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Featured researches published by Seema Noor.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Resveratrol as a Pan-HDAC Inhibitor Alters the Acetylation Status of Jistone Proteins in Human-Derived Hepatoblastoma Cells

Sascha Venturelli; Alexander Berger; Alexander Böcker; Christian Busch; Timo Weiland; Seema Noor; Christian Leischner; Sabine Schleicher; Mascha Mayer; Thomas Weiss; Stephan C. Bischoff; Ulrich M. Lauer; Michael Bitzer

The polyphenolic alcohol resveratrol has demonstrated promising activities for the prevention and treatment of cancer. Different modes of action have been described for resveratrol including the activation of sirtuins, which represent the class III histone deacetylases (HDACs). However, little is known about the activity of resveratrol on the classical HDACs of class I, II and IV, although these classes are involved in cancer development or progression and inhibitors of HDACs (HDACi) are currently under investigation as promising novel anticancer drugs. We could show by in silico docking studies that resveratrol has the chemical structure to inhibit the activity of different human HDAC enzymes. In vitro analyses of overall HDAC inhibition and a detailed HDAC profiling showed that resveratrol inhibited all eleven human HDACs of class I, II and IV in a dose-dependent manner. Transferring this molecular mechanism into cancer therapy strategies, resveratrol treatment was analyzed on solid tumor cell lines. Despite the fact that hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is known to be particularly resistant against conventional chemotherapeutics, treatment of HCC with established HDACi already has shown promising results. Testing of resveratrol on hepatoma cell lines HepG2, Hep3B and HuH7 revealed a dose-dependent antiproliferative effect on all cell lines. Interestingly, only for HepG2 cells a specific inhibition of HDACs and in turn a histone hyperacetylation caused by resveratrol was detected. Additional testing of human blood samples demonstrated a HDACi activity by resveratrol ex vivo. Concluding toxicity studies showed that primary human hepatocytes tolerated resveratrol, whereas in vivo chicken embryotoxicity assays demonstrated severe toxicity at high concentrations. Taken together, this novel pan-HDACi activity opens up a new perspective of resveratrol for cancer therapy alone or in combination with other chemotherapeutics. Moreover, resveratrol may serve as a lead structure for chemical optimization of bioavailability, pharmacology or HDAC inhibition.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2013

Kaempferol, a new nutrition-derived pan-inhibitor of human histone deacetylases

Alexander Berger; Sascha Venturelli; Mascha Kallnischkies; Alexander Böcker; Christian Busch; Timo Weiland; Seema Noor; Christian Leischner; Thomas Weiss; Ulrich M. Lauer; Stephan C. Bischoff; Michael Bitzer

Kaempferol is a natural polyphenol belonging to the group of flavonoids. Different biological functions like inhibition of oxidative stress in plants or animal cells and apoptosis induction have been directly associated with kaempferol. The underlying mechanisms are only partially understood. Here we report for the first time that kaempferol has a distinct epigenetic activity by inhibition of histone deacetylases (HDACs). In silico docking analysis revealed that it fits into the binding pocket of HDAC2, 4, 7 or 8 and thereby binds to the zinc ion of the catalytic center. Further in vitro profiling of all conserved human HDACs of class I, II and IV showed that kaempferol inhibited all tested HDACs. In clinical oncology, HDAC inhibitors are currently under investigation as new anticancer compounds. Therefore, we studied the effect of kaempferol on human-derived hepatoma cell lines HepG2 and Hep3B as well as on HCT-116 colon cancer cells and found that it induces hyperacetylation of histone complex H3. Furthermore, kaempferol mediated a prominent reduction of cell viability and proliferation rate. Interestingly, toxicity assays revealed signs of relevant cellular toxicity in primary human hepatocytes only starting at 50 μM as well as in an in vivo chicken embryotoxicity assay at 200 μM. In conclusion, the identification of a novel broad inhibitory capacity of the natural compound kaempferol for human-derived HDAC enzymes opens up the perspective for clinical application in both tumor prevention and therapy. Moreover, kaempferol may serve as a novel lead structure for chemical optimization of pharmacokinetics, pharmacology or inhibitory activities.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2014

Epigenetic Impacts of Ascorbate on Human Metastatic Melanoma Cells

Sascha Venturelli; Tobias Sinnberg; Alexander Berger; Seema Noor; Mitchell P. Levesque; Alexander Böcker; Heike Niessner; Ulrich M. Lauer; Michael Bitzer; Claus Garbe; Christian Busch

In recent years, increasing evidence has emerged demonstrating that high-dose ascorbate bears cytotoxic effects on cancer cells in vitro and in vivo, making ascorbate a pro-oxidative drug that catalyzes hydrogen peroxide production in tissues instead of acting as a radical scavenger. This anticancer effect of ascorbate is hypoxia-inducible factor-1α- and O2-dependent. However, whether the intracellular mechanisms governing this effect are modulated by epigenetic phenomena remains unknown. We treated human melanoma cells with physiological (200 μM) or pharmacological (8 mM) ascorbate for 1 h to record the impact on DNA methyltransferase (DNMT)-activity, histone deacetylases (HDACs), and microRNA (miRNA) expression after 12 h. The results were analyzed with the MIRUMIR online tool that estimates the power of miRNA to serve as potential biomarkers to predict survival of cancer patients. FACS cell-cycle analyses showed that 8 mM ascorbate shifted BLM melanoma cells toward the sub-G1 fraction starting at 12 h after an initial primary G2/M arrest, indicative for secondary apoptosis induction. In pharmacological doses, ascorbate inhibited the DNMT activity in nuclear extracts of MeWo and BLM melanoma cells, but did not inhibit human HDAC enzymes of classes I, II, and IV. The expression of 151 miRNAs was altered 12 h after ascorbate treatment of BLM cells in physiological or pharmacological doses. Pharmacological doses up-regulated 32 miRNAs (≥4-fold) mainly involved in tumor suppression and drug resistance in our preliminary miRNA screening array. The most prominently up-regulated miRNAs correlated with a significantly increased overall survival of breast cancer or nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients of the MIRUMIR database with high expression of the respective miRNA. Our results suggest a possible epigenetic signature of pharmacological doses of ascorbate in human melanoma cells and support further pre-clinical and possibly even clinical evaluation of ascorbate for melanoma therapy.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2014

The ROS-induced cytotoxicity of ascorbate is attenuated by hypoxia and HIF-1alpha in the NCI60 cancer cell lines

Tobias Sinnberg; Seema Noor; Sascha Venturelli; Alexander Berger; Paul Schuler; Claus Garbe; Christian Busch

Intravenous application of high‐dose ascorbate is used in complementary palliative medicine to treat cancer patients. Pharmacological doses of ascorbate in the mM range induce cytotoxicity in cancer cells mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS), namely hydrogen peroxide and ascorbyl radicals. However, little is known about intrinsic or extrinsic factors modulating this ascorbate‐mediated cytotoxicity. Under normoxia and hypoxia, ascorbate IC50 values were determined on the NCI60 cancer cells. The cell cycle, the influence of cobalt chloride‐induced hypoxia‐inducible factor‐1α (HIF‐1α) and the glucose transporter 1 (GLUT‐1) expression (a pro‐survival HIF‐1α‐downstream‐target) were analysed after ascorbate exposure under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. The amount of ascorbyl radicals increased with rising serum concentrations. Hypoxia (0.1% O2) globally increased the IC50 of ascorbate in the 60 cancer cell lines from 4.5 ± 3.6 mM to 10.1 ± 5.9 mM (2.2‐fold increase, P < 0.001, Mann–Whitney t‐test), thus inducing cellular resistance towards ascorbate. This ascorbate resistance depended on HIF‐1α‐signalling, but did not correlate with cell line‐specific expression of the ascorbate transporter GLUT‐1. However, under normoxic and hypoxic conditions, ascorbate treatment at the individual IC50 reduced the expression of GLUT‐1 in the cancer cells. Our data show a ROS‐induced, HIF‐1α‐ and O2‐dependent cytotoxicity of ascorbate on 60 different cancer cells. This suggests that for clinical application, cancer patients should additionally be oxygenized to increase the cytotoxic efficacy of ascorbate.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2014

In melanoma, Hippo signaling is affected by copy number alterations and YAP1 overexpression impairs patient survival.

Moritz Menzel; Diana Meckbach; Benjamin Weide; Nora C. Toussaint; Karin Schilbach; Seema Noor; Thomas K. Eigentler; Kristian Ikenberg; Christian Busch; Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez; Ursula Kohlhofer; Antonia Göke; Friederike Göke; Rupert Handgretinger; Christian Ottmann; Boris C. Bastian; Claus Garbe; Martin Röcken; Sven Perner; Oliver Kohlbacher; Jürgen Bauer

To take out a personal subscription, please click here More information about Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research at www.pigment.org In melanoma, Hippo signaling is affected by copy number alterations and YAP1 overexpression impairs patient survival Moritz Menzel, Diana Meckbach, Benjamin Weide, Nora C. Toussaint, Karin Schilbach, Seema Noor, Thomas Eigentler, Kristian Ikenberg, Christian Busch, Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez, Ursula Kohlhofer, Antonia Göke, Friederike Göke, Rupert Handgretinger, Christian Ottmann, Boris C. Bastian, Claus Garbe, Martin Röcken, Sven Perner, Oliver Kohlbacher and Jürgen Bauer


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2017

Extracorporal Shock Waves Activate Migration, Proliferation and Inflammatory Pathways in Fibroblasts and Keratinocytes, and Improve Wound Healing in an Open-Label, Single-Arm Study in Patients with Therapy-Refractory Chronic Leg Ulcers

Ilknur Aschermann; Seema Noor; Sascha Venturelli; Tobias Sinnberg; Christian D. Mnich; Christian Busch

Background/Aims: Chronic leg ulcers (CLUs) are globally a major cause of morbidity and mortality with increasing prevalence. Their treatment is highly challenging, and many conservative, surgical or advanced therapies have been suggested, but with little overall efficacy. Since the 1980s extracorporal shock wave therapy (ESWT) has gained interest as treatment for specific indications. Here, we report that patients with CLU showed wound healing after ESWT and investigated the underlying molecular mechanisms. Methods: We performed cell proliferation and migration assays, FACS- and Western blot analyses, RT-PCR, and Affymetrix gene expression analyses on human keratinocytes and fibroblasts, and a tube formation assay on human microvascular endothelial cells to assess the impact of shock waves in vitro. In vivo, chronic therapy-refractory leg ulcers were treated with ESWT, and wound healing was assessed. Results: Upon ESWT, we observed morphological changes and increased cell migration of keratinocytes. Cell-cycle regulatory genes were upregulated, and proliferation induced in fibroblasts. This was accompanied by secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines from keratinocytes, which are known to drive wound healing, and a pro-angiogenic activity of endothelial cells. These observations were transferred “from bench to bedside”, and 60 consecutive patients with 75 CLUs with different pathophysiologies (e.g. venous, mixed arterial-venous, arterial) were treated with ESWT. In this setting, 41% of ESWT-treated CLUs showed complete healing, 16% significant improvement, 35% improvement, and 8% of the ulcers did not respond to ESWT. The induction of healing was independent of patient age, duration or size of the ulcer, and the underlying pathophysiology. Conclusions: The efficacy of ESWT needs to be confirmed in controlled trials to implement ESWT as an adjunct to standard therapy or as a stand-alone treatment. Our results suggest that EWST may advance the treatment of chronic, therapy-refractory ulcers.


Investigational New Drugs | 2015

In vitro and in vivo toxicity of 5-FdU-alendronate, a novel cytotoxic bone-seeking duplex drug against bone metastasis.

Sarah Schott; Sonia Vallet; Robert J. Tower; Seema Noor; Sanjay Tiwari; Christian Schem; Christian Busch

SummaryBackground Bone remains one of the most common anatomic sites for cancer metastases, and the limited therapeutic options aggravate cancer-related morbidity and mortality in multiple malignancies. The covalent conjugation of the amino-bisphosphonate alendronate (ale) with the antimetabolite 5-fluoro-2′-desoxyuridine (5-FdU) results in N4-(butyl-(4-hydroxy-4-phosphono)phosphate)-5-fluoro-2′-desoxyuridine (5-FdU-alendronat, 5-FdU-ale), an effective, novel bone-targeting duplex drug directed against skeletal cancer manifestations. Methods In vitro cytotoxicity of ale, 5-FdU or 5-FdU-ale was measured with Alamar Blue and MUH cell viability assays in 14 malignant melanoma, multiple myeloma, bone marrow-derived stromal cell and osteoblast-like cell lines. In vivo toxicity was evaluated using the chicken embryo assay and evaluation of nephrotoxicity and the systemic toxicity in Balb/c nude mice. The effect of 5-FdU-ale on osteoclast was evaluated with Balb/c nude mice in a metastatic breast cancer mouse model. Results A cell line-specific, dose-related cytotoxicity was observed for 5-FdU-ale in all cancer cell lines tested, which was significantly less toxic than 5-FdU alone when compared to the benign osteoblasts or stromal cells. The embryotoxicity of 5-FdU-ale was significantly less than that of the parental drugs alendronate or 5-FdU. 5-FdU-ale showed no signs of unwanted side effects, weight loss or nephrotoxicity in mice. In a bone metastasis mouse model, 5-FdU-ale reduced the number of tumor-associated osteoclasts. Conclusion The coupling of an amino-bisphosphonate with an antimetabolite via an N-alkyl-bonding offers a new strategy for the preparation of amino-bisphosphonates conjugates with a cancer cell-specific, efficacious cytotoxic bone-targeting potential along with a reduced systemic toxicity. The innovative duplex drug 5-FdU-ale therefore warrants further clinical investigation.


Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift | 2015

Anti-proliferative activity of hop-derived prenylflavonoids against human cancer cell lines

Christian Busch; Seema Noor; Christian Leischner; Markus Burkard; Ulrich M. Lauer; Sascha Venturelli

SummaryFlavonoids form a substantial group of secondary plant metabolites that display several health-promoting effects. Therefore, prenylflavonoids, a subclass of flavonoids, have attracted increasing attention. Here, we investigated the possible anti-cancer potential of 6-prenylnaringenin (6-PN) and 8-prenylnaringenin (8-PN), two prenylflavonoids present in hops and beer and demonstrate an unexpectedly pronounced, dose-dependent reduction of cellular proliferation of human PC-3 prostate cancer and UO.31 renal carcinoma cells upon treatment. Based on these findings 6-PN and 8-PN are currently further clinically evaluated in detail.ZusammenfassungFlavonoide bilden eine wichtige Gruppe von sekundären Pflanzenstoffen, welche gesundheitsfördernde Effekte aufweisen. Daher liegen ebenfalls Prenylflavonoide, eine Subgruppe der Flavonoide, im Fokus der molekularen medizinischen Forschung. Die Untersuchung der anti-tumoralen Eigenschaften der beiden natürlichen Hopfen- und Bierinhaltsstoffe 6-Prenylnarignenin (6-PN) und 8-Prenylnaringenin (8-PN) zeigte eine unerwartet ausgeprägte, dosisabhängige Wachstumshemmung von humanen PC-3 Prostata- und UO.31 Nierenkarzinomzellen. Diese Ergebnisse verdeutlichen das therapeutische Potential von Nahrungsmittelinhaltsstoffen, weswegen aktuell 6-PN und 8-PN im Detail für den potentiellen klinisch-therapeutischen bzw. präventiven Einsatz evaluiert werden.


European Journal of Cancer | 2017

Severe hepatitis under combined immunotherapy: Resolution under corticosteroids plus anti-thymocyte immunoglobulins

Iris Spänkuch; Maximilian Gassenmaier; Ioanna Tampouri; Seema Noor; Andrea Forschner; Claus Garbe; Teresa Amaral

In the last 10 years, new therapies became available for patients with locally advanced or metastatic melanoma, namely target therapies and immune checkpoint inhibitors. These therapies have toxicities different from those associated with chemotherapy, which was previously the first line therapy. Treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors can induce immune-related adverse events (AEs), which can be difficult to recognise for physicians not familiar with these therapies. Taking that in consideration, guidelines and treatment algorithms for these AE approach were elaborated. However, there are some patients who do not respond to the recommended therapies. In these cases, there is presently little experience on how to proceed. Here we present a clinical case of an autoimmune hepatitis after ipilimumab and nivolumab therapy, which did not respond to corticosteroids.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Correction: Resveratrol as a Pan-HDAC Inhibitor Alters the Acetylation Status of Jistone Proteins in Human-Derived Hepatoblastoma Cells

Sascha Venturelli; Alexander Berger; Alexander Böcker; Christian Busch; Timo Weiland; Seema Noor; Christian Leischner; Sabine Schleicher; Mascha Mayer; Thomas Weiss; Stephan C. Bischoff; Ulrich M. Lauer; Michael Bitzer

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Claus Garbe

University of Tübingen

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Thomas Weiss

University of Regensburg

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