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Dive into the research topics where Piotr Zimniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Piotr Zimniak.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Cloning, expression and biochemical characterization of one Epsilon-class (GST-3) and ten Delta-class (GST-1) glutathione S-transferases from Drosophila melanogaster, and identification of additional nine members of the Epsilon class.

Rafał Sawicki; Sharda P. Singh; Ashis K. Mondal; Helen Beneš; Piotr Zimniak

From the fruitfly, Drosophila melanogaster, ten members of the cluster of Delta-class glutathione S-transferases (GSTs; formerly denoted as Class I GSTs) and one member of the Epsilon-class cluster (formerly GST-3) have been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and their catalytic properties have been determined. In addition, nine more members of the Epsilon cluster have been identified through bioinformatic analysis but not further characterized. Of the 11 expressed enzymes, seven accepted the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal as substrate, and nine were active in glutathione conjugation of 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. Since the enzymically active proteins included the gene products of DmGSTD3 and DmGSTD7 which were previously deemed to be pseudogenes, we investigated them further and determined that both genes are transcribed in Drosophila. Thus our present results indicate that DmGSTD3 and DmGSTD7 are probably functional genes. The existence and multiplicity of insect GSTs capable of conjugating 4-hydroxynonenal, in some cases with catalytic efficiencies approaching those of mammalian GSTs highly specialized for this function, indicates that metabolism of products of lipid peroxidation is a highly conserved biochemical pathway with probable detoxification as well as regulatory functions.


International Journal of Cancer | 2003

TRANSPORT OF GLUTATHIONE CONJUGATES AND CHEMOTHERAPEUTIC DRUGS BY RLIP76 (RALBP1): A NOVEL LINK BETWEEN G-PROTEIN AND TYROSINE KINASE SIGNALING AND DRUG RESISTANCE

Sanjay Awasthi; Sharad S. Singhal; Rajendra Sharma; Piotr Zimniak; Yogesh C. Awasthi

Our studies have shown that RLIP76 (RALBP1), a 76 kDa Ral‐binding, Rho/Rac‐GAP and Ral effector protein, is a novel multispecific transporter of xenobiotics as well as GS‐Es. Like previously characterized ABC transporters, it mediates ATP‐dependent transport of structurally unrelated amphiphilic xenobiotics and displays inherent ATPase activity, which is stimulated by its substrate allocrites. It does not have significant sequence homology with ABC transporters and differs from the ABC transporters in several other important aspects, including (i) lack of any close homologs in humans, (ii) lack of a classical Walker domain, (iii) integral membrane association without clearly defined transmembrane domains and (iv) its role as a direct link to Ras/Ral/Rho and EGF‐R signaling through its multifunctional nature, including GAP activity, regulation of exocytosis as well as clathrin‐coated pit–mediated receptor endocytosis. Its multifunctional nature derives from the presence of multiple motifs, including a Rho/Rac GAP domain, a Ral effector domain binding motif, 2 distinct ATP‐binding domains, a H+‐ATPase domain, PKC and tyrosine kinase phosphorylation sites and the ability to undergo fragmentation into multiple smaller peptides which participate as components of macromolecular functional complexes. One of the physiologic functions of RLIP76 is regulation of intracellular concentration of the electrophilic intermediates of oxidative lipid metabolism by mediating efflux of GS‐E formed from oxidative degradation of arachidonic acid, including leukotrienes and the 4HNE‐GSH conjugate. RLIP76‐mediated transport of amphiphilic chemotherapeutic agents such as anthracyclines and vinca alkaloids as well as GS‐E produced during oxidative metabolism places this multifunctional protein in a central role as a resistance mechanism for preventing apoptosis caused by chemotherapeutic agents and a variety of external/internal stressors, including oxidative stress, heat shock and radiation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cells preconditioned with mild, transient UVA irradiation acquire resistance to oxidative stress and UVA-induced apoptosis: role of 4-hydroxynonenal in UVA-mediated signaling for apoptosis.

Yusong Yang; Abha Sharma; Brad Patrick; Sharad S. Singhal; Piotr Zimniak; Sanjay Awasthi; Yogesh C. Awasthi

Because 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) has been suggested to be involved in oxidative stress-mediated apoptosis (Cheng, J. Z., Sharma, R., Yang, Y., Singhal, S. S., Sharma, A., Saini, M. K., Singh, S. V., Zimniak, P., Awasthi, S., and Awasthi, Y. C. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 41213–41223) and UVA irradiation also causes lipid peroxidation, we have examined the role of 4-HNE in UVA-mediated apoptosis. K562 cells irradiated with UVA (3.0 milliwatts/cm2) for 5, 15, and 30 min showed a time dependent increase in 4-HNE levels. As judged by the activation of caspases, apoptosis was observed only in cells irradiated for 30 min. Within 2 h of recovery in normal medium, 4-HNE levels in 5 and 15 min UVA, irradiated cells returned to the basal or even lower levels but in cells irradiated for 30 min, 4-HNE levels remained consistently higher. The cells irradiated with UVA for 5 min and allowed to recover for 2 h in normal medium (UVA-preconditioned cells) showed a remarkable induction of hGST5.8, which catalyzes conjugation of 4-HNE to glutathione (GSH), and RLIP76 (Ral BP-1), which mediates the transport of the conjugate, GS-HNE. In cells irradiated with UVA for 30 min the induction of RLIP76 or hGST5.8 was not observed. The preconditioned cells transported GS-HNE into the medium at a rate about 2-fold higher than the controls and the transport was inhibited (65%) by coating the cells with anti-RLIP76 IgG. Upon treatment with xanthine/xanthine oxidase (XA/XO), 4-HNE, or prolonged UVA exposure, the control cells showed a sustained activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and apoptosis. However, in the UVA-preconditioned cells, apoptosis was not observed, and JNK activation was inhibited. This resistance of preconditioned cells to XA/XO-, 4-HNE-, or UVA-induced apoptosis could be abrogated when these cells were coated with anti-RLIP76 IgG to block the efflux of GS-HNE. These studies strongly suggest a role of 4-HNE in UVA-mediated apoptosis.


Aging Cell | 2005

Lifespan and stress resistance of Caenorhabditis elegans are increased by expression of glutathione transferases capable of metabolizing the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal

Srinivas Ayyadevara; Mark R. Engle; Sharda P. Singh; Abhijit Dandapat; Cheryl F. Lichti; Helen Beneš; Robert J. Shmookler Reis; Eva Liebau; Piotr Zimniak

Caenorhabditis elegans expresses a glutathione transferase (GST) belonging to the Pi class, for which we propose the name CeGSTP2‐2. CeGSTP2‐2 (the product of the gst‐10 gene) has the ability to conjugate the lipid peroxidation product 4‐hydroxynonenal (4‐HNE). Transgenic C. elegans strains were generated in which the 5′‐flanking region and promoter of gst‐10 were placed upstream of gst‐10 and mGsta4 cDNAs, respectively. mGsta4 encodes the murine mGSTA4‐4, an enzyme with particularly high catalytic efficiency for 4‐HNE. The localization of both transgenes was similar to that of native CeGSTP2‐2. The 4‐HNE‐conjugating activity in worm lysates increased in the order: control < mGsta4 transgenic < gst‐10 transgenic; and the amount of 4‐HNE‐protein adducts decreased in the same order, indicating that the transgenic enzymes were active and effective in limiting electrophilic damage by 4‐HNE. Stress resistance and lifespan were measured in transgenic animals (five independent lines each) and were compared with two independent control lines. Resistance to paraquat, heat shock, ultraviolet irradiation and hydrogen peroxide was greater in transgenic strains. Median lifespan of mGsta4 and gst‐10 transgenic strains vs. control strains was increased by 13% and 22%, respectively. In addition to the cause–effect relationship between GST expression and lifespan observed in the transgenic lines, correlative evidence was also obtained in a series of congenic lines of C. elegans in which lifespan paralleled the 4‐HNE‐conjugating activity in whole‐animal lysates. We conclude that electrophilic damage by 4‐HNE may contribute to organismal aging.


Biochemistry | 2008

Role of the Electrophilic Lipid Peroxidation Product 4-Hydroxynonenal in the Development and Maintenance of Obesity in Mice

Sharda P. Singh; Maciej Niemczyk; Deepti Saini; Yogesh C. Awasthi; Ludwika Zimniak; Piotr Zimniak

The lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) is a signaling mediator with wide-ranging biological effects. In this paper, we report that disruption of mGsta4, a gene encoding the 4-HNE-conjugating enzyme mGSTA4-4, causes increased 4-HNE tissue levels and is accompanied by age-dependent development of obesity which precedes the onset of insulin resistance in 129/sv mice. In contrast, mGsta4 null animals in the C57BL/6 genetic background have normal 4-HNE levels and remain lean, indicating a role of 4-HNE in triggering or maintaining obesity. In mGsta4 null 129/sv mice, the expression of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) transcript is enhanced several-fold with a concomitant increase in the tissue level of malonyl-CoA. Also, mitochondrial aconitase is partially inhibited, and tissue citrate levels are increased. Accumulation of citrate could lead to allosteric activation of ACC, further augmenting malonyl-CoA levels. Aconitase may be inhibited by 4-HNE or by peroxynitrite generated by macrophages which are enriched in white adipose tissue of middle-aged mGsta4 null 129/sv mice and, upon lipopolysaccharide stimulation, produce more reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide than macrophages from wild-type mice. Excessive malonyl-CoA synthesized by the more abundant and/or allosterically activated ACC in mGsta4 null mice leads to fat accumulation by the well-known mechanisms of promoting fatty acid synthesis and inhibiting fatty acid beta-oxidation. Our findings complement the recent report that obesity causes both a loss of mGSTA4-4 and an increase in the level of 4-HNE [Grimsrud, P. A., et al. (2007) Mol. Cell. Proteomics 6, 624-637]. The two reciprocal processes are likely to establish a positive feedback loop that would promote and perpetuate the obese state.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

Relationship of electrophilic stress to aging

Piotr Zimniak

This review begins with the premise that an organisms life span is determined by the balance between two countervailing forces: (i) the sum of destabilizing effects and (ii) the sum of protective longevity-assurance processes. Against this backdrop, the role of electrophiles is discussed, both as destabilizing factors and as signals that induce protective responses. Because most biological macromolecules contain nucleophilic centers, electrophiles are particularly reactive and toxic in a biological context. The majority of cellular electrophiles are generated from polyunsaturated fatty acids by a peroxidation chain reaction that is readily triggered by oxygen-centered radicals, but propagates without further input of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Thus, the formation of lipid-derived electrophiles such as 4-hydroxynon-2-enal (4-HNE) is proposed to be relatively insensitive to the level of initiating ROS, but to depend mainly on the availability of peroxidation-susceptible fatty acids. This is consistent with numerous observations that life span is inversely correlated to membrane peroxidizability, and with the hypothesis that 4-HNE may constitute the mechanistic link between high susceptibility of membrane lipids to peroxidation and shortened life span. Experimental interventions that directly alter membrane composition (and thus their peroxidizability) or modulate 4-HNE levels have the expected effects on life span, establishing that the connection is not only correlative but causal. Specific molecular mechanisms are considered, by which 4-HNE could (i) destabilize biological systems via nontargeted reactions with cellular macromolecules and (ii) modulate signaling pathways that control longevity-assurance mechanisms.


Ageing Research Reviews | 2008

Detoxification reactions: relevance to aging

Piotr Zimniak

It is widely (although not universally) accepted that organismal aging is the result of two opposing forces: (i) processes that destabilize the organism and increase the probability of death, and (ii) longevity assurance mechanisms that prevent, repair, or contain damage. Processes of the first group are often chemical and physico-chemical in nature, and are either inevitable or only under marginal biological control. In contrast, protective mechanisms are genetically determined and are subject to natural selection. Life span is therefore largely dependent on the investment into protective mechanisms which evolve to optimize reproductive fitness. Recent data indicate that toxicants, both environmental and generated endogenously by metabolism, are major contributors to macromolecular damage and physiological dysregulation that contribute to aging; electrophilic carbonyl compounds derived from lipid peroxidation appear to be particularly important. As a consequence, detoxification mechanisms, including the removal of electrophiles by glutathione transferase-catalyzed conjugation, are major longevity assurance mechanisms. The expression of multiple detoxification enzymes, each with a significant but relatively modest effect on longevity, is coordinately regulated by signaling pathways such as insulin/insulin-like signaling, explaining the large effect of such pathways on life span. The major aging-related toxicants and their cognate detoxification systems are discussed in this review.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008

4-Hydroxynonenal induces p53-mediated apoptosis in retinal pigment epithelial cells

Abha Sharma; Rajendra Sharma; Pankaj Chaudhary; Rit Vatsyayan; Virginia Pearce; Prince V.S. Jeyabal; Piotr Zimniak; Sanjay Awasthi; Yogesh C. Awasthi

4-Hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) has been suggested to be involved in stress-induced signaling for apoptosis. In present studies, we have examined the effects of 4-HNE on the intrinsic apoptotic pathway associated with p53 in human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE and ARPE-19) cells. Our results show that 4-HNE causes induction, phosphorylation, and nuclear accumulation of p53 which is accompanied with down regulation of MDM2, activation of the pro-apoptotic p53 target genes viz. p21 and Bax, JNK, caspase3, and onset of apoptosis in treated RPE cells. Reduced expression of p53 by an efficient silencing of the p53 gene resulted in a significant resistance of these cells to 4-HNE-induced cell death. The effects of 4-HNE on the expression and functions of p53 are blocked in GSTA4-4 over expressing cells indicating that 4-HNE-induced, p53-mediated signaling for apoptosis is regulated by GSTs. Our results also show that the induction of p53 in tissues of mGsta4 (-/-) mice correlate with elevated levels of 4-HNE due to its impaired metabolism. Together, these studies suggest that 4-HNE is involved in p53-mediated signaling in in vitro cell cultures as well as in vivo that can be regulated by GSTs.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2003

REVIEW: Activation of Muscarinic Receptor Signaling by Bile Acids: Physiological and Medical Implications

Jean-Pierre Raufman; Kunrong Cheng; Piotr Zimniak

Besides their known physiological actions, bile acids are signaling molecules that alter cell function by interacting with muscarinic and nuclear receptors. Bile acid interaction with nuclear receptors modulates bile acid and cholesterol metabolism, whereas the potential consequences of muscarinic receptor activation are much broader. This review examines recent discoveries regarding bile acid interaction with muscarinic receptors. Selective and functional bile acid interaction has been reported with M3 receptors expressed in guinea pig gastric chief cells, human colon cancer cells, and transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. Interaction of bile acids with chief cells may contribute to mucosal damage and other pathophysiological consequences of bile reflux. Bile acid-induced stimulation of muscarinic receptors on colon cancer cells may contribute to cellular proliferation and neoplasia. Potential consequences of bile acid interaction with muscarinic receptors on gastrointestinal myocytes, biliary epithelium, vascular endothelium and dermal neurons are discussed. Elucidation of molecular mechanisms underlying interaction of bile acids with muscarinic receptors may suggest new treatments for conditions that result from such interactions.


FEBS Letters | 1992

A subgroup of class α glutathione S-transferases Cloning of cDNA for mouse lung glutathione S-transferase GST 5.7

Piotr Zimniak; Michael A. Eckles; Manju Saxena; Yogesh C. Awasthi

A full‐length cDNA clone encoding the previously purified mouse glutathione S‐transferase GST 5.7 [(1991), Biochem. J. 278, 793–799] has been isolated from a mouse lung cDNA library in λgt11. Sequencing of the clone revealed the presence of microheterogeneity in GST 5.7. Comparison of the deduced protein sequence with other glutathione S‐transferases, together with previous information available on GST 5.7, indicates that the enzyme belongs to a novel subgroup within the α class of glutathione S‐transferases. Members of the subgroup, which also include the rat GST 8‐8 and perhaps chicken GST CL3, show high sequence homology with each other, but only moderate similarity to other α class enzymes. They share a substrate specificity profile that resembles π‐class enzymes, and are active in the conjugation of lipid peroxidation products.

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Yogesh C. Awasthi

University of North Texas Health Science Center

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Sanjay Awasthi

Beckman Research Institute

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Sharad S. Singhal

University of Texas at Arlington

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Sharda P. Singh

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Rajendra Sharma

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Yusong Yang

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Abha Sharma

University of Texas Medical Branch

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