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Dive into the research topics where Sarvjeet Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarvjeet Singh.


Anti-cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry | 2006

Biological effects of curcumin and its role in cancer chemoprevention and therapy.

Sarvjeet Singh; Ashok Khar

Curcumin, a natural component of the rhizome of curcuma longa has emerged as one of the most powerful chemopreventive and anticancer agents. Its biological effects range from antioxidant, anti-inflammatory to inhibition of angiogenesis and is also shown to possess specific antitumoral activity. The molecular mechanism of its varied cellular effects has been studied in some details and it has been shown to have multiple targets and interacting macromolecules within the cell. Curcumin has been shown to possess anti-angiogenic properties and the angioinhibitory effects of curcumin manifest due to down regulation of proangiogenic genes such as VEGF and angiopoitin and a decrease in migration and invasion of endothelial cells. One of the important factors implicated in chemoresistance and induced chemosensitivity is NFkB and curcumin has been shown to down regulate NFkB and inhibit IKB kinase thereby suppressing proliferation and inducing apoptosis. Cell lines that are resistant to certain apoptotic inducers and radiation become susceptible to apoptosis when treated in conjunction with curcumin. Besides this it can also act as a chemopreventive agent in cancers of colon, stomach and skin by suppressing colonic aberrant crypt foci formation and DNA adduct formation. This review focuses on the various aspects of curcumin as a potential drug for cancer treatment and its implications in a variety of biological and cellular processes vis-à-vis its mechanism of action.


International Immunopharmacology | 2008

Immunomodulatory effects of curcumin : In-vivo

Ch. Varalakshmi; A. Mubarak Ali; B.V.V. Pardhasaradhi; Raghvendra M. Srivastava; Sarvjeet Singh; Ashok Khar

Curcumin specifically exhibits cytostatic and cytotoxic effects against tumors of multiple origin. Previously we have demonstrated apoptotic activity of curcumin against tumor cells with no effect on normal cells in-vitro. Many anti-cancer drugs exhibit deleterious effects on immune cells, which restrict their wide use in-vivo. In the present study, we have evaluated the effect of curcumin on the major functions of T cells, natural killer cells, macrophages and on total splenocytes in-vivo, which insight the role of curcumin on their broad effector functions. This study demonstrates that prolonged curcumin-injections (i.p.) do not impair the cytotoxic function of natural killer cells, the generation of reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide from macrophages and the levels of Th1 regulatory cytokines remained unaltered. Interestingly, curcumin-injections enhanced the mitogen and antigen induced proliferation potential of T cells. We have also evaluated immunomodulatory effects of curcumin in ascites-bearing animals. This study strengthens our belief that curcumin is a safe and useful immunomodulator for the immune system.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Mice deficient in the respiratory chain gene Cox6a2 are protected against high-fat diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance

Roel Quintens; Sarvjeet Singh; Katleen Lemaire; Katrien De Bock; Mikaela Granvik; Anica Schraenen; Irene O.C.M. Vroegrijk; Veronica Costa; Pieter Van Noten; Dennis Lambrechts; Stefan Lehnert; Leentje Van Lommel; Lieven Thorrez; Geoffroy de Faudeur; Johannes A. Romijn; John M. Shelton; Luca Scorrano; H.R. Lijnen; Peter J. Voshol; Peter Carmeliet; Pradeep P.A. Mammen; Frans Schuit

Oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria is responsible for 90% of ATP synthesis in most cells. This essential housekeeping function is mediated by nuclear and mitochondrial genes encoding subunits of complex I to V of the respiratory chain. Although complex IV is the best studied of these complexes, the exact function of the striated muscle-specific subunit COX6A2 is still poorly understood. In this study, we show that Cox6a2-deficient mice are protected against high-fat diet-induced obesity, insulin resistance and glucose intolerance. This phenotype results from elevated energy expenditure and a skeletal muscle fiber type switch towards more oxidative fibers. At the molecular level we observe increased formation of reactive oxygen species, constitutive activation of AMP-activated protein kinase, and enhanced expression of uncoupling proteins. Our data indicate that COX6A2 is a regulator of respiratory uncoupling in muscle and we demonstrate that a novel and direct link exists between muscle respiratory chain activity and diet-induced obesity/insulin resistance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Cytoglobin modulates myogenic progenitor cell viability and muscle regeneration

Sarvjeet Singh; Diana C. Canseco; Shilpa M. Manda; John M. Shelton; Rajendra R. Chirumamilla; Sean C. Goetsch; Qiu Ye; Robert D. Gerard; Jay W. Schneider; James A. Richardson; Beverly A. Rothermel; Pradeep P.A. Mammen

Significance Mammalian skeletal muscle is a dynamic and plastic tissue, capable of responding to physiological demands and pathophysiological stresses. This response relies on the muscle’s ability to activate myogenic progenitor cells (MPCs) resulting in myogenesis. In this study, we demonstrate that cytoglobin, a stress-responsive hemoprotein abundantly expressed in MPCs, is capable of modulating MPCs’ viability and proliferative/differentiative capacity. Collectively, our data demonstrate that cytoglobin serves an important role in muscle regeneration. Thus, an enhanced understanding of cytoglobin’s role in myogenesis may enable the development of therapeutic approaches for treating patients with muscle injuries and other neuromuscular disorders. Mammalian skeletal muscle can remodel, repair, and regenerate itself by mobilizing satellite cells, a resident population of myogenic progenitor cells. Muscle injury and subsequent activation of myogenic progenitor cells is associated with oxidative stress. Cytoglobin is a hemoprotein expressed in response to oxidative stress in a variety of tissues, including striated muscle. In this study, we demonstrate that cytoglobin is up-regulated in activated myogenic progenitor cells, where it localizes to the nucleus and contributes to cell viability. siRNA-mediated depletion of cytoglobin from C2C12 myoblasts increased levels of reactive oxygen species and apoptotic cell death both at baseline and in response to stress stimuli. Conversely, overexpression of cytoglobin reduced reactive oxygen species levels, caspase activity, and cell death. Mice in which cytoglobin was knocked out specifically in skeletal muscle were generated to examine the role of cytoglobin in vivo. Myogenic progenitor cells isolated from these mice were severely deficient in their ability to form myotubes as compared with myogenic progenitor cells from wild-type littermates. Consistent with this finding, the capacity for muscle regeneration was severely impaired in mice deficient for skeletal-muscle cytoglobin. Collectively, these data demonstrate that cytoglobin serves an important role in muscle repair and regeneration.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Calcineurin Activates Cytoglobin Transcription in Hypoxic Myocytes

Sarvjeet Singh; Shilpa M. Manda; Devanjan Sikder; Michael J. Birrer; Beverly A. Rothermel; Daniel J. Garry; Pradeep P.A. Mammen

Cardiac hypertrophy develops in response to a variety of cardiovascular stresses and results in activation of numerous signaling cascades and proteins. In the present study, we demonstrate that cytoglobin is a stress-responsive hemoprotein in the hypoxia-induced hypertrophic myocardium and it is transcriptionally regulated by calcineurin-dependent transcription factors. The cytoglobin transcript level is abundantly expressed in the adult heart and in response to hypoxia cytoglobin expression is markedly up-regulated within the hypoxia-induced hypertrophic heart. To define the molecular mechanism resulting in the induction of cytoglobin, we undertook a transcriptional analysis of the 5′ upstream regulatory region of the cytoglobin gene. Evolutionarily conserved binding elements for transcription factors HIF-1, AP-1, and NFAT are located within the upstream region of the cytoglobin gene. Transcriptional assays demonstrated that calcineurin activity modulates cytoglobin transcription. Increased calcineurin activity enhances the ability of NFAT and AP-1 to bind to the putative cytoglobin promoter, especially under hypoxic conditions. In addition, inhibition of calcineurin, NFAT, and/or AP-1 activities decreases endogenous cytoglobin transcript and protein levels. Thus, the regulation of cytoglobin transcription by calcineurin-dependent transcription factors suggests that cytoglobin may have a functional role in calcium-dependent events accompanying cardiac remodeling.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2014

Calcineurin and its regulator, RCAN1, confer time-of-day changes in susceptibility of the heart to ischemia/reperfusion

David Rotter; D. Bennett Grinsfelder; Valentina Parra; Zully Pedrozo; Sarvjeet Singh; Nita Sachan; Beverly A. Rothermel

Many important components of the cardiovascular system display circadian rhythmicity. In both humans and mice, cardiac damage from ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) is greatest at the transition from sleep to activity. The causes of this window of susceptibility are not fully understood. In the murine heart we have reported high amplitude circadian oscillations in the expression of the cardioprotective protein regulator of calcineurin 1 (Rcan1). This study was designed to test whether Rcan1 contributes to the circadian rhythm in cardiac protection from I/R damage. Wild type (WT), Rcan1 KO, and Rcan1-Tg mice, with cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of Rcan1, were subjected to 45min of myocardial ischemia followed by 24h of reperfusion. Surgeries were performed either during the first 2h (AM) or during the last 2h (PM) of the animals light phase. The area at risk was the same for all genotypes at either time point; however, in WT mice, PM-generated infarcts were 78% larger than AM-generated infarcts. Plasma cardiac troponin I levels were likewise greater in PM-operated animals. In Rcan1 KO mice there was no significant difference between the AM- and PM-operated hearts, which displayed greater indices of damage similar to that of PM-operated WT animals. Mice with cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of human RCAN1, likewise, showed no time-of-day difference, but had smaller infarcts comparable to those of AM-operated WT mice. In vitro, cardiomyocytes depleted of RCAN1 were more sensitive to simulated I/R and the calcineurin inhibitor, FK506, restored protection. FK506 also conferred protection to PM-infarcted WT animals. Importantly, transcription of core circadian clock genes was not altered in Rcan1 KO hearts. These studies identify the calcineurin/Rcan1-signaling cascade as a potential therapeutic target through which to benefit from innate circadian changes in cardiac protection without disrupting core circadian oscillations that are essential to cardiovascular, metabolic, and mental health.


Apoptosis | 2006

Activation of NFκB and Ub-proteasome pathway during apoptosis induced by a serum factor is mediated through the upregulation of the 26S proteasome subunits

Sarvjeet Singh; Ashok Khar

We have been investigating differential gene expression associated with apoptosis in AK-5 cells (a spontaneously regressing rat histiocytoma) and have observed catalytic subunits beta 7 and alpha 5 of the 26S proteasome and ubiquitin to be upregulated during apoptosis induced by a variety of agents. The observed elevation in gene expression was parallel to a comparable increase in the cytosolic protein expression of the proteasome and ubiquitin and a markedly amplified increase in the proteasome activity. Inhibition of the increase in gene expression resulted in the inhibition of the rise in the proteasome activity subsequently leading to an inhibition of apoptosis. Similarly, pretreatment with proteasome inhibitors, MG132 and lactacystin, resulted in a significant inhibition of apoptosis pointing to the requirement of a highly active protein degradation machinery during apoptosis. The apoptosis inhibitory effect of the proteasome inhibitors involved an inhibition of the activation of various initiator and effector caspases but was independent of any changes in the mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cytochrome c release associated with apoptosis. Inhibition of proteasome activity or its upstream PI3 kinase activity inhibited NFκB translocation thereby suppressing apoptosis, which highlights the requirement of NFκB activation for completion of apoptosis in AK-5 cells. Hence, the apoptosis associated induction of the Ub-proteasome pathway components and the proteasome activity suggests that the proteasome, in its capacity as an efficient protein degradation complex, plays an important role in the successful execution of apoptosis.


Expert Reviews in Molecular Medicine | 2003

Antitumour immune responses

Roshni Mitra; Sarvjeet Singh; Ashok Khar

The role of the immune system in combating tumour progression has been studied extensively. The two branches of the immune response - humoral and cell-mediated - act both independently and in concert to combat tumour progression, the success of which depends on the immunogenicity of the tumour cells. The immune system discriminates between transformed cells and normal cells by virtue of the presence of unique antigens on tumour cells. Despite this, the immune system is not always able to detect and kill cancerous cells because neoplasms have also evolved various strategies to escape immune surveillance. Attempts are being made to trigger the immune system into an early and efficient response against malignant cells, and various therapeutic modalities are being developed to enhance the strength of the immune response against tumours. This review aims to elucidate the tumoricidal role of various components of the immune system, including macrophages, lymphocytes, dendritic cells and complement.


International Immunopharmacology | 2011

Immunomodulatory and therapeutic activity of curcumin

Raghvendra M. Srivastava; Sarvjeet Singh; Shiv Kumar Dubey; Krishna Misra; Ashok Khar


Apoptosis | 2005

Differential gene expression during apoptosis induced by a serum factor: Role of mitochondrial F0-F1 ATP synthase complex

Sarvjeet Singh; Ashok Khar

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Ashok Khar

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology

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Beverly A. Rothermel

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Pradeep P.A. Mammen

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Diana C. Canseco

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Shilpa M. Manda

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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John M. Shelton

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Robert D. Gerard

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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A. Mubarak Ali

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology

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B.V.V. Pardhasaradhi

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology

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