S. V. Burov
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by S. V. Burov.
Neuroscience | 2006
G. Lunardi; Alessandro Parodi; L. Perasso; A.V. Pohvozcheva; S. Scarrone; E. Adriano; T. Florio; C. Gandolfo; A. Cupello; S. V. Burov; M. Balestrino
Hereditary creatine transporter deficiency causes brain damage, despite the brain having the enzymes to synthesize creatine. Such damage occurring despite an endogenous synthesis is not easily explained. This condition is incurable, because creatine may not be delivered to the brain without its transporter. Creatine-derived compounds that crossed the blood-brain barrier in a transporter-independent fashion would be useful in the therapy of hereditary creatine transporter deficiency, and possibly also in neuroprotection against brain anoxia or ischemia. We tested the double hypothesis that: (1) the creatine carrier is needed to make creatine cross the plasma membrane of brain cells and (2) creatine-derived molecules may cross this plasma membrane independently of the creatine carrier. In in vitro mouse hippocampal slices, incubation with creatine increased creatine and phosphocreatine content of the tissue. Inhibition of the creatine transporter with 3-guanidinopropionic acid (GPA) dose-dependently prevented this increase. Incubation with creatine benzyl ester (CrOBzl) or phosphocreatine-Mg-complex acetate (PCr-Mg-CPLX) increased tissue creatine content, not phosphocreatine. This increase was not prevented by GPA. Thus, the creatine transporter is required for creatine uptake through the plasma membrane. Since there is a strong indication that creatine in the brain is mainly synthesized by glial cells and transferred to neurons, this might explain why hereditary transporter deficiency is attended by severe brain damage despite the possibility of an endogenous synthesis. CrOBzl and PCr-Mg-CPLX cross the plasma membrane in a transporter-independent way, and might be useful in the therapy of hereditary creatine transporter deficiency. They may also prove useful in the therapy of brain anoxia or ischemia.
Brain Research | 2009
Luisa Perasso; E. Adriano; P. Ruggeri; S. V. Burov; Carlo Gandolfo; Maurizio Balestrino
Phosphocreatine-Mg-complex acetate (PCr-Mg-CPLX) is a creatine-derived compound that in previous in vitro research was able to increase neuronal creatine independently of the creatine transporter, thus providing hope to cure the hereditary syndrome of creatine transporter deficiency. In previous research we showed that it reproduces in vitro the known neuroprotective effect of creatine against anoxic damage. In the present paper we investigated if PCr-Mg-CPLX reproduces this neuroprotective effect in vivo, too. We used a mouse model of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. Mice received PCr-Mg-CPLX or a mixture of the two separate compounds phosphocreatine (PCr) and MgSO(4), or vehicle. The injections were done 60 min and 30 min before ischemia. Forty-eight hours after ischemia neurological damage was evaluated with Clarks behavioural tests, then the infarct volume was measured. PCr-Mg-CPLX reduced the infarct volume by 48%, an effect that was not duplicated by the separate administration of PCr and MgSO(4) and the neurological damage was decreased in a statistically significant way. We conclude that PCr-Mg-CPLX affords in vivo neuroprotection when administered before ischemia. These results are comparable to previous research on creatine administration in experimental stroke. PCr-Mg-CPLX maintains creatine-like neuroprotective effects in vivo as well as in vitro. Our study suggests that PCr-Mg-CPLX might have a therapeutic role in the treatment of hereditary creatine transporter deficiency and of conditions where there is a high risk of impending stroke or cerebral ischemic damage, like high-risk transient ischemic attacks, open heart surgery, and carotid surgery.
International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2016
Roman Akasov; Daria Zaytseva-Zotova; S. V. Burov; Maria V. Leko; Monique Dontenwill; Manuela Chiper; Thierry F. Vandamme; Elena Markvicheva
Development of novel anticancer formulations is a priority challenge in biomedicine. However, in vitro models based on monolayer cultures (2D) which are currently used for cytotoxicity tests leave much to be desired. More and more attention is focusing on 3D in vitro systems which can better mimic solid tumors. The aim of the study was to develop a novel one-step highly reproducible technique for multicellular tumor spheroid (MTS) formation using synthetic cyclic RGD-peptides, and to demonstrate availability of the spheroids as 3D in vitro model for antitumor drug testing. Cell self-assembly effect induced by addition of both linear and cyclic RGD-peptides directly to monolayer cultures was studied for 12 cell lines of various origins, including tumor cells (e.i. U-87 MG, MCF-7, M-3, HCT-116) and normal cells, in particular L-929, BNL.CL2, HepG2. Cyclo-RGDfK and its modification with triphenylphosphonium cation (TPP), namely cyclo-RGDfK(TPP) in a range of 10-100μM were found to induce spheroid formation. The obtained spheroids were unimodal with mean sizes in a range of 60-120μm depending on cell line and serum content in culture medium. The spheroids were used as 3D in vitro model, in order to evaluate cytotoxicity effects of antitumor drugs (doxorubicin, curcumin, temozolomide). The developed technique could be proposed as a promising tool for in vitro test of novel antitumor drugs.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Roman Akasov; Tatiana Borodina; Ekaterina Zaytseva; Anastasia Sumina; T. V. Bukreeva; S. V. Burov; Elena Markvicheva
High toxicity, poor selectivity, and severe side effects are major drawbacks of anticancer drugs. Various drug delivery systems could be proposed to overcome these limitations. The aim of this study was to fabricate polysaccharide microcontainers (MCs) loaded with thymoquinone (TQ) by a one-step ultrasonication technique and to study their cellular uptake and cytotoxicity in vitro. Two MC fractions with a mean size of 500 nm (MC-0.5) and 2 μM (MC-2) were prepared and characterized. Uptake of the MCs by mouse melanoma M-3 cells was evaluated in both 2D (monolayer culture) and 3D (multicellular tumor spheroids) models by confocal microscopy, flow cytometry, and fluorimetry. The higher cytotoxicity of the TQ-MC-0.5 sample than the TQ-MC-2 fraction was in good correlation with higher MC-0.5 accumulation in the cells. The MC-0.5 beads were more promising than the MC-2 particles because of a higher cellular uptake in both 2D and 3D models, an enhanced antitumor effect, and a lower nonspecific toxicity.
Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2012
T. V. Yablokova; Pavel S. Chelushkin; M. Yu. Dorosh; A. M. Efremov; S. V. Orlov; S. V. Burov
A set of GnRH analogues containing the nuclear localization signal (NLS) of the SV-40 virus was synthesized using solid phase peptide synthesis and chemical ligation techniques. Selective chemical ligation was achieved through hydrazone formation upon the interaction of NLS hydrazide and GnRH analogue modified with pyruvic acid. The efficiency of the synthesized compounds was demonstrated in experiments on transfection of various human cancer cell lines with reporter luciferase and β-galactosidase genes, as well as suicide thymidine kinase gene of HSV-1. Selectivity of the peptide-DNA complex effect on cancer cells is achieved as a result of its penetration through the cell membrane via GnRH receptor-mediated endocytosis pathway.
Oncotarget | 2016
Roman Akasov; Sabah Haq; Vanessa Samuel; S. V. Burov; Elena Markvicheva; Ronald J. Neufeld; Myron R. Szewczuk
Multicellular tumor spheroids (MTS) have been at the forefront of cancer research, designed to mimic tumor-like developmental patterns in vitro. Tumor growth in vivo is highly influenced by aberrant cell surface-specific sialoglycan structures on glycoproteins. Aberrant sialoglycan patterns that facilitate MTS formation are not well defined. Matrix-free spheroids from breast MCF-7 and pancreatic PANC1 cancer cell lines and their respective tamoxifen (TMX) and gemcitabine (Gem) resistant variants were generated using the RGD platform of cyclic Arg-Gly-Asp-D-Phe-Lys peptide modified with 4-carboxybutyl-triphenylphosphonium bromide (cyclo-RGDfK (TPP)). MCF-7 and MCF-7 TMX cells formed tight spheroids both in the classical agarose-and RGD-based platforms while all PANC1 cells formed loose aggregates. Using lectin histochemistry staining, sialidase assay, neuraminidase (Vibrio cholerae) and oseltamivir phosphate (OP) neuraminidase inhibitor treatments, MCF-7 and PANC1 cells and their drug-resistant variants expressed different sialic acid (SA) content on their cell surfaces. α-2,3- and α-2,6-sialic acid surface residues facilitated spheroid formation under cyclo-RGDfK(TPP)-induced self-assembly. Pretreatment with α-2,3- SA specific Maackia amurensis (MAL-II) lectin, α-2,6-SA specific Sambucus nigra (SNA) lectin, and exogenous α-2,6-SA specific neuraminidase (Vibrio cholerae) dose-dependently reduced spheroid volume. OP enhanced cell aggregation and compaction forming spheroids. PANC1 and MDA-MB231 xenograft tumors from untreated and OP-treated RAGxCγ double mutant mice expressed significantly higher levels of α-2,3- SA over α-2,6-SA. MCF-7 spheroids also expressed a high α-2,3-SA to α-2,6-SA ratio. These results suggest that the relative levels of specific sialoglycan structures on the cell surface correlate with the ability of cancer cells to form avascular multicellular tumor spheroids and in vivo xenograft tumors.
Bioorganicheskaia khimiia | 2006
S. V. Burov; Yu. E. Moskalenko; Maria V. Leko; M. Yu. Dorosh; E. F. Panarin
N-Amidinoproline, a hybrid structure modeling key features of the Arg-Pro sequence, was synthesized. The activation of carboxyl group of free N-amidinoproline was found to result in the formation of a cyclic side product, whose structure was confirmed by ESI MS, 1H NMR, and 13C NMR spectra. The preparation of N-(mesitylenesulfonylamidino)-L-proline using the mesitylenesulfonyl derivative of 2-methylisothiourea was demonstrated to be accompanied by partial racemization. The target product was synthesized by modification of N-amidinoproline by mesitylenesulfonyl chloride. The possibility of using N-amidinoproline in the N-terminal modification of a peptide chain was shown by the example of synthesis of an analogue of the 95–98 fragment of fibrinogen α chain.
Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2010
S. V. Burov; T. V. Yablokova; M. Yu. Dorosh; E. V. Krivizyuk; A. M. Efremov; S. V. Orlov
With the goal of improving the efficacy of anticancer drugs due to the directed delivery to intracellular targets, a set of luliberin analogues containing the nuclear localization signal (NLS) of the SV-40 virus large T-antigen has been synthesized. The NLS was attached to the parent molecule via the D-lysine ɛ-amino group introduced into position 1 or 6 of the peptide sequence using the orthogonal protection strategy. Biological tests demonstrated that this modification supported in vitro a significant increase in the cytotoxic activity of luliberin analogues containing palmitoyl residues. The influence of the studied peptides on tumor cells was not associated with the distortion of the membrane integrity, which was confirmed by experiments with normal fibroblasts used as a control.
Nanomaterials | 2018
Xia Li; Manpreet Sambi; Alexandria Decarlo; S. V. Burov; Roman Akasov; Elena Markvicheva; Cecile Malardier-Jugroot; Myron R. Szewczuk
Engineering of a “smart” drug delivery system to specifically target tumour cells has been at the forefront of cancer research, having been engineered for safer, more efficient and effective use of chemotherapy for the treatment of cancer. However, selective targeting and choosing the right cancer surface biomarker are critical for a targeted treatment to work. Currently, the available delivery systems use a two-dimensional monolayer of cancer cells to test the efficacy of the drug delivery system, but designing a “smart” drug delivery system to be specific for a tumour in vivo and to penetrate the inner core remains a major design challenge. These challenges can be overcome by using a study model that integrates the three-dimensional aspect of a tumour in a culture system. Here, we tested the efficacy of a functionalized folic acid-conjugated amphiphilic alternating copolymer poly(styrene-alt-maleic anhydride) (FA-DABA-SMA) via a biodegradable linker 2,4-diaminobutyric acid (DABA) to specifically target and penetrate the inner core of three-dimensional avascular human pancreatic and breast tumour spheroids in culture. The copolymer was quantitatively analyzed for its hydrophobic drug encapsulation efficiency using three different chemical drug structures with different molecular weights. Their release profiles and tumour targeting properties at various concentrations and pH environments were also characterized. Using the anticancer drug curcumin and two standard clinical chemotherapeutic hydrophobic drugs, paclitaxel and 5-fluorouracil, we tested the ability of FA-DABA-SMA nanoparticles to encapsulate the differently sized drugs and deliver them to kill monolayer pancreatic cancer cells using the WST-1 cell proliferation assay. The findings of this study revealed that the functionalized folic acid-conjugated amphiphilic alternating copolymer shows unique properties as an active “smart” tumor-targeting drug delivery system with the ability to internalize hydrophobic drugs and release the chemotherapeutics for effective killing of cancer cells. The novelty of the study is the first to demonstrate a functionalized “smart” drug delivery system encapsulated with a hydrophobic drug effectively targeting and penetrating the inner core of pancreatic and breast cancer spheroids and reducing their volumes in a dose- and time-dependent manner.
Doklady Chemistry | 2016
S. V. Burov; Ksenia V. Polyanichko; Pavel S. Chelushkin; M. Yu. Dorosh; I. I. Gavrilova; A. V. Dobrodumov; Yu. V. Pokhvoshchev; V. D. Krasikov; E. F. Panarin
In order to prepare polymeric contrast agents, various ways of modification of N-vinylpyrrolidone copolymers with vinylamine or acrolein with 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid derivatives were investigated.