localized in azurophil granules of neutrophils (PMN), are involved in PMN responses to various stimuli. When released at sites of inflammation, they participate in the degradation of numerous proteins involved in the regulation of the immune response. In this study, we employed ADAM17-/- fibroblasts stably transfected with cDNA of human pro-tumor necrosis factor α (proTNFα) (ADAM17-/-TNF+) to investigate the effects of NE and CG on shedding and degradation of TNFα. Both NE and CG were found to diminish the level of membrane TNFα (mTNFα) as measured by flow cytometry. This process was accompanied by the accumulation of biologically active soluble TNFα (sTNFα) in the culture medium, as determined by an increase in both the cytotoxic activity of TNFα and its ability to serve as a co-stimulator in the induction of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS). However, in contrast to CG, NE at high concentrations was able to degrade sTNFα released from the cell surface. Using soluble recombinant human TNFα, we identified Val93-Ala94 and Val117-Glu118 as the NE cleavage sites within the sTNFα molecule. Taken together, the ability of NE and CG to modulate levels of membrane and soluble forms of TNFα may contribute to the proinflammatory activity of neutrophils.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Sudipta Das; Maria Czarnek; Monika Bzowska; Renata Mężyk-Kopeć; Krystyna Stalińska; Barbara Wyroba; Jolanta Sroka; Jarosław Jucha; Dawid Deneka; Paulina Stokłosa; Justyna Ogonek; Melody A. Swartz; Zbigniew Madeja; Joanna Bereta
ADAM17 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17) is a major sheddase for numerous growth factors, cytokines, receptors, and cell adhesion molecules and is often overexpressed in malignant cells. It is generally accepted that ADAM17 promotes tumor development via activating growth factors from the EGF family, thus facilitating autocrine stimulation of tumor cell proliferation and migration. Here we show, using MC38CEA murine colon carcinoma model, that ADAM17 also regulates tumor angiogenesis and cytokine profile. When ADAM17 was silenced in MC38CEA cells, in vivo tumor growth and in vitro cell motility were significantly diminished, but no effect was seen on in vitro cell proliferation. ADAM17-silencing was accompanied by decreased in vitro expression of vascular endothelial growth factor-A and matrix metalloprotease-9, which was consistent with the limited angiogenesis and slower growth seen in ADAM17-silenced tumors. Among the growth factors susceptible to shedding by ADAM17, neuregulin-1 was the only candidate to mediate the effects of ADAM17 on MC38CEA motility and tumor angiogenesis. Concentrations of TNF and IFNγ, cytokines that synergistically induced proapoptotic effects on MC38CEA cells, were significantly elevated in the lysates of ADAM17-silenced tumors compared to mock transfected controls, suggesting a possible role for ADAM17 in host immune suppression. These results introduce new, complex roles of ADAM17 in tumor progression, including its impact on the anti-tumor immune response.
BMC Cell Biology | 2009
Paulina Węgrzyn; Stephen J. Yarwood; Nathalie Fiegler; Monika Bzowska; Aleksander Koj; Danuta Mizgalska; Stanisław Malicki; Magdalena Pajak; Aneta Kasza; Neli Kachamakova-Trojanowska; Joanna Bereta; Jacek Jura; Jolanta Jura
BackgroundThe product of a novel cytokine-responsive gene discovered by differential display analysis in our earlier studies on HepG2 cells was identified as mimitin – a small mitochondrial protein. Since proinflammatory cytokines are known to affect components of the respiratory chain in mitochondria, and mimitin was reported as a possible chaperone for assembly of mitochondrial complex I, we looked for the effects of modulation of mimitin expression and for mimitin-binding partners.ResultsBy blocking mimitin expression in HepG2 cells by siRNA we found that mimitin has no direct influence on caspase 3/7 activities implicated in apoptosis. However, when apoptosis was induced by TNF and cycloheximide, and mimitin expression blocked, the activities of these caspases were significantly increased. This was accompanied by a slight decrease in proliferation of HepG2 cells. Our observations suggest that mimitin may be involved in the control of apoptosis indirectly, through another protein, or proteins. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and coimmunoprecipitation we found MAP1S among proteins interacting with mimitin. MAP1S is a recently identified member of the microtubule-associated protein family and has been shown to interact with NADH dehydrogenase I and cytochrome oxidase I. Moreover, it was implicated in the process of mitochondrial aggregation and nuclear genome destruction. The expression of mimitin is stimulated more than 1.6-fold by IL-1 and by IL-6, with the maximum level of mimitin observed after 18–24 h exposure to these cytokines. We also found that the cytokine-induced signal leading to stimulation of mimitin synthesis utilizes the MAP kinase pathway.ConclusionMimitin is a mitochondrial protein upregulated by proinflammatory cytokines at the transcriptional and protein levels, with MAP kinases involved in IL-1-dependent induction. Mimitin interacts with a microtubular protein (MAP1S), and some changes of mimitin gene expression modulate activity of apoptotic caspases 3/7, suggesting that this protein may indirectly participate in apoptosis.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Benedykt Wladyka; Marcin Piejko; Monika Bzowska; Piotr Pieta; Monika Krzysik; Łukasz Mazurek; Ibeth Guevara-Lora; Michal Bukowski; Artur J. Sabat; Alexander W. Friedrich; Emilia Bonar; Jacek Miedzobrodzki; Adam Dubin; Paweł Mak
Staphylococcus pseudintermedius is a common commensal bacterium colonizing the skin and mucosal surfaces of household animals. However, it has recently emerged as a dangerous opportunistic pathogen, comparable to S. aureus for humans. The epidemiological situation is further complicated by the increasing number of methicillin-resistant S. pseudintermedius infections and evidence of gene transmission driving antibiotic resistance between staphylococci colonizing human and zoonotic hosts. In the present study, we describe a unique peptide, BacSp222, that possesses features characteristic of both bacteriocins and virulence factors. BacSp222 is secreted in high quantities by S. pseudintermedius strain 222 isolated from dog skin lesions. This linear, fifty-amino-acid highly cationic peptide is plasmid-encoded and does not exhibit significant sequence similarities to any other known peptides or proteins. BacSp222 kills gram-positive bacteria (at doses ranging from 0.1 to several micromol/l) but also demonstrates significant cytotoxic activities towards eukaryotic cells at slightly higher concentrations. Moreover, at nanomolar concentrations, the peptide also possesses modulatory properties, efficiently enhancing interferon gamma-induced nitric oxide release in murine macrophage-like cell lines. BacSp222 appears to be one of the first examples of multifunctional peptides that breaks the convention of splitting bacteriocins and virulence factors into two unrelated groups.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Anna M. Lasica; Theodoros Goulas; Danuta Mizgalska; Xiaoyan Zhou; Iñaki de Diego; Miroslaw Ksiazek; Mariusz Madej; Yonghua Guo; Tibisay Guevara; Magdalena Nowak; Barbara Potempa; Apoorv Goel; Maryta Sztukowska; Apurva T. Prabhakar; Monika Bzowska; Magdalena Widziołek; Ida B. Thøgersen; Jan J. Enghild; Mary Simonian; Arkadiusz W. Kulczyk; Ky-Anh Nguyen; Jan Potempa; F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth
Porphyromonas gingivalis is a member of the human oral microbiome abundant in dysbiosis and implicated in the pathogenesis of periodontal (gum) disease. It employs a newly described type-IX secretion system (T9SS) for secretion of virulence factors. Cargo proteins destined for secretion through T9SS carry a recognition signal in the conserved C-terminal domain (CTD), which is removed by sortase PorU during translocation. Here, we identified a novel component of T9SS, PorZ, which is essential for surface exposure of PorU and posttranslational modification of T9SS cargo proteins. These include maturation of enzyme precursors, CTD removal and attachment of anionic lipopolysaccharide for anchorage in the outer membrane. The crystal structure of PorZ revealed two β-propeller domains and a C-terminal β-sandwich domain, which conforms to the canonical CTD architecture. We further documented that PorZ is itself transported to the cell surface via T9SS as a full-length protein with its CTD intact, independently of the presence or activity of PorU. Taken together, our results shed light on the architecture and possible function of a novel component of the T9SS. Knowledge of how T9SS operates will contribute to our understanding of protein secretion as part of host-microbiome interactions by dysbiotic members of the human oral cavity.
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2016
Krzysztof Szczepanowicz; Monika Bzowska; Tomasz Kruk; Alicja Karabasz; Joanna Bereta; Piotr Warszyński
Targeted drug delivery systems are of special importance in cancer therapies, since serious side effects resulting from unspecific accumulation of highly toxic chemotherapeutics in healthy tissues can restrict effectiveness of the therapy. In this work we present the method of preparing biocompatible, polyelectrolyte nanoparticles containing the anticancer drug that may serve as a vehicle for passive tumor targeting. The nanoparticles were prepared via direct encapsulation of emulsion droplets in a polyelectrolyte multilayer shell. The oil cores that contained paclitaxel were stabilized by docusate sodium salt/poly-l-lysine surface complex (AOT/PLL) and were encapsulated in shells formed by the LbL adsorption of biocompatible polyelectrolytes, poly-L-glutamic acid (PGA) and PLL up to 5 or 6 layers. The surface of the nanoparticles was pegylated through the adsorption of the pegylated polyelectrolyte (PGA-g-PEG) as the outer layer to prolong the persistence of the nanocarriers in the circulation. The synthesized nanoparticles were stable in cell culture medium containing serum and their average size was 100nm, which makes them promising candidates for passive targeted drug delivery. This notion was further confirmed by the results of studying the biological effects of nanoformulations on two tumor cell lines: mouse colon carcinoma cell line CT26-CEA and the mouse mammary carcinoma cell line 4T1. The empty polyelectrolyte nanoparticles did not affect the viability of the tested cells, whereas encapsulated paclitaxel retained its strong cytotoxic/cytostatic activity.
Immunology Letters | 2015
Karolina Ossysek; Tomasz Uchański; Małgorzata Kulesza; Monika Bzowska; Tomasz Klaus; Klaudia Woś; Mariusz Madej; Joanna Bereta
Tomlinson I+J are synthetic phagemid human scFv libraries widely employed to obtain specific antibody fragments via a phage display method. The pIT2/HB2151 expression system proposed by the designers of the libraries has certain drawbacks which result in the lack of expression or low expression levels of numerous soluble scFvs. At the stage of scFv screening, this may lead to losing some excellent antibodies, which can be avoided but requires laborious and expensive work. Here we present a new, pET-30-based vector, which is compatible with Tomlinson libraries, retains all virtues of pIT2 used as a plasmid and eliminates all its flaws. We demonstrate that pET-scFv-T is frequently superior to pIT2 in terms of efficient scFv expression. Moreover, an amber suppressor bacterial strain, RosettaBlue(DE3)pLysS, transformed with the new vector, pET-scFv-T, coding for a number of scFvs, produces substantial amounts of functional, easy to purify recombinant antibody fragments, regardless of whether their coding sequences contain amber codons. Thus, pET-scFv-T/RosettaBlue(DE3)pLysS expression system seems to be a perfect tool for screening for the finest soluble scFvs selected from Tomlinson I+J, as well as from many other phagemid libraries.