Zdeněk Andrysík
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Zdeněk Andrysík.
Archives of Toxicology | 2013
Zdeněk Andrysík; Jiřina Procházková; Markéta Kabátková; Lenka Umannová; Pavlína Šimečková; Jiří Kohoutek; Alois Kozubík; Miroslav Machala; Jan Vondráček
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) contributes to the control of cell-to-cell communication, cell adhesion, migration or proliferation. In the present study, we investigated the regulation of connexin43 (Cx43) and Cx43-mediated gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) during the AhR-dependent disruption of contact inhibition in non-tumorigenic liver epithelial cells. The contact inhibition of cell proliferation is a process restricting the cell division of confluent non-transformed cells, which is frequently abolished in cancer cells; however, the mechanisms contributing to its disruption are still only partially understood. Disruption of contact inhibition, which was induced by toxic AhR ligands 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in epithelial WB-F344 cells, reduced Cx43 protein levels, possibly via enhanced proteasomal degradation, significantly decreased the amount of gap junction plaques and downregulated GJIC, in an AhR-dependent manner. Although both intracellular and membrane Cx43 pools were markedly reduced in cells released from contact inhibition by TCDD, siRNA-mediated Cx43 knock-down was not sufficient to stimulate proliferation in contact-inhibited cells. Our data suggest that downregulation of Cx43/GJIC in non-transformed epithelial cells is an inherent part of disruption of contact inhibition, which occurs at the post-transcriptional level. This process runs in parallel with alterations of other forms of cell-to-cell communication, thus suggesting that toxic AhR agonists may simultaneously abrogate contact inhibition and reduce GJIC, two essential mechanisms linked to deregulation of cell-to-cell communication during tumor promotion and progression.
Mutation Research | 2011
Zdeněk Andrysík; Jan Vondráček; Soňa Marvanová; Miroslav Ciganek; Jiří Neča; Kateřina Pěnčíková; Brinda Mahadevan; Jan Topinka; William M. Baird; Alois Kozubík; Miroslav Machala
Many of the toxic and carcinogenic effects of urban air pollution have been linked to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) adsorbed to airborne particulate matter (PM). The carcinogenic properties of PAHs in complex organic mixtures derived from PM have been chiefly attributed to their mutagenicity. Nevertheless, PAHs are also potent activators of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), which may contribute to their nongenotoxic effects, including tumor promotion. As the genotoxicity of carcinogenic PAHs in complex mixtures derived from urban PM is often inhibited by other mixture constituents, the AhR-mediated activity of urban PM extracts might significantly contribute to the carcinogenic activity of such mixtures. In the present study, we used an organic extract of the urban dust standard reference material, SRM1649a, as a model mixture to study a range of toxic effects related to DNA damage and AhR activation. Both the organic extract and its neutral aromatic fraction formed a low number of DNA adducts per nucleotide in the liver epithelial WB-F344 cells model, without inducing DNA damage response, such as tumor suppressor p53 activation and apoptosis. In contrast, we found that this extract, as well as its neutral and polar fractions, were potent inducers of a range of AhR-mediated responses, including induction of the AhR-mediated transcription, such as cytochrome P450 1A1/1B1 expression, and the AhR-dependent cell proliferation. Importantly, these toxic events occurred at doses one order of magnitude lower than DNA damage. The AhR-mediated activity of the neutral fraction was linked to PAHs and their derivatives, as polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins, dibenzofurans and biphenyls were only minor contributors to the overall AhR-mediated activity. Taken together, our data suggest that more attention should be paid to the AhR-dependent nongenotoxic events elicited by urban PM constituents, especially PAHs and their derivatives.
Mutation Research | 2006
Jan Vondráček; Lenka Švihálková-Šindlerová; Kateřina Pěnčíková; Pavel Krčmář; Zdeněk Andrysík; Kateřina Chramostová; Soňa Marvanová; Zuzana Valovičová; Alois Kozubík; Alena Gábelová; Miroslav Machala
Electroanalysis | 2004
Jan Vacek; Zdeněk Andrysík; Libuše Trnková; Rene Kizek
Toxicological Sciences | 2009
Pavlína Šimečková; Jan Vondráček; Zdeněk Andrysík; Jiřina Zatloukalová; Pavel Krčmář; Alois Kozubík; Miroslav Machala
Leukemia Research | 2006
Jan Vondráček; Karel Souček; Michael A. Sheard; Kateřina Chramostová; Zdeněk Andrysík; Jiřina Hofmanová; Alois Kozubík
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2006
Zdeněk Andrysík; Miroslav Machala; Kateřina Chramostová; Jiřina Hofmanová; Alois Kozubík; Jan Vondráček
Toxicology | 2008
Lenka Umannová; Jiří Neča; Zdeněk Andrysík; Jan Vondráček; Brad L. Upham; James E. Trosko; Jiřina Hofmanová; Alois Kozubík; Miroslav Machala
Archives of Dermatological Research | 2002
Jiří Pacherník; Aleš Hampl; Karel Souček; Martina Kovaříková; Zdeněk Andrysík; Jiřina Hofmanová; Alois Kozubík
Archive | 2006
Petr Beneš; Vendula Macečková; Zdeněk Andrysík; Jiřina Zatloukalová; Jan Šmarda