Publications by authors named "Omkar Zilka"

Article Synopsis
  • - Ferroptosis is a unique cell death process that could help treat certain cancers by targeting the way tumors manage lipid oxidation.
  • - A study has found that 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC), which was thought to be harmful to neurons, actually helps cancer cells survive by protecting their membranes from oxidative damage.
  • - In experiments with neuroblastoma and Burkitt's lymphoma, high levels of 7-DHC were linked to a shift in tumors that makes them more aggressive and resistant to ferroptosis, suggesting a potential cancer survival strategy.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Ferroptosis is a type of cell death involving iron-dependent lipid damage, contributing to organ injuries, degenerative diseases, and the resistance of some cancers to therapy.
  • - Recent research reveals that fully reduced forms of vitamin K, specifically menaquinone and phylloquinone, not only play a role in blood clotting but also provide protection against ferroptosis.
  • - The enzyme Ferroptosis Suppressor Protein 1 (FSP1) reduces vitamin K to a potent antioxidant form, helping to prevent lipid peroxidation and acting as a safeguard against warfarin poisoning, indicating a protective non-canonical role for vitamin K in cellular health.
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The archetype inhibitors of ferroptosis, ferrostatin-1 and liproxstatin-1, were identified via high-throughput screening of compound libraries for cytoprotective activity. These compounds have been shown to inhibit ferroptosis by suppressing propagation of lipid peroxidation, the radical chain reaction that drives cell death. Herein, we present the first rational design and optimization of ferroptosis inhibitors targeting this mechanism of action.

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Article Synopsis
  • CuATSM is a powerful radical-trapping antioxidant, outperforming α-tocopherol, and shows potential for treating ALS and Parkinson's disease by inhibiting (phospho)lipid peroxidation.
  • Its unique mechanism involves reversible addition of peroxyl radicals to the bis(thiosemicarbazone) ligand rather than traditional H-atom transfer, allowing it to effectively trap multiple radicals.
  • The effectiveness of CuATSM and its analogs extends from organic solutions to biological membranes, making them strong candidates for preventing ferroptosis, particularly highlighting CuATSP's impressive potency as a ferroptosis inhibitor.
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Cancer cells rewire their metabolism and rely on endogenous antioxidants to mitigate lethal oxidative damage to lipids. However, the metabolic processes that modulate the response to lipid peroxidation are poorly defined. Using genetic screens, we compared metabolic genes essential for proliferation upon inhibition of cystine uptake or glutathione peroxidase-4 (GPX4).

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Nitroxides were recently shown to catalyze the cross-dismutation of alkylperoxyl and hydroperoxyl radicals, making them uniquely effective radical-trapping antioxidants (RTAs) in unsaturated hydrocarbons where both species are formed. Given the abundance of unsaturated lipids in biological membranes, the continuous generation of hydroperoxyl (superoxide) as a byproduct of aerobic respiration, and the demonstrated cytoprotective properties of some nitroxides, we probed if cross-dismutation operates in phospholipid bilayers and cell culture. Interestingly, only nitroxides that were efficiently converted to amines in situ were effective, with their activity paralleling the stability of the incipient aminyl radicals.

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"Antioxidant activity" is an often invoked, but generally poorly characterized, molecular property. Several assays are available to determine antioxidant activity, the most popular of which is based upon the ability of a putative antioxidant to reduce 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl. Here, we show that the results of this assay do not correlate with the potency of putative antioxidants as inhibitors of ferroptosis, the oxidative cell death modality associated with (phospho)lipid peroxidation.

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Sterically-hindered nitroxides such as 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin- N-oxyl (TEMPO) have long been ascribed antioxidant activity that is thought to underlie their chemopreventive and anti-aging properties. However, the most commonly invoked reactions in this context-combination with an alkyl radical to give a redox inactive alkoxyamine or catalysis of superoxide dismutation-are unlikely to be relevant under (most) physiological conditions. Herein, we characterize the kinetics and mechanisms of the reactions of TEMPO, as well as an N-arylnitroxide and an N, N-diarylnitroxide, with alkylperoxyl radicals, the propagating species in lipid peroxidation.

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Ferroptosis is a form of regulated necrosis associated with the iron-dependent accumulation of lipid hydroperoxides that may play a key role in the pathogenesis of degenerative diseases in which lipid peroxidation has been implicated. High-throughput screening efforts have identified ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1) and liproxstatin-1 (Lip-1) as potent inhibitors of ferroptosis - an activity that has been ascribed to their ability to slow the accumulation of lipid hydroperoxides. Herein we demonstrate that this activity likely derives from their reactivity as radical-trapping antioxidants (RTAs) rather than their potency as inhibitors of lipoxygenases.

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