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Featured researches published by Szilvia Török.


Experimental Diabetes Research | 2016

Experimental Diabetes Mellitus in Different Animal Models

Amin Al-awar; Krisztina Kupai; Médea Veszelka; Gergő Szűcs; Zouhair Attieh; Zsolt Murlasits; Szilvia Török; Anikó Pósa; Csaba Varga

Animal models have historically played a critical role in the exploration and characterization of disease pathophysiology and target identification and in the evaluation of novel therapeutic agents and treatments in vivo. Diabetes mellitus disease, commonly known as diabetes, is a group of metabolic disorders characterized by high blood glucose levels for a prolonged time. To avoid late complications of diabetes and related costs, primary prevention and early treatment are therefore necessary. Due to its chronic symptoms, new treatment strategies need to be developed, because of the limited effectiveness of the current therapies. We overviewed the pathophysiological features of diabetes in relation to its complications in type 1 and type 2 mice along with rat models, including Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats, BB rats, LEW 1AR1/-iddm rats, Goto-Kakizaki rats, chemically induced diabetic models, and Nonobese Diabetic mouse, and Akita mice model. The advantages and disadvantages that these models comprise were also addressed in this review. This paper briefly reviews the wide pathophysiological and molecular mechanisms associated with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, particularly focusing on the challenges associated with the evaluation and predictive validation of these models as ideal animal models for preclinical assessments and discovering new drugs and therapeutic agents for translational application in humans.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2015

Exercise Training and Calorie Restriction Influence the Metabolic Parameters in Ovariectomized Female Rats

Anikó Pósa; Renáta Szabó; Krisztina Kupai; Anett Csonka; Zita Szalai; Médea Veszelka; Szilvia Török; Lejla Daruka; Csaba Varga

The estrogen deficiency after menopause leads to overweight or obesity, and physical exercise is one of the important modulators of this body weight gain. Female Wistar rats underwent ovariectomy surgery (OVX) or sham operation (SO). OVX and SO groups were randomized into new groups based on the voluntary physical activity (with or without running) and the type of diet for 12 weeks. Rats were fed standard chow (CTRL), high triglyceride diet (HT), or restricted diet (CR). The metabolic syndrome was assessed by measuring the body weight gain, the glucose sensitivity, and the levels of insulin, triglyceride, leptin, and aspartate aminotransferase transaminase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT). The exercise training combined with the CR resulted in improvements in the glucose tolerance and the insulin sensitivity. Plasma TG, AST, and ALT levels were significantly higher in OVX rats fed with HT but these high values were suppressed by exercise and CR. Compared to SO animals, estrogen deprivation with HT caused a significant increase in leptin level. Our data provide evidence that CR combined with voluntary physical exercise can be a very effective strategy to prevent the development of a metabolic syndrome induced by high calorie diet.


Scientific Reports | 2018

JDP2 overexpression provokes cardiac dysfunction in mice

Jacqueline Heger; Julia Bornbaum; Alona Würfel; Christian Hill; Nils Brockmann; Renáta Gáspár; János Pálóczi; Zoltán V. Varga; Márta Sárközy; Péter Bencsik; Tamás Csont; Szilvia Török; Baktybek Kojonazarov; Ralph T. Schermuly; Kerstin Böngler; Mariana S. Parahuleva; Péter Ferdinandy; Rainer Schulz; Gerhild Euler

The transcriptional regulator JDP2 (Jun dimerization protein 2) has been identified as a prognostic marker for patients to develop heart failure after myocardial infarction. We now performed in vivo studies on JDP2-overexpressing mice, to clarify the impact of JDP2 on heart failure progression. Therefore, during birth up to the age of 4 weeks cardiac-specific JDP2 overexpression was prevented by doxycycline feeding in transgenic mice. Then, JDP2 overexpression was started. Already after 1 week, cardiac function, determined by echocardiography, decreased which was also resembled on the cardiomyocyte level. After 5 weeks blood pressure declined, ejection fraction and cardiac output was reduced and left ventricular dilatation developed. Heart weight/body weight, and mRNA expression of ANP, inflammatory marker genes, collagen and fibronectin increased. Collagen 1 protein expression increased, and fibrosis developed. As an additional sign of elevated extracellular matrix remodeling, matrix metalloproteinase 2 activity increased in JDP2 mice. Thus, JDP2 overexpression is deleterious to heart function in vivo. It can be concluded that JDP2 overexpression provokes cardiac dysfunction in adult mice that is accompanied by hypertrophy and fibrosis. Thus, induction of JDP2 is a maladaptive response contributing to heart failure development.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2018

Role of Exercise-Induced Cardiac Remodeling in Ovariectomized Female Rats

Renáta Szabó; Zoltán Karácsonyi; Denise Börzsei; Bela Juhasz; Amin Al-awar; Szilvia Török; Anikó Berkó; István Takács; Krisztina Kupai; Csaba Varga; Anikó Pósa

Myocardial extracellular matrix (ECM) is essential for proper cardiac function and structural integrity; thus, the disruption of ECM homeostasis is associated with several pathological processes. Female Wistar rats underwent surgical ovariectomy (OVX) or sham operation (SO) and were then divided into eight subgroups based on the type of diet (standard chow or high-triglyceride diet/HT) and exercise (with or without running). After 12 weeks, cardiac MMP-2 activity, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2, content of collagen type I, the level of nitrotyrosine (3-NT) and glutathione (GSH), and the ratio of infarct size were determined. Our results show that OVX and HT diet caused an excessive accumulation of collagen; however, this increase was not observed in the trained animals. Twelve weeks of exercise promoted elevation in the levels of 3-NT and GSH and similarly an increase in MMP-2 activity of both SO and OVX animals. The high infarct-size ratio caused by OVX and HT diet was mitigated by physical exercise. Our findings demonstrate that ovarian estrogen loss and HT diet caused collagen accumulation and increased ratio of the infarct size. However, exercise-induced cardiac remodeling serves as a compensatory mechanism by enhancing MMP-2 activity and reducing fibrosis, thus minimizing the ischemia/reperfusion injury.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018

Novel Potentials of the DPP-4 Inhibitor Sitagliptin against Ischemia-Reperfusion (I/R) Injury in Rat Ex-Vivo Heart Model

Amin Al-awar; Nikoletta Almási; Renáta Szabó; István Takács; Zsolt Murlasits; Gergő Szűcs; Szilvia Török; Anikó Pósa; Csaba Varga; Krisztina Kupai

Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors are a class of oral anti-diabetic drugs, implicated in pleiotropic secondary cardioprotective effects. The aim of the study was to unveil the unknown and possible cardioprotective targets that can be exerted by sitagliptin (Sitg) against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury. Male wistar rats received 2 weeks’ Sitg oral treatment of different doses (25, 50, 100, and 150 mg/kg/day), or saline as a Control. Hearts were then isolated and subjected to two different I/R injury protocols: 10 min perfusion, 45 min regional ischemia, and 120 min reperfusion for infarct size (IS) measurement, or: 10 min perfusion, 45 min regional ischemia and 10 min reperfusion for biochemical analysis: nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) and DPP-4 activity, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), Calcium, transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV)-1 and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) levels, transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC)-1 and e-NOS protein expression. NOS inhibitor (l-NAME) and TRPV-1 inhibitor (Capsazepine) were utilized to confirm the implication of both signaling mechanisms in DPP-4 inhibition-induced at the level of IS. Findings show that Sitg (50 mg) resulted in significant decrease in IS and DPP-4 activity, and significant increase in GLP-1, NOS activity, e-NOS expression, TRPV-1 level and TRPC-1 expression, compared to controls. Results of CGRP are in line with TRPV-1, as a downstream regulatory effect. NOS system and transient receptor potential (TRP) channels can contribute to DPP-4 inhibition-mediated cardioprotection against I/R injury using Sitagliptin.


Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy | 2013

Cardioprotection by Farnesol: Role of the Mevalonate Pathway

Gergő Szűcs; Zsolt Murlasits; Szilvia Török; Gabriella F. Kocsis; János Pálóczi; Anikó Görbe; Tamás Csont; Csaba Csonka; Péter Ferdinandy


Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome | 2015

Consequences of exercising on ischemia-reperfusion injury in type 2 diabetic Goto-Kakizaki rat hearts: role of the HO/NOS system.

Krisztina Kupai; Renáta Szabó; Médea Veszelka; Amin Al Awar; Szilvia Török; Anett Csonka; Zoltán Baráth; Anikó Pósa; Csaba Varga


Inflammopharmacology | 2018

H2S confers colonoprotection against TNBS-induced colitis by HO-1 upregulation in rats

Krisztina Kupai; Nikoletta Almási; Magdolna Kósa; János Nemcsók; Zsolt Murlasits; Szilvia Török; Amin Al-awar; Zoltán Baráth; Anikó Pósa; Csaba Varga


Acta Biologica Szegediensis | 2014

Novel features of the rat model of inflammatory bowel disease based on 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acidinduced acute colitis

Zita Szalai; Krisztina Kupai; Médea Veszelka; Anikó Pósa; Szilvia Török; Anikó Berkó; Zoltán Baráth; Ferenc László; Csaba Varga


Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | 2013

Different administration schedules of darbepoetin alfa affect oxidized and reduced glutathione levels to a similar extent in 5/6 nephrectomized rats

Péter Monostori; Gabriella F. Kocsis; Zsuzsanna Ökrös; Péter Bencsik; Orsolya Czétényi; Zoltán Kiss; Balázs Gellén; Imre Ocsovszki; Judit Pipis; János Pálóczi; Márta Sárközy; Szilvia Török; Ilona S. Varga; István Kiss; Eszter Fodor; Tamás Csont; Péter Ferdinandy; Sándor Túri

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