7 results match your criteria: "and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute[Affiliation]"

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive disease with complex and heterogeneous biology. Although several genomic classifications have been proposed, there is a growing interest in going beyond genomics to stratify AML. In this study, we profile the sphingolipid family of bioactive molecules in 213 primary AML samples and 30 common human AML cell lines.

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Alterations in sphingolipid composition and mitochondrial bioenergetics represent synergistic therapeutic vulnerabilities linked to multidrug resistance in leukemia.

FASEB J

January 2022

Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Brody School of Medicine, and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Modifications in sphingolipid metabolism and mitochondrial function are crucial in how cancer cells, particularly acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells, respond to chemotherapy and can develop resistance.
  • HL60 cells resistant to vincristine exhibit significant changes in sphingolipid enzyme activity and lipid composition, with increased expression of ceramide detoxifying enzymes and alterations in key lipid species, compared to drug-sensitive controls.
  • A combined therapeutic approach targeting both sphingolipid metabolism and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation has shown promising synergistic effects against drug-resistant leukemia, indicating potential for new treatments targeting multidrug resistance.
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Chemotherapy selection pressure alters sphingolipid composition and mitochondrial bioenergetics in resistant HL-60 cells.

J Lipid Res

September 2019

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, Greenville, NC. Electronic address:

The combination of daunorubicin (dnr) and cytarabine (Ara-C) is a cornerstone of treatment for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML); resistance to these drugs is a major cause of treatment failure. Ceramide, a sphingolipid (SL), plays a critical role in cancer cell apoptosis in response to chemotherapy. Here, we investigated the effects of chemotherapy selection pressure with Ara-C and dnr on SL composition and enzyme activity in the AML cell line HL-60.

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The Onus of Sphingolipid Enzymes in Cancer Drug Resistance.

Adv Cancer Res

September 2019

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, East Carolina University, Brody School of Medicine, and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, Greenville, SC, United States.

Chemotherapy resistance, inherent or acquired, represents a serious barrier to the successful treatment of cancer. Although drug efflux, conducted by plasma membrane-resident proteins, detoxification enzymes, cell death inhibition, and DNA damage repair are ensemble players in this unwanted biology, a full understanding of the many in concert molecular mechanisms driving drug resistance is lacking. Recent discoveries in sphingolipid (SL) metabolism have provided significant insight into the role of these lipids in cancer growth; however, considerably less is known with respect to SLs and the drug-resistant phenotype.

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(V/K) kinetic isotope effect and steady-state kinetic analysis for the transglutaminase 2 catalyzed deamidation and transamidation reactions.

Arch Biochem Biophys

April 2018

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, United States. Electronic address:

The Ca-dependent deamidation and transamidation activities of transglutaminase 2 (TG2) are important to numerous physiological and pathological processes. Herein, we have examined the steady-state kinetics and (V/K) kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) for the TG2-catalyzed deamidation and transamidation of N-Benzyloxycarbonyl-l-Glutaminylglycine (Z-Gln-Gly) using putrescine as the acyl acceptor substrate. Kinetic parameters determined from initial velocity plots are consistent with previously proposed mechanisms.

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Protein structure, ligand binding, and catalytic turnover contributes to the governance of catalytic events occurring at spatially distinct domains in multifunctional enzymes. Coordination of these catalytic events partially rests on the ability of spatially discrete active sites to communicate with other allosteric and active sites on the same polypeptide chain (intramolecular) or on different polypeptide chains (intermolecular) within the holoenzyme. Often, communication results in long-range effects on substrate binding or product release.

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Fish oil disrupts MHC class II lateral organization on the B-cell side of the immunological synapse independent of B-T cell adhesion.

J Nutr Biochem

November 2013

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Brody School of Medicine and the East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27834.

Article Synopsis
  • Fish oil enriched with long chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids negatively affects the organization of T-cell proteins at the immunological synapse, particularly diminishing MHC II accumulation during T-cell activation.
  • Previous research indicated that B-cells from mice that consumed fish oil suppress naive CD4(+) T-cell activation, but the specific impacts on these B-cells at the molecular level were unclear.
  • The study found that fish oil disrupts the lateral organization of MHC class II molecules on B-cells and reduces the recruitment of PKCθ in T-cells, demonstrating that fish oil and cholesterol depletion share similar mechanisms in reorganizing cell membranes and affecting immune responses.
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