Dinić, Jelena

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Authority KeyName Variants
orcid::0000-0003-3371-2381
  • Dinić, Jelena (99)
Projects
Identification of predictive molecular markers for cancer progression, response to therapy and disease outcome Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200007 (University of Belgrade, Institute for Biological Research 'Siniša Stanković')
COST Action CM1106 (Chemical Approaches to Targeting Drug Resistance in Cancer Stem Cells) Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200042 (University of Belgrade, Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering)
TargetedResponse - Functional diagnostics in non-small cell lung carcinoma: A new concept for the improvement of personalized therapy in Serbian patients COST Action CM1407 (Challenging organic syntheses inspired by nature - from natural products chemistry to drug discovery)
Complex diseases as a model system for phenotype modulation- structural and functional analysis of molecular biomarkers COST Action CA17104 STRATAGEM
Brain plasticity in aging: effect of dietary restriction and anesthesia COST Actions CM1106 (Chemical Approaches to Targeting Drug Resistance in Cancer Stem Cells)
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Deutsche Krebshilfe
EU Research Potential (FP7-REGPOT- 2012-CT2012-31637-IMBRAIN) European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) and the Spanish MINECO (CTQ2014-56362- C2-1- P)
Finnish Cultural Foundation 190336 Fondazione AIRC per la Ricerca sul Cancro (grant No. IG23566)
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (SFRH/BPD/84634/2012) Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia PTDC/MED-QUI/30591/2017
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia SFRH/ BD/137671/2018 Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia UIDB/ 00100/2020
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia UID/ DTP/04567/2019 Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia UIDP/00100/2020
Hungarian National Research Fund (OTKA K104385) Natural products of wild, cultivated and edible plants: structure and bioactivity determination
Interactions of natural products, their derivatives and coordination compounds with proteins and nucleic acids Modulation of intracellular energy balance-controlling signalling pathways in therapy of cancer and neuro-immuno-endocrine disorders
Pharmacodynamic and pharmacogenomic research of new drugs in the treatment of solid tumors Junta de Andalucía (FQM134)
Lead Discovery Siena, Srl National Science Fund of Bulgaria (grant No. KP-06-COST/3/18.06.2019)

Author's Bibliography

Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases

Fuentes-Aguilar, Alma; González-Bakker, Aday; Jovanović, Mirna; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Puerta, Adrián; Gargano, Adriana; Dinić, Jelena; Vega-Báez, José L.; Merino-Montiel, Penélope; Montiel-Smith, Sara; Alcaro, Stefano; Nocentini, Alessio; Pešić, Milica; Supuran, Claudiu T.; Padrón, José M.; Fernández-Bolaños, José G.; López, Óscar

(Elsevier Inc., 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Fuentes-Aguilar, Alma
AU  - González-Bakker, Aday
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Puerta, Adrián
AU  - Gargano, Adriana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Vega-Báez, José L.
AU  - Merino-Montiel, Penélope
AU  - Montiel-Smith, Sara
AU  - Alcaro, Stefano
AU  - Nocentini, Alessio
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Supuran, Claudiu T.
AU  - Padrón, José M.
AU  - Fernández-Bolaños, José G.
AU  - López, Óscar
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6550
AB  - Being aware of the need to develop more efficient therapies against cancer, herein we disclose an innovative
approach for the design of selective antiproliferative agents. We have accomplished the conjugation of a
coumarin fragment with lipophilic cations (triphenylphosphonium salts, guanidinium) for providing mitochondriotropic
agents that simultaneously target also carbonic anhydrases IX and XII, involved in the development
and progression of cancer. The new compounds prepared herein turned out to be strong inhibitors of
carbonic anhydrases IX and XII of human origin (low-to-mid nM range), also endowed with high selectivity,
exhibiting negligible activity towards cytosolic CA isoforms. Key interactions with the enzyme were analysed
using docking and molecular dynamics simulations.
Regarding their in vitro antiproliferative activities, an increase of the tether length connecting both pharmacophores
led to a clear improvement in potency, reaching the submicromolar range for the lead compounds, and
an outstanding selectivity towards tumour cell lines (S.I. up to >357). Cytotoxic effects were also analysed on
MDR cell lines under hypoxic and normoxic conditions. Chemoresistance exhibited by phosphonium salts, and
not by guanidines, against MDR cells was based on the fact that the former were found to be substrates of Pglycoprotein
(P-gp), the pump responsible for extruding foreign chemicals; this situation was reversed by
administrating tariquidar, a third generation P-gp inhibitor. Moreover, phosphonium salts provoked a profound
depolarization of mitochondria membranes from tumour cells, thus probably compromising their oxidative
metabolism.
To gain insight into the mode of action of title compounds, continuous live cell microscopy was employed;
interestingly, this technique revealed two different antiproliferative mechanisms for both families of mitocans.
Whereas phosphonium salts had a cytostatic effect, blocking cell division, guanidines led to cell death via
apoptosis.
PB  - Elsevier Inc.
T2  - Bioorganic Chemistry
T1  - Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases
VL  - 145
DO  - 10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107168
SP  - 107168
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Fuentes-Aguilar, Alma and González-Bakker, Aday and Jovanović, Mirna and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Puerta, Adrián and Gargano, Adriana and Dinić, Jelena and Vega-Báez, José L. and Merino-Montiel, Penélope and Montiel-Smith, Sara and Alcaro, Stefano and Nocentini, Alessio and Pešić, Milica and Supuran, Claudiu T. and Padrón, José M. and Fernández-Bolaños, José G. and López, Óscar",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Being aware of the need to develop more efficient therapies against cancer, herein we disclose an innovative
approach for the design of selective antiproliferative agents. We have accomplished the conjugation of a
coumarin fragment with lipophilic cations (triphenylphosphonium salts, guanidinium) for providing mitochondriotropic
agents that simultaneously target also carbonic anhydrases IX and XII, involved in the development
and progression of cancer. The new compounds prepared herein turned out to be strong inhibitors of
carbonic anhydrases IX and XII of human origin (low-to-mid nM range), also endowed with high selectivity,
exhibiting negligible activity towards cytosolic CA isoforms. Key interactions with the enzyme were analysed
using docking and molecular dynamics simulations.
Regarding their in vitro antiproliferative activities, an increase of the tether length connecting both pharmacophores
led to a clear improvement in potency, reaching the submicromolar range for the lead compounds, and
an outstanding selectivity towards tumour cell lines (S.I. up to >357). Cytotoxic effects were also analysed on
MDR cell lines under hypoxic and normoxic conditions. Chemoresistance exhibited by phosphonium salts, and
not by guanidines, against MDR cells was based on the fact that the former were found to be substrates of Pglycoprotein
(P-gp), the pump responsible for extruding foreign chemicals; this situation was reversed by
administrating tariquidar, a third generation P-gp inhibitor. Moreover, phosphonium salts provoked a profound
depolarization of mitochondria membranes from tumour cells, thus probably compromising their oxidative
metabolism.
To gain insight into the mode of action of title compounds, continuous live cell microscopy was employed;
interestingly, this technique revealed two different antiproliferative mechanisms for both families of mitocans.
Whereas phosphonium salts had a cytostatic effect, blocking cell division, guanidines led to cell death via
apoptosis.",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc.",
journal = "Bioorganic Chemistry",
title = "Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases",
volume = "145",
doi = "10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107168",
pages = "107168"
}
Fuentes-Aguilar, A., González-Bakker, A., Jovanović, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Puerta, A., Gargano, A., Dinić, J., Vega-Báez, J. L., Merino-Montiel, P., Montiel-Smith, S., Alcaro, S., Nocentini, A., Pešić, M., Supuran, C. T., Padrón, J. M., Fernández-Bolaños, J. G.,& López, Ó.. (2024). Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases. in Bioorganic Chemistry
Elsevier Inc.., 145, 107168.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107168
Fuentes-Aguilar A, González-Bakker A, Jovanović M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Puerta A, Gargano A, Dinić J, Vega-Báez JL, Merino-Montiel P, Montiel-Smith S, Alcaro S, Nocentini A, Pešić M, Supuran CT, Padrón JM, Fernández-Bolaños JG, López Ó. Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases. in Bioorganic Chemistry. 2024;145:107168.
doi:10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107168 .
Fuentes-Aguilar, Alma, González-Bakker, Aday, Jovanović, Mirna, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Puerta, Adrián, Gargano, Adriana, Dinić, Jelena, Vega-Báez, José L., Merino-Montiel, Penélope, Montiel-Smith, Sara, Alcaro, Stefano, Nocentini, Alessio, Pešić, Milica, Supuran, Claudiu T., Padrón, José M., Fernández-Bolaños, José G., López, Óscar, "Coumarins-lipophilic cations conjugates: Efficient mitocans targeting carbonic anhydrases" in Bioorganic Chemistry, 145 (2024):107168,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107168 . .
4

Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells

Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Pajović, Milica; Jovanović, Mirna; Petrović Rodić, Dušica; Marić, Dragana; Ercegovac, Maja; Pešić, Milica

(Basel: MDPI, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Pajović, Milica
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Petrović Rodić, Dušica
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6448
AB  - Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer death globally, with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounting for the majority of cases. Multidrug resistance (MDR), often caused by ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, represents a significant obstacle in the treatment of NSCLC. While genetic profiling has an important role in personalized therapy, functional assays that measure cellular responses to drugs are gaining in importance. We developed an automated microplate-based immunofluorescence assay for the evaluation of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 in cells obtained from NSCLC patients through high-content imaging and image analysis, as part of a functional diagnostic approach. This assay effectively discriminated cancer from non-cancer cells within mixed cultures, which is vital for accurate assessment of changes in MDR marker expression in different cell populations in response to anticancer drugs. Validation was performed using established drug-sensitive (NCI-H460) and drug-resistant (NCI-H460/R) NSCLC cell lines, demonstrating the assay’s capacity to distinguish and evaluate different MDR profiles. The obtained results revealed wide-ranging effects of various chemotherapeutic agents on MDR marker expression in different patient-derived NSCLC cultures, emphasizing the need for MDR diagnostics in NSCLC. In addition to being a valuable tool for assessing drug effects on MDR markers in different cell populations, the assay can complement genetic profiling to optimize treatment. Further assay adaptations may extend its application to other cancer types, improving treatment efficacy while minimizing the development of resistance.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Diagnostics
T1  - Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells
IS  - 24
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.3390/diagnostics13243617
SP  - 3617
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Pajović, Milica and Jovanović, Mirna and Petrović Rodić, Dušica and Marić, Dragana and Ercegovac, Maja and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer death globally, with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounting for the majority of cases. Multidrug resistance (MDR), often caused by ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, represents a significant obstacle in the treatment of NSCLC. While genetic profiling has an important role in personalized therapy, functional assays that measure cellular responses to drugs are gaining in importance. We developed an automated microplate-based immunofluorescence assay for the evaluation of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 in cells obtained from NSCLC patients through high-content imaging and image analysis, as part of a functional diagnostic approach. This assay effectively discriminated cancer from non-cancer cells within mixed cultures, which is vital for accurate assessment of changes in MDR marker expression in different cell populations in response to anticancer drugs. Validation was performed using established drug-sensitive (NCI-H460) and drug-resistant (NCI-H460/R) NSCLC cell lines, demonstrating the assay’s capacity to distinguish and evaluate different MDR profiles. The obtained results revealed wide-ranging effects of various chemotherapeutic agents on MDR marker expression in different patient-derived NSCLC cultures, emphasizing the need for MDR diagnostics in NSCLC. In addition to being a valuable tool for assessing drug effects on MDR markers in different cell populations, the assay can complement genetic profiling to optimize treatment. Further assay adaptations may extend its application to other cancer types, improving treatment efficacy while minimizing the development of resistance.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Diagnostics",
title = "Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells",
number = "24",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.3390/diagnostics13243617",
pages = "3617"
}
Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Dragoj, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Pajović, M., Jovanović, M., Petrović Rodić, D., Marić, D., Ercegovac, M.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells. in Diagnostics
Basel: MDPI., 13(24), 3617.
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13243617
Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Dragoj M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Pajović M, Jovanović M, Petrović Rodić D, Marić D, Ercegovac M, Pešić M. Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells. in Diagnostics. 2023;13(24):3617.
doi:10.3390/diagnostics13243617 .
Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Pajović, Milica, Jovanović, Mirna, Petrović Rodić, Dušica, Marić, Dragana, Ercegovac, Maja, Pešić, Milica, "Immunofluorescence-Based Assay for High-Throughput Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Markers in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Patient-Derived Cells" in Diagnostics, 13, no. 24 (2023):3617,
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13243617 . .
1

High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović, Mirna; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Pajović, Milica; Petrović Rodić, Dušica; Marić, Dragana; Ercegovac, Maja; Pešić, Milica

(Belgrade: Serbian Association for Cancer Research Belgrade, Serbia, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Pajović, Milica
AU  - Petrović Rodić, Dušica
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6449
AB  - Introduction

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death globally, despite significant advancements in cancer treatment over the past decades. A major challenge in cancer therapy is multidrug resistance (MDR), which is responsible for over 90% of deaths in cancer patients receiving both traditional chemotherapeutics and novel targeted drugs. MDR arises from various mechanisms, including elevated metabolism of foreign substances (xenobiotics), enhanced drug efflux from cells, increased DNA repair capacity, and genetic factors such as gene mutations, amplifications, and epigenetic alterations.1 It is categorized into two types: primary resistance, which exists before initiating therapy and acquired resistance, which develops after the initial treatment. The incidence of primary resistance to cancer treatment can be remarkably high (up to 60%) in certain cancer types.2 Furthermore, the majority of cancer patients are likely to develop resistance at some point during treatment.
Although, the various underlying mechanism for drug resistance development in tumors have been highlighted in the past years, enhanced drug efflux, caused by increased expression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) membrane transporters, is one of the major contributors to MDR. Among the known ABC transporters, three members, P-glycoprotein (P-gp, encoded by the MDR1 gene), Multidrug Resistance-Associated Protein 1 (MRP1), and Breast Cancer Resistance Protein - BCRP or Placenta ABC Protein - ABC-P), have been linked to chemoresistance to various drugs. P-gp and BCRP regulate various chemical compounds' distribution, absorption, and excretion. However, their overexpression can interfere with drug administration, reducing drug bioavailability and intracellular concentration.3 There is a significant correlation between increased expression of P-gp in cancer cells and enhanced resistance to drugs like paclitaxel, etoposide, DOX, and vinblastine. Overexpression of P-gp has been observed in approximately 50% of all human cancers. While in some tumor types, such as lung, liver, kidney, rectum, and colon, increased P-gp expression has been observed before chemotherapy treatment, in others, such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia, it has been noticed after exposure to anticancer agents.4 Overexpression of P-gp and BCRP has been associated with poor clinical response and MDR in patients. Therefore, the pharmacological inhibition of the efflux function of these transporters was pursued as a strategy to overcome resistance to anticancer drugs in the clinic. However, despite showing high efficacy in preclinical studies, none of the P-gp inhibitors have been approved yet by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical use in cancer treatment.5
Taking into account all the above mentioned it is clear that screening and assessment of MDR markers in patient’s cancer cells could play an important role in personalized treatment approaches. Expressing MDR markers in cancer cells could predict a patient's response to specific drugs or drug classes, allowing the selection of the most effective treatment regimen and avoiding using drugs that are likely ineffective due to resistance. Moreover, the presence of MDR markers associated with resistance to multiple drugs could guide the design of personalized treatment regimens with a combination of drugs that have a higher chance of overcoming the patient's specific drug resistance profile. Monitoring the expression level of MDR markers during the course of treatment could provide valuable insights into the development of drug resistance, and would allow healthcare professionals to adjust the treatment plan if drug resistance emerges, ensuring that the patient receives the most effective therapy.
Our team established a promising method for high-throughput screening for MDR markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patient-derived cells, which implies pharmacological screening and an ex vivo experimental setting. It enables gaining valuable insights into patient characteristics and drug responses that may not be apparent through conventional sequencing or clinical trials. This strategy has the potential to improve personalized cancer treatment approaches, offering patients more effective and tailored therapies based on their individual characteristics and drug responses.

Methodology

Patient-derived NSCLC cell cultures 
Samples from NSCLC patients are collected from the Thoracic Surgery Clinic at the Clinical Center of Serbia. The histological grade is determined by histopathological analysis of the surgical specimen. Collected NSCLC samples are used to establish patient-derived NSCLC cell cultures comprising cancer and stromal cells (mainly fibroblasts). It is well known that the sensitivity of cancer cells depends on their interaction with the microenvironment including neighboring cells.6 The primary cultures obtained from the samples are grown for 1-2 weeks prior to drug testing.

Fluorescence immunoassay for high-throughput identification of cancers cells and MDR markers in NSCLC patient-derived cell cultures
The fluorescence immunoassay utilizes antibodies against CK8 and CK18, which are expressed in nearly all carcinomas of epithelial origin, to identify epithelial cancer cells. Co-staining of CK8/18 with Hoechst 33342 allows the identification and quantification of two types of cells: CK8/18-negative (non-cancer cells) and CK8/18-positive (cancer cells). This immunoassay is also used to identify and quantify changes in the expression of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 both in cancer and non-cancer cells in primary NSCLC cultures that may occur during chemotherapy and tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) treatment.7 Co-staining of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 with CK8/18 and Hoechst 33342 enables the identification of four types of cells in NSCLC primary cell cultures: drug-sensitive non-cancer cells, MDR non-cancer cells, drug-sensitive cancer cells, and MDR cancer cells.
For validation of the immunoassay patient-derived cells are seeded in 384 well-plates and treated with 5 different concentrations of 8 chemotherapeutics known to induce overexpression of MDR markers (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, gemcitabine, vinorelbine, etoposide, and pemetrexed), allowing the ex vivo evaluation of NSCLC MDR profile. Validated immunoassay is further used to evaluate the expression of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 (MDR profile) in patient-derived cell cultures after treatment with a panel of 10 TKIs (erlotinib, gefitinib, afatinib, osimertinib crizotinib, alectinib, ceritinib, nintedanib, dabrafenib, and trametinib), allowing evaluation of MDR profile in both cancer and stromal cells. The sensitivity of cancer and stromal cells for each individual NSCLC patient to a particular TKI is assessed using a discriminative immunoassay employing CK8/18 antibodies cocktail.
Whole Exome Sequencing (WES)
	Paired patient samples (normal and tumor) were subjected to a DNA isolation procedure using Qiagen genomic DNA extraction kit, recommended for NGS applications. Isolated DNA samples underwent WES analyses by Novogene Company. Bioinformatics and statistics tools were employed to define clinically relevant gene alterations in MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2.

Results


In order to understand how NSCLC patient cells respond to chemotherapy and targeted therapy, ex vivo testing was performed. The maximum concentration of drugs in human plasma that the patient is exposed to during therapy (Cmax) was used as an upper limit for drug concentration during testing, with four lower concentrations also used. The results showed that patient-derived cells display individual differences in sensitivity to both chemo and targeted therapeutics. IC50 values, which indicate sensitivity, fell within the concentration range for most chemotherapeutics. Only some chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, etoposide, docetaxel, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed) showed selectivity towards cancer cells with lower IC50 values in cancer than in stromal cells. Among TKIs, only erlotinib was efficient with IC50 below Cmax, showing selectivity towards cancer cells in all investigated patient-derived cell cultures. A number of chemotherapeutics increased the expression of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2, while TKIs afatinib, alectinib, ceritinib, osimertinib, and trametinib did not affect these transporters. Some TKIs increased the expression of ABC transporters, with nintedanib showing the potential to select cancer cells with higher MDR marker expression. WES showed significant ABCC1 gene instability, while ABCB1 had many SNPs with clinical relevance for drug response. ABCG2 had the lowest number of SNPs, but intron deletions were still identified. However, the clinical significance of these changes is currently unknown.

Conclusion

Screening for multidrug-resistance markers through a high-throughput process provides valuable information about how a patient will respond to therapy. This process can identify if the MDR phenotype is already present or if it can be induced with targeted or chemotherapy. Based on this information, it can provide recommendations for a patient's mono- and combined therapy. This methodology has the potential to greatly impact cancer treatment strategies and improve patient outcomes by tailoring therapies to individual patient profiles. Ultimately, this will benefit a wider range of patients with non-small cell lung carcinoma and other cancers, as it leads to more precise and targeted treatment selections.


References
1.	Bukowski, K., Kciuk, M., & Kontek, R. (2020). Mechanisms of Multidrug Resistance in Cancer Chemotherapy. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 21(9). 
2.	Sharma, P., Hu-Lieskovan, S., Wargo, J. A., & Ribas, A. (2017). Primary, Adaptive and Acquired Resistance to Cancer Immunotherapy. Cell, 168(4), 707. 
3.	Wang, J. Q., Wu, Z. X., Yang, Y., Teng, Q. X., Li, Y. D., Lei, Z. N., Jani, K. A., Kaushal, N., & Chen, Z. S. (2021). ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters in cancer: A review of recent updates. Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine, 14(3), 232–256. 
4.	Wang, X., Zhang, H., & Chen, X. (n.d.). Review Open Access Cancer Drug Resistance Drug resistance and combating drug resistance in cancer.
5.	Nanayakkara, A. K., Follit, C. A., Chen, G., Williams, N. S., Vogel, P. D., & Wise, J. G. (n.d.). Targeted inhibitors of P-glycoprotein increase chemotherapeutic-induced mortality of multidrug resistant tumor cells OPEN. 
6.	 Sazeides, C., & Le, A. (2021). Metabolic Relationship Between Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts and Cancer Cells. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 1311, 189–204. 
7.	Beretta, G. L., Cassinelli, G., Pennati, M., Zuco, V., & Gatti, L. (2017). Overcoming ABC transporter-mediated multidrug resistance: The dual role of tyrosine kinase inhibitors as multitargeting agents. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 142, 271–289.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Association for Cancer Research Belgrade, Serbia
C3  - Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment
SP  - 37
EP  - 39
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6449
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović, Mirna and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Pajović, Milica and Petrović Rodić, Dušica and Marić, Dragana and Ercegovac, Maja and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Introduction

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death globally, despite significant advancements in cancer treatment over the past decades. A major challenge in cancer therapy is multidrug resistance (MDR), which is responsible for over 90% of deaths in cancer patients receiving both traditional chemotherapeutics and novel targeted drugs. MDR arises from various mechanisms, including elevated metabolism of foreign substances (xenobiotics), enhanced drug efflux from cells, increased DNA repair capacity, and genetic factors such as gene mutations, amplifications, and epigenetic alterations.1 It is categorized into two types: primary resistance, which exists before initiating therapy and acquired resistance, which develops after the initial treatment. The incidence of primary resistance to cancer treatment can be remarkably high (up to 60%) in certain cancer types.2 Furthermore, the majority of cancer patients are likely to develop resistance at some point during treatment.
Although, the various underlying mechanism for drug resistance development in tumors have been highlighted in the past years, enhanced drug efflux, caused by increased expression of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) membrane transporters, is one of the major contributors to MDR. Among the known ABC transporters, three members, P-glycoprotein (P-gp, encoded by the MDR1 gene), Multidrug Resistance-Associated Protein 1 (MRP1), and Breast Cancer Resistance Protein - BCRP or Placenta ABC Protein - ABC-P), have been linked to chemoresistance to various drugs. P-gp and BCRP regulate various chemical compounds' distribution, absorption, and excretion. However, their overexpression can interfere with drug administration, reducing drug bioavailability and intracellular concentration.3 There is a significant correlation between increased expression of P-gp in cancer cells and enhanced resistance to drugs like paclitaxel, etoposide, DOX, and vinblastine. Overexpression of P-gp has been observed in approximately 50% of all human cancers. While in some tumor types, such as lung, liver, kidney, rectum, and colon, increased P-gp expression has been observed before chemotherapy treatment, in others, such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia, it has been noticed after exposure to anticancer agents.4 Overexpression of P-gp and BCRP has been associated with poor clinical response and MDR in patients. Therefore, the pharmacological inhibition of the efflux function of these transporters was pursued as a strategy to overcome resistance to anticancer drugs in the clinic. However, despite showing high efficacy in preclinical studies, none of the P-gp inhibitors have been approved yet by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical use in cancer treatment.5
Taking into account all the above mentioned it is clear that screening and assessment of MDR markers in patient’s cancer cells could play an important role in personalized treatment approaches. Expressing MDR markers in cancer cells could predict a patient's response to specific drugs or drug classes, allowing the selection of the most effective treatment regimen and avoiding using drugs that are likely ineffective due to resistance. Moreover, the presence of MDR markers associated with resistance to multiple drugs could guide the design of personalized treatment regimens with a combination of drugs that have a higher chance of overcoming the patient's specific drug resistance profile. Monitoring the expression level of MDR markers during the course of treatment could provide valuable insights into the development of drug resistance, and would allow healthcare professionals to adjust the treatment plan if drug resistance emerges, ensuring that the patient receives the most effective therapy.
Our team established a promising method for high-throughput screening for MDR markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patient-derived cells, which implies pharmacological screening and an ex vivo experimental setting. It enables gaining valuable insights into patient characteristics and drug responses that may not be apparent through conventional sequencing or clinical trials. This strategy has the potential to improve personalized cancer treatment approaches, offering patients more effective and tailored therapies based on their individual characteristics and drug responses.

Methodology

Patient-derived NSCLC cell cultures 
Samples from NSCLC patients are collected from the Thoracic Surgery Clinic at the Clinical Center of Serbia. The histological grade is determined by histopathological analysis of the surgical specimen. Collected NSCLC samples are used to establish patient-derived NSCLC cell cultures comprising cancer and stromal cells (mainly fibroblasts). It is well known that the sensitivity of cancer cells depends on their interaction with the microenvironment including neighboring cells.6 The primary cultures obtained from the samples are grown for 1-2 weeks prior to drug testing.

Fluorescence immunoassay for high-throughput identification of cancers cells and MDR markers in NSCLC patient-derived cell cultures
The fluorescence immunoassay utilizes antibodies against CK8 and CK18, which are expressed in nearly all carcinomas of epithelial origin, to identify epithelial cancer cells. Co-staining of CK8/18 with Hoechst 33342 allows the identification and quantification of two types of cells: CK8/18-negative (non-cancer cells) and CK8/18-positive (cancer cells). This immunoassay is also used to identify and quantify changes in the expression of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 both in cancer and non-cancer cells in primary NSCLC cultures that may occur during chemotherapy and tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) treatment.7 Co-staining of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 with CK8/18 and Hoechst 33342 enables the identification of four types of cells in NSCLC primary cell cultures: drug-sensitive non-cancer cells, MDR non-cancer cells, drug-sensitive cancer cells, and MDR cancer cells.
For validation of the immunoassay patient-derived cells are seeded in 384 well-plates and treated with 5 different concentrations of 8 chemotherapeutics known to induce overexpression of MDR markers (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, gemcitabine, vinorelbine, etoposide, and pemetrexed), allowing the ex vivo evaluation of NSCLC MDR profile. Validated immunoassay is further used to evaluate the expression of MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 (MDR profile) in patient-derived cell cultures after treatment with a panel of 10 TKIs (erlotinib, gefitinib, afatinib, osimertinib crizotinib, alectinib, ceritinib, nintedanib, dabrafenib, and trametinib), allowing evaluation of MDR profile in both cancer and stromal cells. The sensitivity of cancer and stromal cells for each individual NSCLC patient to a particular TKI is assessed using a discriminative immunoassay employing CK8/18 antibodies cocktail.
Whole Exome Sequencing (WES)
	Paired patient samples (normal and tumor) were subjected to a DNA isolation procedure using Qiagen genomic DNA extraction kit, recommended for NGS applications. Isolated DNA samples underwent WES analyses by Novogene Company. Bioinformatics and statistics tools were employed to define clinically relevant gene alterations in MDR markers ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2.

Results


In order to understand how NSCLC patient cells respond to chemotherapy and targeted therapy, ex vivo testing was performed. The maximum concentration of drugs in human plasma that the patient is exposed to during therapy (Cmax) was used as an upper limit for drug concentration during testing, with four lower concentrations also used. The results showed that patient-derived cells display individual differences in sensitivity to both chemo and targeted therapeutics. IC50 values, which indicate sensitivity, fell within the concentration range for most chemotherapeutics. Only some chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, etoposide, docetaxel, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed) showed selectivity towards cancer cells with lower IC50 values in cancer than in stromal cells. Among TKIs, only erlotinib was efficient with IC50 below Cmax, showing selectivity towards cancer cells in all investigated patient-derived cell cultures. A number of chemotherapeutics increased the expression of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2, while TKIs afatinib, alectinib, ceritinib, osimertinib, and trametinib did not affect these transporters. Some TKIs increased the expression of ABC transporters, with nintedanib showing the potential to select cancer cells with higher MDR marker expression. WES showed significant ABCC1 gene instability, while ABCB1 had many SNPs with clinical relevance for drug response. ABCG2 had the lowest number of SNPs, but intron deletions were still identified. However, the clinical significance of these changes is currently unknown.

Conclusion

Screening for multidrug-resistance markers through a high-throughput process provides valuable information about how a patient will respond to therapy. This process can identify if the MDR phenotype is already present or if it can be induced with targeted or chemotherapy. Based on this information, it can provide recommendations for a patient's mono- and combined therapy. This methodology has the potential to greatly impact cancer treatment strategies and improve patient outcomes by tailoring therapies to individual patient profiles. Ultimately, this will benefit a wider range of patients with non-small cell lung carcinoma and other cancers, as it leads to more precise and targeted treatment selections.


References
1.	Bukowski, K., Kciuk, M., & Kontek, R. (2020). Mechanisms of Multidrug Resistance in Cancer Chemotherapy. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 21(9). 
2.	Sharma, P., Hu-Lieskovan, S., Wargo, J. A., & Ribas, A. (2017). Primary, Adaptive and Acquired Resistance to Cancer Immunotherapy. Cell, 168(4), 707. 
3.	Wang, J. Q., Wu, Z. X., Yang, Y., Teng, Q. X., Li, Y. D., Lei, Z. N., Jani, K. A., Kaushal, N., & Chen, Z. S. (2021). ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters in cancer: A review of recent updates. Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine, 14(3), 232–256. 
4.	Wang, X., Zhang, H., & Chen, X. (n.d.). Review Open Access Cancer Drug Resistance Drug resistance and combating drug resistance in cancer.
5.	Nanayakkara, A. K., Follit, C. A., Chen, G., Williams, N. S., Vogel, P. D., & Wise, J. G. (n.d.). Targeted inhibitors of P-glycoprotein increase chemotherapeutic-induced mortality of multidrug resistant tumor cells OPEN. 
6.	 Sazeides, C., & Le, A. (2021). Metabolic Relationship Between Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts and Cancer Cells. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 1311, 189–204. 
7.	Beretta, G. L., Cassinelli, G., Pennati, M., Zuco, V., & Gatti, L. (2017). Overcoming ABC transporter-mediated multidrug resistance: The dual role of tyrosine kinase inhibitors as multitargeting agents. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 142, 271–289.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Association for Cancer Research Belgrade, Serbia",
journal = "Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment",
pages = "37-39",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6449"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Podolski-Renić, A., Dinić, J., Dragoj, M., Jovanović, M., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Pajović, M., Petrović Rodić, D., Marić, D., Ercegovac, M.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment. in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Association for Cancer Research Belgrade, Serbia., 37-39.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6449
Jovanović Stojanov S, Podolski-Renić A, Dinić J, Dragoj M, Jovanović M, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Pajović M, Petrović Rodić D, Marić D, Ercegovac M, Pešić M. High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment. in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia. 2023;:37-39.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6449 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović, Mirna, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Pajović, Milica, Petrović Rodić, Dušica, Marić, Dragana, Ercegovac, Maja, Pešić, Milica, "High-throughput screening of multidrug-resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells - contribution to personalized treatment" in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia (2023):37-39,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6449 .

Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy

Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Pajović, Milica; Petrović Rodić, Dušica; Marić, Dragana; Ercegovac, Maja; Pešić, Milica

(Elsevier Inc, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Pajović, Milica
AU  - Petrović Rodić, Dušica
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6380
AB  - Background: Multidrug resistance (MDR) hampers tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) efficacy in non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). ABC transporters ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 trigger MDR by effluxing drugs from cancer cells. We studied erlotinib and nintedanib effects in patient-derived NSCLC cultures, MDR phenotype impact, and genetic alterations influencing drug response.
Methods: ABC transporter expression in 10 NSCLC patient-derived cell cultures was assessed after TKI treatment via immunofluorescence assay which enables discrimination between cancer and stromal cells. Erlotinib (1 µM – 4 µM) and nintedanib (2.5 µM – 20 µM) were used in clinically relevant concentrations. Whole exome sequencing was employed to analyze genetic alterations in NSCLC samples. 
Results: Erlotinib selectively inhibited cancer cell growth (IC50: 0.25 µM – 3.2 µM). It increased ABCC1 expression in 4/10 cultures and ABCB1/ABCG2 in 2/10 cultures. Erlotinib induced MDR markers expression at all concentrations. Nintedanib stimulated cancer cell growth at lower concentrations (˂10 µM) and caused 90% cell death at higher concentrations (˃15 µM), enriching the culture with cancer cells with high expression of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2. TKIs had no impact on MDR marker expression in stromal cells. Genetic alterations without clinical relevance for NSCLC were found in EGFR, ALK, ROS1, RET, and BRAF. L858R mutation in EGFR, indicated for erlotinib treatment, was detected in one patient, although all patients were responsive to erlotinib. Genetic alterations related to drug response were found in ABCB1 (7/10 patients) and ABCG2 (1/10 patients). 
Conclusions: The employed functional diagnostics approach can effectively assess how erlotinib and nintedanib influence the MDR phenotype for individual patients. The ex-vivo screening system utilized in this study identifies the sensitivity of cancer and stromal cells and the correlation between response and their MDR profile, as well as the dependence of drug response on genetic alterations. This approach holds great promise for advancing personalized treatment strategies in NSCLC.
PB  - Elsevier Inc
C3  - Abstract book: Molecular Analysis for Precision Oncology Congress 2023; 2023 Oct 4-6; Paris, France
T1  - Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy
DO  - 10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.101680
SP  - 12
EP  - 12
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Pajović, Milica and Petrović Rodić, Dušica and Marić, Dragana and Ercegovac, Maja and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Background: Multidrug resistance (MDR) hampers tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) efficacy in non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). ABC transporters ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 trigger MDR by effluxing drugs from cancer cells. We studied erlotinib and nintedanib effects in patient-derived NSCLC cultures, MDR phenotype impact, and genetic alterations influencing drug response.
Methods: ABC transporter expression in 10 NSCLC patient-derived cell cultures was assessed after TKI treatment via immunofluorescence assay which enables discrimination between cancer and stromal cells. Erlotinib (1 µM – 4 µM) and nintedanib (2.5 µM – 20 µM) were used in clinically relevant concentrations. Whole exome sequencing was employed to analyze genetic alterations in NSCLC samples. 
Results: Erlotinib selectively inhibited cancer cell growth (IC50: 0.25 µM – 3.2 µM). It increased ABCC1 expression in 4/10 cultures and ABCB1/ABCG2 in 2/10 cultures. Erlotinib induced MDR markers expression at all concentrations. Nintedanib stimulated cancer cell growth at lower concentrations (˂10 µM) and caused 90% cell death at higher concentrations (˃15 µM), enriching the culture with cancer cells with high expression of ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2. TKIs had no impact on MDR marker expression in stromal cells. Genetic alterations without clinical relevance for NSCLC were found in EGFR, ALK, ROS1, RET, and BRAF. L858R mutation in EGFR, indicated for erlotinib treatment, was detected in one patient, although all patients were responsive to erlotinib. Genetic alterations related to drug response were found in ABCB1 (7/10 patients) and ABCG2 (1/10 patients). 
Conclusions: The employed functional diagnostics approach can effectively assess how erlotinib and nintedanib influence the MDR phenotype for individual patients. The ex-vivo screening system utilized in this study identifies the sensitivity of cancer and stromal cells and the correlation between response and their MDR profile, as well as the dependence of drug response on genetic alterations. This approach holds great promise for advancing personalized treatment strategies in NSCLC.",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc",
journal = "Abstract book: Molecular Analysis for Precision Oncology Congress 2023; 2023 Oct 4-6; Paris, France",
title = "Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy",
doi = "10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.101680",
pages = "12-12"
}
Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Dragoj, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Pajović, M., Petrović Rodić, D., Marić, D., Ercegovac, M.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy. in Abstract book: Molecular Analysis for Precision Oncology Congress 2023; 2023 Oct 4-6; Paris, France
Elsevier Inc., 12-12.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.101680
Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Dragoj M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Pajović M, Petrović Rodić D, Marić D, Ercegovac M, Pešić M. Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy. in Abstract book: Molecular Analysis for Precision Oncology Congress 2023; 2023 Oct 4-6; Paris, France. 2023;:12-12.
doi:10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.101680 .
Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Pajović, Milica, Petrović Rodić, Dušica, Marić, Dragana, Ercegovac, Maja, Pešić, Milica, "Functional diagnostics and ex-vivo screening of erlotinib and nintedanib in non-small cell lung carcinoma: Implications for multidrug resistance and personalized therapy" in Abstract book: Molecular Analysis for Precision Oncology Congress 2023; 2023 Oct 4-6; Paris, France (2023):12-12,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.101680 . .

The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells

Lupšić, Ema; Dinić, Jelena; Nikolić, Igor; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Pešić, Milica; Podolski-Renić, Ana

(Belgrade, Serbia: Serbian Associaton for Cancer Research, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Nikolić, Igor
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6381
AB  - Background:  High-grade gliomas are the most frequently diagnosed malignant brain tumors in adults, with a very unfavorable prognosis. Although various strategies have been applied in the clinical setting, no significant progress has been made in the treatment of high-grade glioma. Clinical trials continue to expand into new approaches such as targeted agents and immunotherapy. Here, we performed pharmacological screening of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) on patient-derived glioma cells ex vivo and assessed the expression of multidrug resistance (MDR) marker in glioma and stromal (non-glioma) cells. The effects of TKIs have been compared with chemotherapeutic agents approved for the treatment of high-grade glioma. Material and Methods: Primary patient-derived cell cultures were established from resections of high-grade gliomas. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of glioma and non-glioma cells was treated with 4 TKIs (alectinib, dabrafenib, trametinib, and nintedanib), as well as temozolomide (TMZ) and carmustine (BCNU). The maximum achieved concentration in human plasma during therapy (Cmax) was set as the upper limit and 4 lower concentrations were also used during the study. An immunofluorescence assay allowing discrimination of glial fibrillary acidic protein antibody-positive glioma cells versus negative non-glioma cells was performed using an ImageXpress Pico high-content imager (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. The MDR marker (ABCB1) was analyzed with the corresponding antibody in the same immunoassay. Results: Among the compounds tested, alectinib and TMZ did not affect cell growth and did not change the number of ABCB1-positive cells. Other compounds significantly inhibited the growth of glioma cells. However, they were not selective towards glioma cells, on the contrary, they showed greater cytotoxicity in non-glioma cells. The number of glioma cells positive for the ABCB1 marker increased significantly after treatment with dabrafenib, nintedanib, and BCNU, while trametinib and did not change ABCB1 expression in glioma cells. Stromal (non-glioma) cells generally followed the pattern of ABCB1 observed in glioma cells. Conclusions: Novel functional immunoassay may provide valuable information on the sensitivity of high-grade gliomas to different TKIs and possible treatment outcomes based on the expression of MDR marker.
PB  - Belgrade, Serbia: Serbian Associaton for Cancer Research
C3  - Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells
SP  - 84
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6381
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Lupšić, Ema and Dinić, Jelena and Nikolić, Igor and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Pešić, Milica and Podolski-Renić, Ana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Background:  High-grade gliomas are the most frequently diagnosed malignant brain tumors in adults, with a very unfavorable prognosis. Although various strategies have been applied in the clinical setting, no significant progress has been made in the treatment of high-grade glioma. Clinical trials continue to expand into new approaches such as targeted agents and immunotherapy. Here, we performed pharmacological screening of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) on patient-derived glioma cells ex vivo and assessed the expression of multidrug resistance (MDR) marker in glioma and stromal (non-glioma) cells. The effects of TKIs have been compared with chemotherapeutic agents approved for the treatment of high-grade glioma. Material and Methods: Primary patient-derived cell cultures were established from resections of high-grade gliomas. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of glioma and non-glioma cells was treated with 4 TKIs (alectinib, dabrafenib, trametinib, and nintedanib), as well as temozolomide (TMZ) and carmustine (BCNU). The maximum achieved concentration in human plasma during therapy (Cmax) was set as the upper limit and 4 lower concentrations were also used during the study. An immunofluorescence assay allowing discrimination of glial fibrillary acidic protein antibody-positive glioma cells versus negative non-glioma cells was performed using an ImageXpress Pico high-content imager (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. The MDR marker (ABCB1) was analyzed with the corresponding antibody in the same immunoassay. Results: Among the compounds tested, alectinib and TMZ did not affect cell growth and did not change the number of ABCB1-positive cells. Other compounds significantly inhibited the growth of glioma cells. However, they were not selective towards glioma cells, on the contrary, they showed greater cytotoxicity in non-glioma cells. The number of glioma cells positive for the ABCB1 marker increased significantly after treatment with dabrafenib, nintedanib, and BCNU, while trametinib and did not change ABCB1 expression in glioma cells. Stromal (non-glioma) cells generally followed the pattern of ABCB1 observed in glioma cells. Conclusions: Novel functional immunoassay may provide valuable information on the sensitivity of high-grade gliomas to different TKIs and possible treatment outcomes based on the expression of MDR marker.",
publisher = "Belgrade, Serbia: Serbian Associaton for Cancer Research",
journal = "Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells",
pages = "84",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6381"
}
Lupšić, E., Dinić, J., Nikolić, I., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Pešić, M.,& Podolski-Renić, A.. (2023). The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells. in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade, Serbia: Serbian Associaton for Cancer Research., 84.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6381
Lupšić E, Dinić J, Nikolić I, Jovanović Stojanov S, Pešić M, Podolski-Renić A. The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells. in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia. 2023;:84.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6381 .
Lupšić, Ema, Dinić, Jelena, Nikolić, Igor, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Pešić, Milica, Podolski-Renić, Ana, "The effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in high-grade glioma patient-derived cells" in Proceedings book of The Sixth Congress of The Serbian Association for Cancer Research with international participation: From Collaboration to Innovation in Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 2-4; Belgrade, Serbia (2023):84,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6381 .

Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells

Ljujić, Mila; Trifunović, Sara; Ilić, Bojan; Milovanović, Jelena; Dinić, Jelena; Divac Rankov, Aleksandra

(Belgrade: Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering, University of Belgrade, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Ljujić, Mila
AU  - Trifunović, Sara
AU  - Ilić, Bojan
AU  - Milovanović, Jelena
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Divac Rankov, Aleksandra
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6250
AB  - Introduction: Cigarette smoke exposure is a known risk factor for development of lung diseases and
electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) were introduced as a popular and safer alternative to combustible tobacco products. Increasing number of studies are reporting their adverse biological effects both in vivo
and in vitro. Aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of e-cigarettes on mitochondrial function in
lung bronchial epithelial cells.
Methods: Electronic cigarette vapor condensate (ECC) was generated using an e-cigarette device on a
suction trap cooled in a dry ice/ethanol bath. We used unflavoured and flavoured e-cigarette liquids with
and without nicotine. Human bronchial epithelial BEAS2B cells were seeded in 96well plates and treated
with 2% e-cigarette vapour condensate for 24h. Mitochondrial membrane potential was measured using
50nM TMRE (Tetramethyl rhodamine ethyl ester) and cells were visualized on ImageXpress® Pico Automated Cell Imaging System (Molecular Devices, San Jose, CA, USA) with a 10x objective.
Results: We found a significant reduction of TMRE fluorescence in treated cells compared to the control. Imaging of treated cells also revealed changes in cell morphology and the presence of mitochondria in TNT-like structures.
Conclusion: Mitochondrial dysfunction has been associated with various pathological conditions including lung diseases such as asthma, COPD and lung cancer. Due to their relative novelty, the role of
electronic cigarette use in development of chronic lung diseases is still relatively unknown. Our findings
contribute to the growing list of studies pointing to their adverse biological effects and imply their involvement in processes contributing to chronic lung diseases.
PB  - Belgrade: Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering, University of Belgrade
C3  - Abstract Book: CoMBoS2 - the Second Congress of Molecular Biologists of Serbia; 2023 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells
SP  - 139
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6250
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Ljujić, Mila and Trifunović, Sara and Ilić, Bojan and Milovanović, Jelena and Dinić, Jelena and Divac Rankov, Aleksandra",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Introduction: Cigarette smoke exposure is a known risk factor for development of lung diseases and
electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) were introduced as a popular and safer alternative to combustible tobacco products. Increasing number of studies are reporting their adverse biological effects both in vivo
and in vitro. Aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of e-cigarettes on mitochondrial function in
lung bronchial epithelial cells.
Methods: Electronic cigarette vapor condensate (ECC) was generated using an e-cigarette device on a
suction trap cooled in a dry ice/ethanol bath. We used unflavoured and flavoured e-cigarette liquids with
and without nicotine. Human bronchial epithelial BEAS2B cells were seeded in 96well plates and treated
with 2% e-cigarette vapour condensate for 24h. Mitochondrial membrane potential was measured using
50nM TMRE (Tetramethyl rhodamine ethyl ester) and cells were visualized on ImageXpress® Pico Automated Cell Imaging System (Molecular Devices, San Jose, CA, USA) with a 10x objective.
Results: We found a significant reduction of TMRE fluorescence in treated cells compared to the control. Imaging of treated cells also revealed changes in cell morphology and the presence of mitochondria in TNT-like structures.
Conclusion: Mitochondrial dysfunction has been associated with various pathological conditions including lung diseases such as asthma, COPD and lung cancer. Due to their relative novelty, the role of
electronic cigarette use in development of chronic lung diseases is still relatively unknown. Our findings
contribute to the growing list of studies pointing to their adverse biological effects and imply their involvement in processes contributing to chronic lung diseases.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering, University of Belgrade",
journal = "Abstract Book: CoMBoS2 - the Second Congress of Molecular Biologists of Serbia; 2023 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells",
pages = "139",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6250"
}
Ljujić, M., Trifunović, S., Ilić, B., Milovanović, J., Dinić, J.,& Divac Rankov, A.. (2023). Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells. in Abstract Book: CoMBoS2 - the Second Congress of Molecular Biologists of Serbia; 2023 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade: Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering, University of Belgrade., 139.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6250
Ljujić M, Trifunović S, Ilić B, Milovanović J, Dinić J, Divac Rankov A. Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells. in Abstract Book: CoMBoS2 - the Second Congress of Molecular Biologists of Serbia; 2023 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia. 2023;:139.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6250 .
Ljujić, Mila, Trifunović, Sara, Ilić, Bojan, Milovanović, Jelena, Dinić, Jelena, Divac Rankov, Aleksandra, "Electronic cigarette vapour condensate affects mitochondrial potential in BEAS2B cells" in Abstract Book: CoMBoS2 - the Second Congress of Molecular Biologists of Serbia; 2023 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia (2023):139,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_6250 .

Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Ntungwe, Epole N.; Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Pajović, Milica; Rijo, Patrícia; Pešić, Milica

(Basel: MDPI, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Ntungwe, Epole N.
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Pajović, Milica
AU  - Rijo, Patrícia
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6027
AB  - Multidrug resistance in cancer is often mediated by P-glycoprotein. Natural compounds
have been suggested as a fourth generation of P-glycoprotein inhibitors. Coleon U, isolated from
Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., was reported to modulate P-glycoprotein activity but the underlying
mechanism has not yet been revealed. Therefore, the effects of Coleon U on cell viability, proliferation, and cell death induction were studied in a non-small-cell lung carcinoma model comprising
sensitive and multidrug-resistant cells with P-glycoprotein overexpression. P-glycoprotein activity
and mitochondrial membrane potential were assessed by flow cytometry upon Coleon U, sodiumorthovanadate (an ATPase inhibitor), and verapamil (an ATPase stimulator) treatments. SwissADME
was used to identify the pharmacokinetic properties of Coleon U, while P-glycoprotein expression
was studied by immunofluorescence. Our results showed that Coleon U is not a P-glycoprotein
substrate and is equally efficient in sensitive and multidrug-resistant cancer cells. A decrease in
P-glycoprotein activity observed with Coleon U and verapamil after 72 h is antagonized in combination with sodium-orthovanadate. Coleon U induced a pronounced effect on mitochondrial membrane
depolarization and showed a tendency to decrease P-glycoprotein expression. In conclusion, Coleon
U-delayed effect on the decrease in P-glycoprotein activity is due to P-glycoprotein’s functioning
dependence on ATP production in mitochondria.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Pharmaceutics
T1  - Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition
IS  - 7
VL  - 15
DO  - 10.3390/pharmaceutics15071942
SP  - 1942
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Ntungwe, Epole N. and Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Pajović, Milica and Rijo, Patrícia and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Multidrug resistance in cancer is often mediated by P-glycoprotein. Natural compounds
have been suggested as a fourth generation of P-glycoprotein inhibitors. Coleon U, isolated from
Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., was reported to modulate P-glycoprotein activity but the underlying
mechanism has not yet been revealed. Therefore, the effects of Coleon U on cell viability, proliferation, and cell death induction were studied in a non-small-cell lung carcinoma model comprising
sensitive and multidrug-resistant cells with P-glycoprotein overexpression. P-glycoprotein activity
and mitochondrial membrane potential were assessed by flow cytometry upon Coleon U, sodiumorthovanadate (an ATPase inhibitor), and verapamil (an ATPase stimulator) treatments. SwissADME
was used to identify the pharmacokinetic properties of Coleon U, while P-glycoprotein expression
was studied by immunofluorescence. Our results showed that Coleon U is not a P-glycoprotein
substrate and is equally efficient in sensitive and multidrug-resistant cancer cells. A decrease in
P-glycoprotein activity observed with Coleon U and verapamil after 72 h is antagonized in combination with sodium-orthovanadate. Coleon U induced a pronounced effect on mitochondrial membrane
depolarization and showed a tendency to decrease P-glycoprotein expression. In conclusion, Coleon
U-delayed effect on the decrease in P-glycoprotein activity is due to P-glycoprotein’s functioning
dependence on ATP production in mitochondria.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Pharmaceutics",
title = "Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition",
number = "7",
volume = "15",
doi = "10.3390/pharmaceutics15071942",
pages = "1942"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Ntungwe, E. N., Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Pajović, M., Rijo, P.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition. in Pharmaceutics
Basel: MDPI., 15(7), 1942.
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071942
Jovanović Stojanov S, Ntungwe EN, Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Pajović M, Rijo P, Pešić M. Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition. in Pharmaceutics. 2023;15(7):1942.
doi:10.3390/pharmaceutics15071942 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Ntungwe, Epole N., Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Pajović, Milica, Rijo, Patrícia, Pešić, Milica, "Coleon U, Isolated from Plectranthus mutabilis Codd., Decreases P-Glycoprotein Activity Due to Mitochondrial Inhibition" in Pharmaceutics, 15, no. 7 (2023):1942,
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071942 . .
1
1

Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović, Mirna; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Bajović, Radovan; Glumac, Sofija; Marić, Dragana; Ercegovac, Maja; Pešić, Milica

(Elsevier Inc., 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Bajović, Radovan
AU  - Glumac, Sofija
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5712
AB  - Background: Osimertinib belongs to the third-generation epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) approved for metastatic EGFR-mutant non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients. Herein, we studied osimertinib selectivity towards NSCLC cells, its efficacy dependence on the EGFR mutation status, and its ability to evade the classical mechanism of multidrug-resistance (MDR) mirrored in the increased expression of main ATP Binding Cassette (ABC) transporters (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2).
Methods: Primary patient-derived cultures were established from the NSCLC resections. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of cancer and non-cancer cells (around a ratio of 1:1) and two co-cultures of NSCLC cell lines (sensitive NCI-H460 and MDR NCI-H460/R) with lung fibroblasts MRC-5 were treated with 8 chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed) as well as osimertinib. The maximum concentration reached in human plasma to which the patient is exposed during therapy (Cmax) was set as an upper limit and four lower concentrations were also applied during the study. Immunofluorescence assay enabling discrimination of epithelial cancer cells positive to a cocktail of antibodies against cytokeratin 8/18 vs. negative mesenchymal non-cancer cells was conducted using high-content imager ImageXpress Pico (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. Within the same immunoassay, MDR markers (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) were analyzed by corresponding antibodies.
Results: Osimertinib showed selectivity against NSCLC cells, particularly in the patient-derived cell culture without EGFR mutations. Other chemotherapeutics were not selective towards cancer cells, on contrary, they showed higher cytotoxicity in non-cancer cells. Osimertinib did not change the expression of ABCB1 in cancer cells, but it significantly decreased the expression of ABCC1 and ABCG2 transporters in cancer and non-cancer cells.
Conclusions: Osimertinib can be valuable as a selective anticancer drug and an MDR modulator even in NSCLC without EGFR mutations.
PB  - Elsevier Inc.
C3  - Abstract Book of the ESMO Targeted Anticancer Therapies Congress (TAT); 2023 Mar 6-8; Paris, France
T1  - Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts
IS  - 69p
DO  - 10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.100927
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović, Mirna and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Bajović, Radovan and Glumac, Sofija and Marić, Dragana and Ercegovac, Maja and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Background: Osimertinib belongs to the third-generation epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) approved for metastatic EGFR-mutant non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients. Herein, we studied osimertinib selectivity towards NSCLC cells, its efficacy dependence on the EGFR mutation status, and its ability to evade the classical mechanism of multidrug-resistance (MDR) mirrored in the increased expression of main ATP Binding Cassette (ABC) transporters (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2).
Methods: Primary patient-derived cultures were established from the NSCLC resections. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of cancer and non-cancer cells (around a ratio of 1:1) and two co-cultures of NSCLC cell lines (sensitive NCI-H460 and MDR NCI-H460/R) with lung fibroblasts MRC-5 were treated with 8 chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed) as well as osimertinib. The maximum concentration reached in human plasma to which the patient is exposed during therapy (Cmax) was set as an upper limit and four lower concentrations were also applied during the study. Immunofluorescence assay enabling discrimination of epithelial cancer cells positive to a cocktail of antibodies against cytokeratin 8/18 vs. negative mesenchymal non-cancer cells was conducted using high-content imager ImageXpress Pico (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. Within the same immunoassay, MDR markers (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) were analyzed by corresponding antibodies.
Results: Osimertinib showed selectivity against NSCLC cells, particularly in the patient-derived cell culture without EGFR mutations. Other chemotherapeutics were not selective towards cancer cells, on contrary, they showed higher cytotoxicity in non-cancer cells. Osimertinib did not change the expression of ABCB1 in cancer cells, but it significantly decreased the expression of ABCC1 and ABCG2 transporters in cancer and non-cancer cells.
Conclusions: Osimertinib can be valuable as a selective anticancer drug and an MDR modulator even in NSCLC without EGFR mutations.",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc.",
journal = "Abstract Book of the ESMO Targeted Anticancer Therapies Congress (TAT); 2023 Mar 6-8; Paris, France",
title = "Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts",
number = "69p",
doi = "10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.100927"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Podolski-Renić, A., Dinić, J., Dragoj, M., Jovanović, M., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Bajović, R., Glumac, S., Marić, D., Ercegovac, M.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts. in Abstract Book of the ESMO Targeted Anticancer Therapies Congress (TAT); 2023 Mar 6-8; Paris, France
Elsevier Inc..(69p).
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.100927
Jovanović Stojanov S, Podolski-Renić A, Dinić J, Dragoj M, Jovanović M, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Bajović R, Glumac S, Marić D, Ercegovac M, Pešić M. Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts. in Abstract Book of the ESMO Targeted Anticancer Therapies Congress (TAT); 2023 Mar 6-8; Paris, France. 2023;(69p).
doi:10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.100927 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović, Mirna, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Bajović, Radovan, Glumac, Sofija, Marić, Dragana, Ercegovac, Maja, Pešić, Milica, "Osimertinib is selective against NSCLC cells and modulates the multidrug-resistant phenotype in patient-derived cell cultures and co-cultures of NSCLC cells and fibroblasts" in Abstract Book of the ESMO Targeted Anticancer Therapies Congress (TAT); 2023 Mar 6-8; Paris, France, no. 69p (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2023.100927 . .

New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin

Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Pajović, Milica; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Dragoj, Miodrag; Terzić Jovanović, Nataša; Opsenica, Igor; Pešić, Milica

(Belgrade: Serbian Neuroscience Society, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Pajović, Milica
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Terzić Jovanović, Nataša
AU  - Opsenica, Igor
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5905
AB  - Background: Doxorubicin (DOX) has been very effective against glioblastoma in
vitro. Its application in vivo is hampered because it cannot pass the blood–brain
barrier (BBB). Significant research efforts are invested to overcome this limitation.
Sclareol (SC) is an aromatic compound naturally found in clary sage. The
combination of SC and DOX showed promising effects in different tumor types in
vitro and in vivo. Therefore, we tested their combination and innovative hybrid
molecules (SC:DOX) on glioblastoma cells with the expression of P-glycoprotein, a
major component of BBB and cancer multidrug resistance marker. Methods:
Cytotoxicity and selectivity towards glioblastoma cells of SC, DOX, their
combination, and SC:DOX were examined by MTT assay. The effect of SC on DOX
accumulation was determined by flow cytometry. We also studied SC:DOX
accumulation, cellular uptake, localization imaging, and DNA damage induction.
Results: The effects of simultaneous SC and DOX treatments demonstrated the
considerable potential of SC to reverse DOX resistance in glioblastoma cells and
increase DOX accumulation. SC:DOX hybrids, named CON1 and CON2 were less
cytotoxic than DOX, but with reduced resistance and increased selectivity towards
glioblastoma cells. Cellular uptake of CON1 and CON2 was increased in glioblastoma
cells compared to DOX. Perinuclear localization of CON1 and CON2 vs. nuclear
localization of DOX as well as no DNA damaging effects suggest a different
mechanism of action for SC:DOX. Conclusion: The combination of SC and DOX, and
their innovative hybrids, could be considered a promising strategy that can overcome
the limitations of DOX application in glioblastoma.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Neuroscience Society
C3  - Book of abstracts: 8th Congress of Serbian neuroscience society with international participation; 2023 May 31 - Jun 2; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin
SP  - 71
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5905
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Pajović, Milica and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Dragoj, Miodrag and Terzić Jovanović, Nataša and Opsenica, Igor and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Background: Doxorubicin (DOX) has been very effective against glioblastoma in
vitro. Its application in vivo is hampered because it cannot pass the blood–brain
barrier (BBB). Significant research efforts are invested to overcome this limitation.
Sclareol (SC) is an aromatic compound naturally found in clary sage. The
combination of SC and DOX showed promising effects in different tumor types in
vitro and in vivo. Therefore, we tested their combination and innovative hybrid
molecules (SC:DOX) on glioblastoma cells with the expression of P-glycoprotein, a
major component of BBB and cancer multidrug resistance marker. Methods:
Cytotoxicity and selectivity towards glioblastoma cells of SC, DOX, their
combination, and SC:DOX were examined by MTT assay. The effect of SC on DOX
accumulation was determined by flow cytometry. We also studied SC:DOX
accumulation, cellular uptake, localization imaging, and DNA damage induction.
Results: The effects of simultaneous SC and DOX treatments demonstrated the
considerable potential of SC to reverse DOX resistance in glioblastoma cells and
increase DOX accumulation. SC:DOX hybrids, named CON1 and CON2 were less
cytotoxic than DOX, but with reduced resistance and increased selectivity towards
glioblastoma cells. Cellular uptake of CON1 and CON2 was increased in glioblastoma
cells compared to DOX. Perinuclear localization of CON1 and CON2 vs. nuclear
localization of DOX as well as no DNA damaging effects suggest a different
mechanism of action for SC:DOX. Conclusion: The combination of SC and DOX, and
their innovative hybrids, could be considered a promising strategy that can overcome
the limitations of DOX application in glioblastoma.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Neuroscience Society",
journal = "Book of abstracts: 8th Congress of Serbian neuroscience society with international participation; 2023 May 31 - Jun 2; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin",
pages = "71",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5905"
}
Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Pajović, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Dragoj, M., Terzić Jovanović, N., Opsenica, I.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin. in Book of abstracts: 8th Congress of Serbian neuroscience society with international participation; 2023 May 31 - Jun 2; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Neuroscience Society., 71.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5905
Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Pajović M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Dragoj M, Terzić Jovanović N, Opsenica I, Pešić M. New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin. in Book of abstracts: 8th Congress of Serbian neuroscience society with international participation; 2023 May 31 - Jun 2; Belgrade, Serbia. 2023;:71.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5905 .
Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Pajović, Milica, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Dragoj, Miodrag, Terzić Jovanović, Nataša, Opsenica, Igor, Pešić, Milica, "New anti-glioblastoma strategy with natural compounds sclareol and doxorubicin" in Book of abstracts: 8th Congress of Serbian neuroscience society with international participation; 2023 May 31 - Jun 2; Belgrade, Serbia (2023):71,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5905 .

Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells

Stepanović, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović, Mirna; Lupšić, Ema; Milićević, Aleksandar; Glumac, Sofija; Marić, Dragana; Ercegovac, Maja; Pešić, Milica

(John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Milićević, Aleksandar
AU  - Glumac, Sofija
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5884
AB  - Introduction: Multidrug resistance (MDR) significantly hampers nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) drugs’ efficacy. To evaluate the contribution of MDR markers to anticancer drugs’ sensitivity, we performed pharmacological screening on patient-derived NSCLC cells ex vivo and assessed the expression of MDR markers in cancer and stromal (non-cancer) cells.
Material and Methods: Primary patient-derived cultures were established from the NSCLC resections. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of cancer and non-cancer cells were treated with 8 chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed). The maximum concentration reached in human plasma to which the patient is exposed during therapy (Cmax) was set as an upper limit and four lower concentrations were 
also applied during the study. Immunofluorescence assay enabling discrimination of epithelial cancer cells positive to a cocktail of antibodies against cytokeratin 8/18 vs. negative mesenchymal noncancer cells was conducted using high-content imager ImageXpress Pico (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. Within the same immunoassay, MDR markers (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) were analyzed by corresponding antibodies.
Results and Discussions: Among all tested compounds, only gemcitabine increased the number of positive cancer cells to all MDR markers in all investigated primary cell cultures. Pemetrexed did not
change the number of MDR-positive cancer cells. In a patient sample IIIA stage bearing EGFR mutation
(L858R), the number of positive cancer cells to all MDR markers increased upon treatment with cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, and gemcitabine. Stromal (non-cancer) cells mainly followed the pattern of MDR observed in cancer cells.
Conclusion: Novel functional immunoassay can provide valuable information about the sensitivity of NSCLC to different drugs and possible treatment outcomes based on the
expression of MDR markers.
PB  - John Wiley and Sons Inc
C3  - EACR 2023 Congress: Innovative Cancer Science; 2023 Jun 12-15; Torino, Italy
T1  - Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells
DO  - 10.1002/1878-0261.13469
SP  - 461
EP  - 462
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Stepanović, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović, Mirna and Lupšić, Ema and Milićević, Aleksandar and Glumac, Sofija and Marić, Dragana and Ercegovac, Maja and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Introduction: Multidrug resistance (MDR) significantly hampers nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) drugs’ efficacy. To evaluate the contribution of MDR markers to anticancer drugs’ sensitivity, we performed pharmacological screening on patient-derived NSCLC cells ex vivo and assessed the expression of MDR markers in cancer and stromal (non-cancer) cells.
Material and Methods: Primary patient-derived cultures were established from the NSCLC resections. After short-term culturing (2-3 weeks), a mixed population of cancer and non-cancer cells were treated with 8 chemotherapeutics (cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, gemcitabine, and pemetrexed). The maximum concentration reached in human plasma to which the patient is exposed during therapy (Cmax) was set as an upper limit and four lower concentrations were 
also applied during the study. Immunofluorescence assay enabling discrimination of epithelial cancer cells positive to a cocktail of antibodies against cytokeratin 8/18 vs. negative mesenchymal noncancer cells was conducted using high-content imager ImageXpress Pico (Molecular Devices) with CellReporterXpress 2.9 software. Within the same immunoassay, MDR markers (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) were analyzed by corresponding antibodies.
Results and Discussions: Among all tested compounds, only gemcitabine increased the number of positive cancer cells to all MDR markers in all investigated primary cell cultures. Pemetrexed did not
change the number of MDR-positive cancer cells. In a patient sample IIIA stage bearing EGFR mutation
(L858R), the number of positive cancer cells to all MDR markers increased upon treatment with cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, etoposide, vinorelbine, and gemcitabine. Stromal (non-cancer) cells mainly followed the pattern of MDR observed in cancer cells.
Conclusion: Novel functional immunoassay can provide valuable information about the sensitivity of NSCLC to different drugs and possible treatment outcomes based on the
expression of MDR markers.",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc",
journal = "EACR 2023 Congress: Innovative Cancer Science; 2023 Jun 12-15; Torino, Italy",
title = "Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells",
doi = "10.1002/1878-0261.13469",
pages = "461-462"
}
Stepanović, A., Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Dragoj, M., Jovanović, M., Lupšić, E., Milićević, A., Glumac, S., Marić, D., Ercegovac, M.,& Pešić, M.. (2023). Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells. in EACR 2023 Congress: Innovative Cancer Science; 2023 Jun 12-15; Torino, Italy
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 461-462.
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13469
Stepanović A, Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Jovanović Stojanov S, Dragoj M, Jovanović M, Lupšić E, Milićević A, Glumac S, Marić D, Ercegovac M, Pešić M. Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells. in EACR 2023 Congress: Innovative Cancer Science; 2023 Jun 12-15; Torino, Italy. 2023;:461-462.
doi:10.1002/1878-0261.13469 .
Stepanović, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović, Mirna, Lupšić, Ema, Milićević, Aleksandar, Glumac, Sofija, Marić, Dragana, Ercegovac, Maja, Pešić, Milica, "Novel functional immunoassay for identification of multidrug resistance markers in non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived cells" in EACR 2023 Congress: Innovative Cancer Science; 2023 Jun 12-15; Torino, Italy (2023):461-462,
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13469 . .

Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents

Roldán-Peña, Jesús M.; Puerta, Adrián; Dinić, Jelena; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; González-Bakker, Aday; Hicke, Francisco J.; Mishra, Atreyee; Piyasaengthong, Akkharadet; Maya, Inés; Walton, James W.; Pešić, Milica; Padrón, José M.; Fernández-Bolaños, José G.; López, Óscar

(Academic Press Inc., 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Roldán-Peña, Jesús M.
AU  - Puerta, Adrián
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - González-Bakker, Aday
AU  - Hicke, Francisco J.
AU  - Mishra, Atreyee
AU  - Piyasaengthong, Akkharadet
AU  - Maya, Inés
AU  - Walton, James W.
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Padrón, José M.
AU  - Fernández-Bolaños, José G.
AU  - López, Óscar
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045206823000706
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5487
AB  - Most of the currently available cytotoxic agents for tackling cancer are devoid of selectivity, thus causing severe side-effects. This situation stimulated us to develop new antiproliferative agents with enhanced affinity towards tumour cells. We focused our attention on novel chalcogen-containing compounds (thiosemicarbazones, disulfides, selenoureas, thio- and selenocyanates), and particularly on selenium derivatives, as it has been documented that this kind of compounds might act as prodrugs releasing selenium-based reactive species on tumour cells. Particularly interesting in terms of potency and selectivity was a pharmacophore comprised by a selenocyanato-alkyl fragment connected to a p-phenylenediamine residue, where the nature of the second amino moiety (free, Boc-protected, enamine-protected) provided a wide variety of antiproliferative activities, ranging from the low micromolar to the nanomolar values. The optimized structure was in turn conjugated through a peptide linkage with biotin (vitamin B7), a cellular growth promoter, whose receptor is overexpressed in numerous cancer cells; the purpose was to develop a selective vector towards malignant cells. Such biotinylated derivative behaved as a very strong antiproliferative agent, achieving GI50 values in the low nM range for most of the tested cancer cells; moreover, it was featured with an outstanding selectivity, with GI50 > 100 µM against human fibroblasts. Mechanistic studies on the mode of inhibition of the biotinylated selenocyanate revealed (Annexin-V assay) a remarkable increase in the number of apoptotic cells compared to the control experiment; moreover, depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane was detected by flow cytometry analysis, and with fluorescent microscopy, what supports the apoptotic cell death. Prior to the apoptotic events, cytostatic effects were observed against SW1573 cells using label-free cell-living imaging; therefore, tumour cell division was prevented. Multidrug resistant cell lines exhibited a reduced sensitivity towards the biotinylated selenocyanate, probably due to its P-gp-mediated efflux. Remarkably, antiproliferative levels could be restored by co-administration with tariquidar, a P-gp inhibitor; this approach can, therefore, overcome multidrug resistance mediated by the P-gp efflux system.
PB  - Academic Press Inc.
T2  - Bioorganic Chemistry
T1  - Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents
VL  - 133
DO  - 10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106410
SP  - 106410
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Roldán-Peña, Jesús M. and Puerta, Adrián and Dinić, Jelena and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and González-Bakker, Aday and Hicke, Francisco J. and Mishra, Atreyee and Piyasaengthong, Akkharadet and Maya, Inés and Walton, James W. and Pešić, Milica and Padrón, José M. and Fernández-Bolaños, José G. and López, Óscar",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Most of the currently available cytotoxic agents for tackling cancer are devoid of selectivity, thus causing severe side-effects. This situation stimulated us to develop new antiproliferative agents with enhanced affinity towards tumour cells. We focused our attention on novel chalcogen-containing compounds (thiosemicarbazones, disulfides, selenoureas, thio- and selenocyanates), and particularly on selenium derivatives, as it has been documented that this kind of compounds might act as prodrugs releasing selenium-based reactive species on tumour cells. Particularly interesting in terms of potency and selectivity was a pharmacophore comprised by a selenocyanato-alkyl fragment connected to a p-phenylenediamine residue, where the nature of the second amino moiety (free, Boc-protected, enamine-protected) provided a wide variety of antiproliferative activities, ranging from the low micromolar to the nanomolar values. The optimized structure was in turn conjugated through a peptide linkage with biotin (vitamin B7), a cellular growth promoter, whose receptor is overexpressed in numerous cancer cells; the purpose was to develop a selective vector towards malignant cells. Such biotinylated derivative behaved as a very strong antiproliferative agent, achieving GI50 values in the low nM range for most of the tested cancer cells; moreover, it was featured with an outstanding selectivity, with GI50 > 100 µM against human fibroblasts. Mechanistic studies on the mode of inhibition of the biotinylated selenocyanate revealed (Annexin-V assay) a remarkable increase in the number of apoptotic cells compared to the control experiment; moreover, depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane was detected by flow cytometry analysis, and with fluorescent microscopy, what supports the apoptotic cell death. Prior to the apoptotic events, cytostatic effects were observed against SW1573 cells using label-free cell-living imaging; therefore, tumour cell division was prevented. Multidrug resistant cell lines exhibited a reduced sensitivity towards the biotinylated selenocyanate, probably due to its P-gp-mediated efflux. Remarkably, antiproliferative levels could be restored by co-administration with tariquidar, a P-gp inhibitor; this approach can, therefore, overcome multidrug resistance mediated by the P-gp efflux system.",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
journal = "Bioorganic Chemistry",
title = "Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents",
volume = "133",
doi = "10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106410",
pages = "106410"
}
Roldán-Peña, J. M., Puerta, A., Dinić, J., Jovanović Stojanov, S., González-Bakker, A., Hicke, F. J., Mishra, A., Piyasaengthong, A., Maya, I., Walton, J. W., Pešić, M., Padrón, J. M., Fernández-Bolaños, J. G.,& López, Ó.. (2023). Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents. in Bioorganic Chemistry
Academic Press Inc.., 133, 106410.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106410
Roldán-Peña JM, Puerta A, Dinić J, Jovanović Stojanov S, González-Bakker A, Hicke FJ, Mishra A, Piyasaengthong A, Maya I, Walton JW, Pešić M, Padrón JM, Fernández-Bolaños JG, López Ó. Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents. in Bioorganic Chemistry. 2023;133:106410.
doi:10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106410 .
Roldán-Peña, Jesús M., Puerta, Adrián, Dinić, Jelena, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, González-Bakker, Aday, Hicke, Francisco J., Mishra, Atreyee, Piyasaengthong, Akkharadet, Maya, Inés, Walton, James W., Pešić, Milica, Padrón, José M., Fernández-Bolaños, José G., López, Óscar, "Biotinylated selenocyanates: Potent and selective cytostatic agents" in Bioorganic Chemistry, 133 (2023):106410,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106410 . .
8
4
4

Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations

Ortega-Sabater, Carmen; F. Calvo, Gabriel; Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Pešić, Milica; Pérez-García, Víctor

(Springer, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ortega-Sabater, Carmen
AU  - F. Calvo, Gabriel
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Pérez-García, Víctor
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5357
AB  - Evolutionary dynamics allows us to understand many changes happening in a broad variety of biological systems, ranging from individuals to complete ecosystems. It is also behind a number of remarkable organizational changes that happen during the natural history of cancers. These reflect tumour heterogeneity, which is present at all cellular levels, including the genome, proteome and phenome, shaping its development and interrelation with its environment. An intriguing observation in different cohorts of oncological patients is that tumours exhibit an increased proliferation as the disease progresses, while the timescales involved are apparently too short for the fixation of sufficient driver mutations to promote explosive growth. Here, we discuss how phenotypic plasticity, emerging from a single genotype, may play a key role and provide a ground for a continuous acceleration of the proliferation rate of clonal populations with time. We address this question by combining the analysis of real-time growth of non-small-cell lung carcinoma cells (N-H460) together with stochastic and deterministic mathematical models that capture proliferation trait heterogeneity in clonal populations to elucidate the contribution of phenotypic transitions on tumour growth dynamics.
PB  - Springer
T2  - Bulletin of Mathematical Biology
T1  - Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations
IS  - 1
VL  - 85
DO  - 10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4
SP  - 8
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ortega-Sabater, Carmen and F. Calvo, Gabriel and Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Pešić, Milica and Pérez-García, Víctor",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Evolutionary dynamics allows us to understand many changes happening in a broad variety of biological systems, ranging from individuals to complete ecosystems. It is also behind a number of remarkable organizational changes that happen during the natural history of cancers. These reflect tumour heterogeneity, which is present at all cellular levels, including the genome, proteome and phenome, shaping its development and interrelation with its environment. An intriguing observation in different cohorts of oncological patients is that tumours exhibit an increased proliferation as the disease progresses, while the timescales involved are apparently too short for the fixation of sufficient driver mutations to promote explosive growth. Here, we discuss how phenotypic plasticity, emerging from a single genotype, may play a key role and provide a ground for a continuous acceleration of the proliferation rate of clonal populations with time. We address this question by combining the analysis of real-time growth of non-small-cell lung carcinoma cells (N-H460) together with stochastic and deterministic mathematical models that capture proliferation trait heterogeneity in clonal populations to elucidate the contribution of phenotypic transitions on tumour growth dynamics.",
publisher = "Springer",
journal = "Bulletin of Mathematical Biology",
title = "Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations",
number = "1",
volume = "85",
doi = "10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4",
pages = "8"
}
Ortega-Sabater, C., F. Calvo, G., Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Pešić, M.,& Pérez-García, V.. (2023). Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations. in Bulletin of Mathematical Biology
Springer., 85(1), 8.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4
Ortega-Sabater C, F. Calvo G, Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Pešić M, Pérez-García V. Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations. in Bulletin of Mathematical Biology. 2023;85(1):8.
doi:10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4 .
Ortega-Sabater, Carmen, F. Calvo, Gabriel, Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Pešić, Milica, Pérez-García, Víctor, "Stochastic Fluctuations Drive Non-genetic Evolution of Proliferation in Clonal Cancer Cell Populations" in Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 85, no. 1 (2023):8,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-022-01113-4 . .
1
5
3

Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Stepanović, Ana; Ljujić, Mila; Lupšić, Ema; Schenone, Silvia; Pešić, Milica; Dinić, Jelena

(Basel : MDPI, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Ljujić, Mila
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Schenone, Silvia
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5043
AB  - Drug resistance presents a major obstacle to the successful treatment of glioblastoma. Autophagy plays a key role in drug resistance, particularly in relation to targeted therapy, which has prompted the use of autophagy inhibitors to increase the effectiveness of targeted therapeutics. The ability of two Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors, Si306 and its prodrug pro-Si306, to induce autophagy was evaluated in the human glioblastoma cell line U87 and its multidrug-resistant counterpart U87-TxR. Autophagy markers were assessed by flow cytometry, microscopy, and Western blot, and induction of autophagy by these compounds was demonstrated after 3 h as well as 48 h. The effects of Si306 and pro-Si306 on cell proliferation and cell death were examined in the presence or absence of autophagy inhibition by bafilomycin A1. Combined treatments of Si306 and pro-Si306 with bafilomycin A1 were synergistic in nature, and the inhibition of autophagy sensitized glioblastoma cells to Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Si306 and pro-Si306 more strongly inhibited cell proliferation and triggered necrosis in combination with bafilomycin A1. Our findings suggest that modulation of Si306- and pro-Si306-induced autophagy can be used to enhance the anticancer effects of these Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors and overcome the drug-resistant phenotype in glioblastoma cells.
PB  - Basel : MDPI
T2  - Life
T1  - Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors
IS  - 10
VL  - 12
DO  - 10.3390/life12101503
SP  - 1503
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Stepanović, Ana and Ljujić, Mila and Lupšić, Ema and Schenone, Silvia and Pešić, Milica and Dinić, Jelena",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Drug resistance presents a major obstacle to the successful treatment of glioblastoma. Autophagy plays a key role in drug resistance, particularly in relation to targeted therapy, which has prompted the use of autophagy inhibitors to increase the effectiveness of targeted therapeutics. The ability of two Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors, Si306 and its prodrug pro-Si306, to induce autophagy was evaluated in the human glioblastoma cell line U87 and its multidrug-resistant counterpart U87-TxR. Autophagy markers were assessed by flow cytometry, microscopy, and Western blot, and induction of autophagy by these compounds was demonstrated after 3 h as well as 48 h. The effects of Si306 and pro-Si306 on cell proliferation and cell death were examined in the presence or absence of autophagy inhibition by bafilomycin A1. Combined treatments of Si306 and pro-Si306 with bafilomycin A1 were synergistic in nature, and the inhibition of autophagy sensitized glioblastoma cells to Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Si306 and pro-Si306 more strongly inhibited cell proliferation and triggered necrosis in combination with bafilomycin A1. Our findings suggest that modulation of Si306- and pro-Si306-induced autophagy can be used to enhance the anticancer effects of these Src tyrosine kinase inhibitors and overcome the drug-resistant phenotype in glioblastoma cells.",
publisher = "Basel : MDPI",
journal = "Life",
title = "Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors",
number = "10",
volume = "12",
doi = "10.3390/life12101503",
pages = "1503"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Stepanović, A., Ljujić, M., Lupšić, E., Schenone, S., Pešić, M.,& Dinić, J.. (2022). Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors. in Life
Basel : MDPI., 12(10), 1503.
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12101503
Jovanović Stojanov S, Stepanović A, Ljujić M, Lupšić E, Schenone S, Pešić M, Dinić J. Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors. in Life. 2022;12(10):1503.
doi:10.3390/life12101503 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Stepanović, Ana, Ljujić, Mila, Lupšić, Ema, Schenone, Silvia, Pešić, Milica, Dinić, Jelena, "Autophagy Inhibition Enhances Anti-Glioblastoma Effects of Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors" in Life, 12, no. 10 (2022):1503,
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12101503 . .
1
5
4

Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression

Jovanović, Mirna; Stanković, Tijana; Stojković Burić, Sonja; Banković, Jasna; Dinić, Jelena; Ljujić, Mila; Pešić, Milica; Dragoj, Miodrag

(Basel : MDPI, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Stanković, Tijana
AU  - Stojković Burić, Sonja
AU  - Banković, Jasna
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Ljujić, Mila
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5041
AB  - Tspan14 is a transmembrane protein of the tetraspanin (Tspan) protein family. Different members of the Tspan family can promote or suppress tumor progression. The exact role of Tspan14 in tumor cells is unknown. Earlier, mutational inactivation of the TSPAN14 gene has been proposed to coincide with a low survival rate in NSCLC patients. This study aimed to investigate the correlation of TSPAN14 lack of function with clinicopathological features of NSCLC patients, and to elucidate the role TSPAN14 might have in NSCLC progression. TSPAN14 expression was lower in tumor cells than non-tumor cells in NSCLC patients’ samples. The decreased gene expression was correlated with a low survival rate of patients and was more frequent in patients with aggressive, invasive tumor types. Additionally, the role of decreased TSPAN14 expression in the metastatic potential of cancer cells was confirmed in NSCLC cell lines. The highly invasive NSCLC cell line (NCI-H661) had the lowest TSPAN14 gene and protein expression, whereas the NSCLC cell line with the highest TSPAN14 expression (NCI-H460) had no significant metastatic potential. Finally, silencing of TSPAN14 in these non-metastatic cancer cells caused an increased expression of matrix-degrading enzymes MMP-2 and MMP-9, followed by an elevated capacity of cancer cells to degrade gelatin. The results of this study propose TSPAN14 expression as an indicator of NSCLC metastatic potential and progression.
PB  - Basel : MDPI
T2  - Life
T1  - Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression
IS  - 9
VL  - 12
DO  - 10.3390/life12091291
SP  - 1291
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jovanović, Mirna and Stanković, Tijana and Stojković Burić, Sonja and Banković, Jasna and Dinić, Jelena and Ljujić, Mila and Pešić, Milica and Dragoj, Miodrag",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Tspan14 is a transmembrane protein of the tetraspanin (Tspan) protein family. Different members of the Tspan family can promote or suppress tumor progression. The exact role of Tspan14 in tumor cells is unknown. Earlier, mutational inactivation of the TSPAN14 gene has been proposed to coincide with a low survival rate in NSCLC patients. This study aimed to investigate the correlation of TSPAN14 lack of function with clinicopathological features of NSCLC patients, and to elucidate the role TSPAN14 might have in NSCLC progression. TSPAN14 expression was lower in tumor cells than non-tumor cells in NSCLC patients’ samples. The decreased gene expression was correlated with a low survival rate of patients and was more frequent in patients with aggressive, invasive tumor types. Additionally, the role of decreased TSPAN14 expression in the metastatic potential of cancer cells was confirmed in NSCLC cell lines. The highly invasive NSCLC cell line (NCI-H661) had the lowest TSPAN14 gene and protein expression, whereas the NSCLC cell line with the highest TSPAN14 expression (NCI-H460) had no significant metastatic potential. Finally, silencing of TSPAN14 in these non-metastatic cancer cells caused an increased expression of matrix-degrading enzymes MMP-2 and MMP-9, followed by an elevated capacity of cancer cells to degrade gelatin. The results of this study propose TSPAN14 expression as an indicator of NSCLC metastatic potential and progression.",
publisher = "Basel : MDPI",
journal = "Life",
title = "Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression",
number = "9",
volume = "12",
doi = "10.3390/life12091291",
pages = "1291"
}
Jovanović, M., Stanković, T., Stojković Burić, S., Banković, J., Dinić, J., Ljujić, M., Pešić, M.,& Dragoj, M.. (2022). Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression. in Life
Basel : MDPI., 12(9), 1291.
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091291
Jovanović M, Stanković T, Stojković Burić S, Banković J, Dinić J, Ljujić M, Pešić M, Dragoj M. Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression. in Life. 2022;12(9):1291.
doi:10.3390/life12091291 .
Jovanović, Mirna, Stanković, Tijana, Stojković Burić, Sonja, Banković, Jasna, Dinić, Jelena, Ljujić, Mila, Pešić, Milica, Dragoj, Miodrag, "Decreased TSPAN14 Expression Contributes to NSCLC Progression" in Life, 12, no. 9 (2022):1291,
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12091291 . .
1
5
4

A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors

Alov, Petko; Al Sharif, Merilin; Aluani, Denitsa; Chegaev, Konstantin; Dinić, Jelena; Divac Rankov, Aleksandra; Fernandes, Miguel X.; Fusi, Fabio; García-Sosa, Alfonso T.; Juvonen, Risto; Kondeva-Burdina, Magdalena; Padrón, José M.; Pajeva, Ilza; Pencheva, Tania; Puerta, Adrián; Raunio, Hannu; Riganti, Chiara; Tsakovska, Ivanka; Tzankova, Virginia; Yordanov, Yordan; Saponara, Simona

(Lausanne : Frontiers Media, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Alov, Petko
AU  - Al Sharif, Merilin
AU  - Aluani, Denitsa
AU  - Chegaev, Konstantin
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Divac Rankov, Aleksandra
AU  - Fernandes, Miguel X.
AU  - Fusi, Fabio
AU  - García-Sosa, Alfonso T.
AU  - Juvonen, Risto
AU  - Kondeva-Burdina, Magdalena
AU  - Padrón, José M.
AU  - Pajeva, Ilza
AU  - Pencheva, Tania
AU  - Puerta, Adrián
AU  - Raunio, Hannu
AU  - Riganti, Chiara
AU  - Tsakovska, Ivanka
AU  - Tzankova, Virginia
AU  - Yordanov, Yordan
AU  - Saponara, Simona
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4870
AB  - Sdox is a hydrogen sulfide (H2S)-releasing doxorubicin effective in P-glycoprotein-overexpressing/doxorubicin-resistant tumor models and not cytotoxic, as the parental drug, in H9c2 cardiomyocytes. The aim of this study was the assessment of Sdox drug-like features and its absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME)/toxicity properties, by a multi- and transdisciplinary in silico, in vitro, and in vivo approach. Doxorubicin was used as the reference compound. The in silico profiling suggested that Sdox possesses higher lipophilicity and lower solubility compared to doxorubicin, and the off-targets prediction revealed relevant differences between Dox and Sdox towards several cancer targets, suggesting different toxicological profiles. In vitro data showed that Sdox is a substrate with lower affinity for P-glycoprotein, less hepatotoxic, and causes less oxidative damage than doxorubicin. Both anthracyclines inhibited CYP3A4, but not hERG currents. Unlike doxorubicin, the percentage of zebrafish live embryos at 72 hpf was not affected by Sdox treatment. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that Sdox displays a more favorable drug-like ADME/toxicity profile than doxorubicin, different selectivity towards cancer targets, along with a greater preclinical efficacy in resistant tumors. Therefore, Sdox represents a prototype of innovative anthracyclines, worthy of further investigations in clinical settings.
PB  - Lausanne : Frontiers Media
T2  - Frontiers in Pharmacology
T1  - A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.3389/fphar.2022.831791
SP  - 831791
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Alov, Petko and Al Sharif, Merilin and Aluani, Denitsa and Chegaev, Konstantin and Dinić, Jelena and Divac Rankov, Aleksandra and Fernandes, Miguel X. and Fusi, Fabio and García-Sosa, Alfonso T. and Juvonen, Risto and Kondeva-Burdina, Magdalena and Padrón, José M. and Pajeva, Ilza and Pencheva, Tania and Puerta, Adrián and Raunio, Hannu and Riganti, Chiara and Tsakovska, Ivanka and Tzankova, Virginia and Yordanov, Yordan and Saponara, Simona",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Sdox is a hydrogen sulfide (H2S)-releasing doxorubicin effective in P-glycoprotein-overexpressing/doxorubicin-resistant tumor models and not cytotoxic, as the parental drug, in H9c2 cardiomyocytes. The aim of this study was the assessment of Sdox drug-like features and its absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME)/toxicity properties, by a multi- and transdisciplinary in silico, in vitro, and in vivo approach. Doxorubicin was used as the reference compound. The in silico profiling suggested that Sdox possesses higher lipophilicity and lower solubility compared to doxorubicin, and the off-targets prediction revealed relevant differences between Dox and Sdox towards several cancer targets, suggesting different toxicological profiles. In vitro data showed that Sdox is a substrate with lower affinity for P-glycoprotein, less hepatotoxic, and causes less oxidative damage than doxorubicin. Both anthracyclines inhibited CYP3A4, but not hERG currents. Unlike doxorubicin, the percentage of zebrafish live embryos at 72 hpf was not affected by Sdox treatment. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that Sdox displays a more favorable drug-like ADME/toxicity profile than doxorubicin, different selectivity towards cancer targets, along with a greater preclinical efficacy in resistant tumors. Therefore, Sdox represents a prototype of innovative anthracyclines, worthy of further investigations in clinical settings.",
publisher = "Lausanne : Frontiers Media",
journal = "Frontiers in Pharmacology",
title = "A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.3389/fphar.2022.831791",
pages = "831791"
}
Alov, P., Al Sharif, M., Aluani, D., Chegaev, K., Dinić, J., Divac Rankov, A., Fernandes, M. X., Fusi, F., García-Sosa, A. T., Juvonen, R., Kondeva-Burdina, M., Padrón, J. M., Pajeva, I., Pencheva, T., Puerta, A., Raunio, H., Riganti, C., Tsakovska, I., Tzankova, V., Yordanov, Y.,& Saponara, S.. (2022). A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors. in Frontiers in Pharmacology
Lausanne : Frontiers Media., 13, 831791.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.831791
Alov P, Al Sharif M, Aluani D, Chegaev K, Dinić J, Divac Rankov A, Fernandes MX, Fusi F, García-Sosa AT, Juvonen R, Kondeva-Burdina M, Padrón JM, Pajeva I, Pencheva T, Puerta A, Raunio H, Riganti C, Tsakovska I, Tzankova V, Yordanov Y, Saponara S. A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors. in Frontiers in Pharmacology. 2022;13:831791.
doi:10.3389/fphar.2022.831791 .
Alov, Petko, Al Sharif, Merilin, Aluani, Denitsa, Chegaev, Konstantin, Dinić, Jelena, Divac Rankov, Aleksandra, Fernandes, Miguel X., Fusi, Fabio, García-Sosa, Alfonso T., Juvonen, Risto, Kondeva-Burdina, Magdalena, Padrón, José M., Pajeva, Ilza, Pencheva, Tania, Puerta, Adrián, Raunio, Hannu, Riganti, Chiara, Tsakovska, Ivanka, Tzankova, Virginia, Yordanov, Yordan, Saponara, Simona, "A Comprehensive Evaluation of Sdox, a Promising H2S-Releasing Doxorubicin for the Treatment of Chemoresistant Tumors" in Frontiers in Pharmacology, 13 (2022):831791,
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.831791 . .
9
3

Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents

Hicke, Francisco; Puerta, Adrián; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica; Padrón, José M.; López, Óscar; Fernández-Bolaños, José G.

(Amsterdam : Elsevier Ltd, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Hicke, Francisco
AU  - Puerta, Adrián
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Padrón, José M.
AU  - López, Óscar
AU  - Fernández-Bolaños, José G.
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4671
AB  - The necessity for developing novel cytostatic agents with improved activities and reduced side-effects to tackle cancer prompted us to investigate mitochondria-targeted compounds, an approach that is gaining attention for the selective transportation of cytotoxic agents.
We envisioned the possibility of conjugating a phenethyl alcohol motif, decorated with a series of phenol-based substituents on the aryl moiety, with a triphenyl phosphonium scaffold (a mitochondria-directed vector), through a hydrocarbon chain of different lengths. Thus, such compounds that incorporate the phenethyl skeleton can be considered as masked phenolic compounds derived from relevant natural counterparts found in olive tree (e.g. tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol).
Title compounds exhibited very strong in vitro antiproliferative activities against the panel of six human tumor cell lines tested, with GI50 values ranging from the nanomolar (0.026 ± 0.010 μM for 36) to the submicromolar range in most of the cases; this represents an improvement of up to 350-fold compared to classical chemotherapeutic agents, like 5-fluorouracil or cisplatin. Interestingly, decrease in the linker length led to an increase of GI50 values against non-tumor cells, thus allowing a remarkable improvement of selectivity (SI up to 269).
The very promising antiproliferative activities prompted us to further investigate their behaviour against multidrug resistant cell lines (MDR). The results indicated a reduced sensitivity of the multidrug resistant cells to compounds, probably due to P-gp-mediated efflux of these antiproliferative agents. Interestingly, activities were completely restored to the same levels by co-administration of tariquidar, a well-known inhibitor of P-gp.
Flow cytometry analysis on sensitive cell lines revealed a decrease in the percentage of cells in G1 phase accompanied by increase in S and G2/M phases. In addition, a significant increase in subG1 area, was observed. These results are compatible with the necrotic and apoptotic cell death detected in the Annexin V assay, and with the depolarization of the mitochondria membrane.
Thus, the new mitochondriotropic agents reported herein can be considered as promising antiproliferative agents, endowed with remarkable potency and selectivity, including MDR cells, upon co-administration with a pump-efflux inhibitor.
PB  - Amsterdam : Elsevier Ltd
T2  - European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
T1  - Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents
VL  - 228
DO  - 10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113980
SP  - 113980
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Hicke, Francisco and Puerta, Adrián and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica and Padrón, José M. and López, Óscar and Fernández-Bolaños, José G.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The necessity for developing novel cytostatic agents with improved activities and reduced side-effects to tackle cancer prompted us to investigate mitochondria-targeted compounds, an approach that is gaining attention for the selective transportation of cytotoxic agents.
We envisioned the possibility of conjugating a phenethyl alcohol motif, decorated with a series of phenol-based substituents on the aryl moiety, with a triphenyl phosphonium scaffold (a mitochondria-directed vector), through a hydrocarbon chain of different lengths. Thus, such compounds that incorporate the phenethyl skeleton can be considered as masked phenolic compounds derived from relevant natural counterparts found in olive tree (e.g. tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol).
Title compounds exhibited very strong in vitro antiproliferative activities against the panel of six human tumor cell lines tested, with GI50 values ranging from the nanomolar (0.026 ± 0.010 μM for 36) to the submicromolar range in most of the cases; this represents an improvement of up to 350-fold compared to classical chemotherapeutic agents, like 5-fluorouracil or cisplatin. Interestingly, decrease in the linker length led to an increase of GI50 values against non-tumor cells, thus allowing a remarkable improvement of selectivity (SI up to 269).
The very promising antiproliferative activities prompted us to further investigate their behaviour against multidrug resistant cell lines (MDR). The results indicated a reduced sensitivity of the multidrug resistant cells to compounds, probably due to P-gp-mediated efflux of these antiproliferative agents. Interestingly, activities were completely restored to the same levels by co-administration of tariquidar, a well-known inhibitor of P-gp.
Flow cytometry analysis on sensitive cell lines revealed a decrease in the percentage of cells in G1 phase accompanied by increase in S and G2/M phases. In addition, a significant increase in subG1 area, was observed. These results are compatible with the necrotic and apoptotic cell death detected in the Annexin V assay, and with the depolarization of the mitochondria membrane.
Thus, the new mitochondriotropic agents reported herein can be considered as promising antiproliferative agents, endowed with remarkable potency and selectivity, including MDR cells, upon co-administration with a pump-efflux inhibitor.",
publisher = "Amsterdam : Elsevier Ltd",
journal = "European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry",
title = "Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents",
volume = "228",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113980",
pages = "113980"
}
Hicke, F., Puerta, A., Dinić, J., Pešić, M., Padrón, J. M., López, Ó.,& Fernández-Bolaños, J. G.. (2022). Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents. in European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Amsterdam : Elsevier Ltd., 228, 113980.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113980
Hicke F, Puerta A, Dinić J, Pešić M, Padrón JM, López Ó, Fernández-Bolaños JG. Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents. in European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 2022;228:113980.
doi:10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113980 .
Hicke, Francisco, Puerta, Adrián, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, Padrón, José M., López, Óscar, Fernández-Bolaños, José G., "Straightforward access to novel mitochondriotropics derived from 2-arylethanol as potent and selective antiproliferative agents" in European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 228 (2022):113980,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113980 . .
12
3
3

Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća

Jovanović, Mirna; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Dragoj, Miodrag; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica

(Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5392
AB  - Експресија  ензима  угљеничне  анхидразе  9  (УА9)  је  често  повишена  код  ћелија 
тумора.1  УА9 има важну улогу у регулацији pH вредности која доприноси расту и 
деоби  туморске  ћелије,2  због  чега  се  инхибитори  овог  ензима  истражују  као кандидати за анти-туморске лекове.3 Овде је описан анти-туморски ефекат новог деривата кумарина, гуанидина АФА-36, за који је показано да инхибира активност УА9.  У  испитивању,  коришћена  је  туморска  ћелијска  линија  неситноћелијског карцинома  плућа  (NCI-H460).  Показано  је  да  АФА-36  инхибира  раст  NCI-H460 ћелија  узгајаних  у  једном  слоју,  у  условима  нормоксије  и  хипоксије,  са  ИЦ50 вредностима око 5 μМ. У тесту ћелијске смрти, 25 μМ АФА-36 селективно доводи до смрти NCI-H460 (50% мртвих ћелија) у поређењу са нормалним фибробластима човека  MRC-5  (без  ефекта  ћелијске  смрти).  Флуоресцентном  бојом  BCECF показано је да 5 μМ АФА-36 смањује унутарћелијску pH, за око 30% у односу на нетретиране NCI-H460 ћелије. Притом, под третманом се експресија УА9 повећава 1,5 пута. Флуоресцентном бојом TMRE показали смо да АФА-36 има инхибиторни ефекат  на  активност  митохондрија.  Инхибиција  раста  NCI-H460  ћелија  са  5  μМ 
АФА-36  узгајаних  у  3Д  систему  алгинатних  влакана  је  израженија  у  хипоксији, него  у нормоксији.  Дериват  кумарина  АФА-36  са  својством  инхибитора  УА9, остварује  значајан  анти-туморски  ефекат  и  има  потенцијал  за  даља  опсежнија преклиничка испитивања посебно код тумора са израженим зонама хипоксије које доприносе већој малигности. 
1.  Ivanov, S., Liao, S.Y., Ivanova, A., et al., 2001, Am. J. Pathol. 158:905-919. 
2.  Sedlakova, O., Svastova, E., Takacova, M., et al., 2014, Front. Physiol. 4:400. 
3.  Supuran, C.T., 2008, Nat. Rev. Drug Discov. 7:168-181.
AB  - Ekspresija enzima ugljenične anhidraze 9 (UA9) je često povišena kod ćelija tumora.1 UA9 ima važnu ulogu u regulaciji pH vrednosti koja doprinosi rastu i deobi tumorske ćelije,2 zbog čega se inhibitori ovog enzima istražuju kao kandidati za anti-tumorske lekove.3 Ovde je opisan anti-tumorski efekat novog derivata kumarina, guanidina AFA-36, za koji je pokazano da inhibira aktivnost UA9. U ispitivanju, korišćena je tumorska ćelijska linija nesitnoćelijskog karcinoma pluća (NCI-H460). Pokazano je da AFA-36 inhibira rast NCI-H460 ćelija uzgajanih u jednom sloju, u uslovima normoksije i hipoksije, sa IC50 vrednostima oko 5 μM. U testu ćelijske smrti, 25 μM AFA-36 selektivno dovodi do smrti NCI-H460 (50% mrtvih ćelija) u poređenju sa normalnim fibroblastima čoveka MRC-5 (bez efekta ćelijske smrti). Fluorescentnom bojom BCECF pokazano je da 5 μM AFA-36 smanjuje unutarćelijsku pH, za oko 30% u odnosu na netretirane NCI-H460 ćelije. Pritom, pod tretmanom se ekspresija UA9 povećava 1,5 puta. Fluorescentnom bojom TMRE pokazali smo da AFA-36 ima inhibitorni efekat na aktivnost mitohondrija. Inhibicija rasta NCI-H460 ćelija sa 5 μM AFA-36 uzgajanih u 3D sistemu alginatnih vlakana je izraženija u hipoksiji, nego u normoksiji. Derivat kumarina AFA-36 sa svojstvom inhibitora UA9, ostvaruje značajan anti-tumorski efekat i ima potencijal za dalja opsežnija preklinička ispitivanja posebno kod tumora sa izraženim zonama hipoksije koje doprinose većoj malignosti.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society
C3  - Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia
T1  - Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća
T1  - Анти-туморски ефекат инхибитора угљеничне анхидразе – деривата кумарина на ћелијама тумора плућа
SP  - 318
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5392
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović, Mirna and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Dragoj, Miodrag and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Експресија  ензима  угљеничне  анхидразе  9  (УА9)  је  често  повишена  код  ћелија 
тумора.1  УА9 има важну улогу у регулацији pH вредности која доприноси расту и 
деоби  туморске  ћелије,2  због  чега  се  инхибитори  овог  ензима  истражују  као кандидати за анти-туморске лекове.3 Овде је описан анти-туморски ефекат новог деривата кумарина, гуанидина АФА-36, за који је показано да инхибира активност УА9.  У  испитивању,  коришћена  је  туморска  ћелијска  линија  неситноћелијског карцинома  плућа  (NCI-H460).  Показано  је  да  АФА-36  инхибира  раст  NCI-H460 ћелија  узгајаних  у  једном  слоју,  у  условима  нормоксије  и  хипоксије,  са  ИЦ50 вредностима око 5 μМ. У тесту ћелијске смрти, 25 μМ АФА-36 селективно доводи до смрти NCI-H460 (50% мртвих ћелија) у поређењу са нормалним фибробластима човека  MRC-5  (без  ефекта  ћелијске  смрти).  Флуоресцентном  бојом  BCECF показано је да 5 μМ АФА-36 смањује унутарћелијску pH, за око 30% у односу на нетретиране NCI-H460 ћелије. Притом, под третманом се експресија УА9 повећава 1,5 пута. Флуоресцентном бојом TMRE показали смо да АФА-36 има инхибиторни ефекат  на  активност  митохондрија.  Инхибиција  раста  NCI-H460  ћелија  са  5  μМ 
АФА-36  узгајаних  у  3Д  систему  алгинатних  влакана  је  израженија  у  хипоксији, него  у нормоксији.  Дериват  кумарина  АФА-36  са  својством  инхибитора  УА9, остварује  значајан  анти-туморски  ефекат  и  има  потенцијал  за  даља  опсежнија преклиничка испитивања посебно код тумора са израженим зонама хипоксије које доприносе већој малигности. 
1.  Ivanov, S., Liao, S.Y., Ivanova, A., et al., 2001, Am. J. Pathol. 158:905-919. 
2.  Sedlakova, O., Svastova, E., Takacova, M., et al., 2014, Front. Physiol. 4:400. 
3.  Supuran, C.T., 2008, Nat. Rev. Drug Discov. 7:168-181., Ekspresija enzima ugljenične anhidraze 9 (UA9) je često povišena kod ćelija tumora.1 UA9 ima važnu ulogu u regulaciji pH vrednosti koja doprinosi rastu i deobi tumorske ćelije,2 zbog čega se inhibitori ovog enzima istražuju kao kandidati za anti-tumorske lekove.3 Ovde je opisan anti-tumorski efekat novog derivata kumarina, guanidina AFA-36, za koji je pokazano da inhibira aktivnost UA9. U ispitivanju, korišćena je tumorska ćelijska linija nesitnoćelijskog karcinoma pluća (NCI-H460). Pokazano je da AFA-36 inhibira rast NCI-H460 ćelija uzgajanih u jednom sloju, u uslovima normoksije i hipoksije, sa IC50 vrednostima oko 5 μM. U testu ćelijske smrti, 25 μM AFA-36 selektivno dovodi do smrti NCI-H460 (50% mrtvih ćelija) u poređenju sa normalnim fibroblastima čoveka MRC-5 (bez efekta ćelijske smrti). Fluorescentnom bojom BCECF pokazano je da 5 μM AFA-36 smanjuje unutarćelijsku pH, za oko 30% u odnosu na netretirane NCI-H460 ćelije. Pritom, pod tretmanom se ekspresija UA9 povećava 1,5 puta. Fluorescentnom bojom TMRE pokazali smo da AFA-36 ima inhibitorni efekat na aktivnost mitohondrija. Inhibicija rasta NCI-H460 ćelija sa 5 μM AFA-36 uzgajanih u 3D sistemu alginatnih vlakana je izraženija u hipoksiji, nego u normoksiji. Derivat kumarina AFA-36 sa svojstvom inhibitora UA9, ostvaruje značajan anti-tumorski efekat i ima potencijal za dalja opsežnija preklinička ispitivanja posebno kod tumora sa izraženim zonama hipoksije koje doprinose većoj malignosti.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society",
journal = "Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia",
title = "Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća, Анти-туморски ефекат инхибитора угљеничне анхидразе – деривата кумарина на ћелијама тумора плућа",
pages = "318",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5392"
}
Jovanović, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Dragoj, M., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Podolski-Renić, A., Dinić, J.,& Pešić, M.. (2022). Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća. in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society., 318.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5392
Jovanović M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Dragoj M, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Podolski-Renić A, Dinić J, Pešić M. Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća. in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia. 2022;:318.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5392 .
Jovanović, Mirna, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Dragoj, Miodrag, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, "Anti-tumorski efekat inhibitora ugljenične anhidraze - derivata kumarina na ćelijama tumora pluća" in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia (2022):318,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5392 .

Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells

Jovanović, Mirna; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Dragoj, Miodrag; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica

(2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5467
AB  - Introduction: Carbonic anhydrase 9 (CA9) is a membrane enzyme, a regulator of intracellular and extracellular pH, overexpressed in cells in a hypoxic environment [1]. Solid tumors, adapted to hypoxia, have large quantities of the CA9 and the increased expression correlates with tumor patients’ poor prognosis, tumor malignancy, and resistance to drugs [2]. In glioblastoma, hypoxia promotes the spreading of cancer cells into the brain tissue, to evade the environment with low oxygen levels [3]. Inhibitors of CA9 have previously been investigated for anticancer drugs [2]. In the present study, we evaluated the anticancer properties of three CA9 inhibitors (AFA-30, AFA-40 and AFA-49), phosphonium salts derived from coumarin, in sensitive (U87) and chemoresistant (U87-TxR) human glioblastoma cell lines. 
Materials & Methods: The effect of CA9 inhibitors on cell growth, either alone or in combination with tariquidar was determined by sulforhodamine B assay. Flow cytometry was used for the assessment of change in intracellular pH by BCECF staining, and the rhodamine 123 assay of P-gp activity. Changes in the expression of CA9, CA12, and ABCB1 genes were analyzed by qPCR.
Results: The three compounds inhibited cell growth of both sensitive (U87) and resistant (U87-TxR) cells in 48 h treatments, in both hypoxic (1% O2) and normoxic (20% O2) conditions. However, compared to U87 (IC50 range 1 - 5 μM), the U87-TxR were less sensitive to the compounds’ growth inhibition effect (IC50 range 8 – 30 μM). U87-TxR cells are characterized by the increased expression of the P-gp extruding pump. When tariquidar, a P-gp inhibitor, was applied in combination with CA9 inhibitors, U87-TxR cells were sensitized to these compounds. In the P-gp activity assay, we demonstrated that compounds (5 – 50 μM) increase a P-gp substrate accumulation – rhodamine 123. Further, gene expression of ABCB1 was increased 2 – 8 times in U87, following treatment. In 24 h treatments, these CA9 inhibitors decreased intracellular pH. Moreover, the 24 h treatments resulted in decreased expression of CA9 and CA12.
Conclusion: The three CA9 inhibitors here described have significant anticancer effects in glioblastoma cells and show potential for further pre-clinical investigation, especially in tumors with emphasized hypoxic zones contributing to increased malignancy, such as glioblastomas. 
1.	Mussi, S., et al., Antiproliferative effects of sulphonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors C18, SLC-0111 and acetazolamide on bladder, glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer cell lines. J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem, 2022. 37(1): p. 280-286.
2.	Kalinin, S., et al., Carbonic Anhydrase IX Inhibitors as Candidates for Combination Therapy of Solid Tumors. Int J Mol Sci, 2021. 22(24).
3.	Monteiro, A.R., et al., The Role of Hypoxia in Glioblastoma Invasion. Cells, 2017. 6(4).
 Funding: This research was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia (ref. number 451-03-68/2020-14/200007).
C3  - Abstract Book: 3rd Symposium in Biomedicine: Basic and Clinical Neuroscience; 2022 Jun 29; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5467
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović, Mirna and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Dragoj, Miodrag and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Introduction: Carbonic anhydrase 9 (CA9) is a membrane enzyme, a regulator of intracellular and extracellular pH, overexpressed in cells in a hypoxic environment [1]. Solid tumors, adapted to hypoxia, have large quantities of the CA9 and the increased expression correlates with tumor patients’ poor prognosis, tumor malignancy, and resistance to drugs [2]. In glioblastoma, hypoxia promotes the spreading of cancer cells into the brain tissue, to evade the environment with low oxygen levels [3]. Inhibitors of CA9 have previously been investigated for anticancer drugs [2]. In the present study, we evaluated the anticancer properties of three CA9 inhibitors (AFA-30, AFA-40 and AFA-49), phosphonium salts derived from coumarin, in sensitive (U87) and chemoresistant (U87-TxR) human glioblastoma cell lines. 
Materials & Methods: The effect of CA9 inhibitors on cell growth, either alone or in combination with tariquidar was determined by sulforhodamine B assay. Flow cytometry was used for the assessment of change in intracellular pH by BCECF staining, and the rhodamine 123 assay of P-gp activity. Changes in the expression of CA9, CA12, and ABCB1 genes were analyzed by qPCR.
Results: The three compounds inhibited cell growth of both sensitive (U87) and resistant (U87-TxR) cells in 48 h treatments, in both hypoxic (1% O2) and normoxic (20% O2) conditions. However, compared to U87 (IC50 range 1 - 5 μM), the U87-TxR were less sensitive to the compounds’ growth inhibition effect (IC50 range 8 – 30 μM). U87-TxR cells are characterized by the increased expression of the P-gp extruding pump. When tariquidar, a P-gp inhibitor, was applied in combination with CA9 inhibitors, U87-TxR cells were sensitized to these compounds. In the P-gp activity assay, we demonstrated that compounds (5 – 50 μM) increase a P-gp substrate accumulation – rhodamine 123. Further, gene expression of ABCB1 was increased 2 – 8 times in U87, following treatment. In 24 h treatments, these CA9 inhibitors decreased intracellular pH. Moreover, the 24 h treatments resulted in decreased expression of CA9 and CA12.
Conclusion: The three CA9 inhibitors here described have significant anticancer effects in glioblastoma cells and show potential for further pre-clinical investigation, especially in tumors with emphasized hypoxic zones contributing to increased malignancy, such as glioblastomas. 
1.	Mussi, S., et al., Antiproliferative effects of sulphonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors C18, SLC-0111 and acetazolamide on bladder, glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer cell lines. J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem, 2022. 37(1): p. 280-286.
2.	Kalinin, S., et al., Carbonic Anhydrase IX Inhibitors as Candidates for Combination Therapy of Solid Tumors. Int J Mol Sci, 2021. 22(24).
3.	Monteiro, A.R., et al., The Role of Hypoxia in Glioblastoma Invasion. Cells, 2017. 6(4).
 Funding: This research was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia (ref. number 451-03-68/2020-14/200007).",
journal = "Abstract Book: 3rd Symposium in Biomedicine: Basic and Clinical Neuroscience; 2022 Jun 29; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5467"
}
Jovanović, M., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Dragoj, M., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Podolski-Renić, A., Dinić, J.,& Pešić, M.. (2022). Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells. in Abstract Book: 3rd Symposium in Biomedicine: Basic and Clinical Neuroscience; 2022 Jun 29; Belgrade, Serbia.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5467
Jovanović M, Jovanović Stojanov S, Dragoj M, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Podolski-Renić A, Dinić J, Pešić M. Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells. in Abstract Book: 3rd Symposium in Biomedicine: Basic and Clinical Neuroscience; 2022 Jun 29; Belgrade, Serbia. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5467 .
Jovanović, Mirna, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Dragoj, Miodrag, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, "Anticancer effect of new carbonic anhydrase 9 inhibitors in glioblastoma cells" in Abstract Book: 3rd Symposium in Biomedicine: Basic and Clinical Neuroscience; 2022 Jun 29; Belgrade, Serbia (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5467 .

Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy

Dragoj, Miodrag; Dinić, Jelena; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Jovanović, Mirna; Stepanović, Ana; Ercegovac, Maja; Marić, Dragana; Pešić, Milica

(STRATAGEM COST Action, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Ercegovac, Maja
AU  - Marić, Dragana
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://stratagem-cost.eu/2022/04/stratagems-5th-co-located-annual-conference-and-wg3-4-training-school-to-be-held-in-coimbra-portugal-june-july-2022/
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5371
AB  - Although advances in sequencing technology and target identification enabled the implementation of a
personalized therapy approach, unfortunately, only 3-9% of cancer patients who receive the targeted
therapy show an adequate response. On the other side, there are exceptional responders to targeted
therapy among cancer patients without common genetic alterations. Therefore, current patient
classifications relying only on sequencing are not sufficient to determine optimal treatment. Our
intention is to start in the opposite direction to conventional diagnostics by performing pharmacological
screening on patient-derived cancer cells ex vivo because testing of multiple drugs is not possible in
clinical trials. An incomplete understanding of how tumour genotype reflects on tumour phenotype
limits the efficacy of DNA and mRNA sequencing for personalized therapy. Functional diagnostics using
patient-derived cancer cells is recently implicated to overcome this limitation and it is clinically available
for haematological malignancies. We plan to perform the immunofluorescence-based drug-screening
assay to determine non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients’ cancer cells’ response to targeted
therapeutics, particularly tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) within the time frame necessary to influence
patient care. The usage of the functional diagnostics approach should be an addition to clinical trials and
complement DNA and mRNA sequencing.
In contrast to similar research efforts [1], we will shorten the cultivation of NSCLC patient-derived
cells to 1-2 weeks because we intend to test drugs on a mixture of cancer and stromal cells (fibroblasts).
It is well-known that the sensitivity of cancer cells depends on their interaction with the
microenvironment including neighbouring cells. In addition, we will examine the changes in the
expression level of ATP Binding Cassette transporters (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) in both cancer
and stromal cells that may occur during TKIs and chemotherapy treatment. In such way, we will gain
knowledge about (i) which TKI or chemotherapeutic induces multidrug-resistant (MDR) phenotype in
our NSCLC patients’ cohort, (ii) whether the induction of MDR depends on the ratio between cancer
and stromal cells, (iii) whether the induction of MDR is prevalent in cancer cells, and (iv) whether MDR
induction depends on individual patient’s characteristics (comparison with Whole Exome Sequencing
results).
PB  - STRATAGEM COST Action
C3  - Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal
T1  - Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy
SP  - 94
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5371
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Dragoj, Miodrag and Dinić, Jelena and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Jovanović, Mirna and Stepanović, Ana and Ercegovac, Maja and Marić, Dragana and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Although advances in sequencing technology and target identification enabled the implementation of a
personalized therapy approach, unfortunately, only 3-9% of cancer patients who receive the targeted
therapy show an adequate response. On the other side, there are exceptional responders to targeted
therapy among cancer patients without common genetic alterations. Therefore, current patient
classifications relying only on sequencing are not sufficient to determine optimal treatment. Our
intention is to start in the opposite direction to conventional diagnostics by performing pharmacological
screening on patient-derived cancer cells ex vivo because testing of multiple drugs is not possible in
clinical trials. An incomplete understanding of how tumour genotype reflects on tumour phenotype
limits the efficacy of DNA and mRNA sequencing for personalized therapy. Functional diagnostics using
patient-derived cancer cells is recently implicated to overcome this limitation and it is clinically available
for haematological malignancies. We plan to perform the immunofluorescence-based drug-screening
assay to determine non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients’ cancer cells’ response to targeted
therapeutics, particularly tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) within the time frame necessary to influence
patient care. The usage of the functional diagnostics approach should be an addition to clinical trials and
complement DNA and mRNA sequencing.
In contrast to similar research efforts [1], we will shorten the cultivation of NSCLC patient-derived
cells to 1-2 weeks because we intend to test drugs on a mixture of cancer and stromal cells (fibroblasts).
It is well-known that the sensitivity of cancer cells depends on their interaction with the
microenvironment including neighbouring cells. In addition, we will examine the changes in the
expression level of ATP Binding Cassette transporters (ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2) in both cancer
and stromal cells that may occur during TKIs and chemotherapy treatment. In such way, we will gain
knowledge about (i) which TKI or chemotherapeutic induces multidrug-resistant (MDR) phenotype in
our NSCLC patients’ cohort, (ii) whether the induction of MDR depends on the ratio between cancer
and stromal cells, (iii) whether the induction of MDR is prevalent in cancer cells, and (iv) whether MDR
induction depends on individual patient’s characteristics (comparison with Whole Exome Sequencing
results).",
publisher = "STRATAGEM COST Action",
journal = "Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal",
title = "Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy",
pages = "94",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5371"
}
Dragoj, M., Dinić, J., Podolski-Renić, A., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Jovanović, M., Stepanović, A., Ercegovac, M., Marić, D.,& Pešić, M.. (2022). Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy. in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal
STRATAGEM COST Action., 94.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5371
Dragoj M, Dinić J, Podolski-Renić A, Jovanović Stojanov S, Jovanović M, Stepanović A, Ercegovac M, Marić D, Pešić M. Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy. in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal. 2022;:94.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5371 .
Dragoj, Miodrag, Dinić, Jelena, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Jovanović, Mirna, Stepanović, Ana, Ercegovac, Maja, Marić, Dragana, Pešić, Milica, "Functional diagnostics as a new concept for the improvement of personalized targeted therapy" in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal (2022):94,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5371 .

Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Stepanović, Ana; Ljujić, Mila; Lupšić, Ema; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović, Mirna; Schenone, Silvia; Pešić, Milica; Dinić, Jelena

(European Association for Cancer Research, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Ljujić, Mila
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Schenone, Silvia
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://nwm.covr.be/EACR2022abstracts/data/HtmlApp/main.html#
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5425
AB  - Introduction:
Glioblastoma (GBM) is among the most frequent and aggressive brain tumors characterized by
infiltrating nature, high proliferation, and resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. GBM exhibit high
expression of Src tyrosine kinase which regulates proliferation, survival, and invasiveness of tumor
cells, making Src a potential target for GBM therapy. Numerous Src family kinase inhibitors (SFKI)
were reported to induce autophagy, thus protecting cells from undergoing cell death. However,
inhibition of autophagy was shown to sensitize cells to SFKI in several cancer types.
Material and Methods:
Human GBM cell line U87 and its multidrug-resistant (MDR) counterpart U87-TxR were transfected
with RFP-LC3, an autophagy marker. The ability of two SFKIs, pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidines Si306 and
its prodrug pro-si306, to induce autophagy in RFP-LC3-transfected GBM cells was evaluated by flow
cytometry and fluorescent microscopy. Cell viability was assessed by MTT assay. The autophagy
induction and autophagic flux were evaluated by Acridine orange assay, immunocytochemistry and
immunoblotting. Cell proliferation rate was analyzed by CFSE assay. Cell death was detected by
Annexin/Propidium Iodide assay. PARP-1 cleavage was assessed by immunoblotting.
Results and Discussions:
SFKI treatment resulted in degradation of RFP-LC3 after 3 h treatment as well as in formation of
RFP-LC3 puncta in GBM cells demonstrating autophagy induction. The effect of SFKIs on autophagy
induction persisted after 48 h, as demonstrated by autophagy markers LC3 and p62. Inhibition of
autophagy by Bafilomycin A1 sensitized both U87 and U87-TxR cells to Si306 and its pro-drug after
48 h. The anti-proliferative effect of Si306 and pro-Si306 was additionally increased after autophagy
inhibition by Bafilomycin A1. Furthermore, while single SFKI treatments did not cause significant
cell death, combination treatments with autophagy inhibitor induced necrosis in U87 and U87-TxR
cells after 48 h. Detection of necrotic PARP-1 fragment further confirmed necrotic cell death.
Conclusion:
Taken together, these data suggest that autophagy induced by Si306 and pro-Si306 has a protective
role in GBM cells, and that autophagy modulation may be used to enhance the anticancer effects of
SFKIs. In addition, as the ability of the SFKIs to induce autophagy was not diminished by the
presence of the MDR phenotype makes these compounds promising for treatment of MDR cancers.
PB  - European Association for Cancer Research
C3  - Congress abstracts: Annual Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research EACR 2022: Innovative Cancer Service: Translating Biology to Medicine; 2022 Jun 20-23; Seville, Spain
T1  - Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug
SP  - P1-135
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5425
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Stepanović, Ana and Ljujić, Mila and Lupšić, Ema and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović, Mirna and Schenone, Silvia and Pešić, Milica and Dinić, Jelena",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Introduction:
Glioblastoma (GBM) is among the most frequent and aggressive brain tumors characterized by
infiltrating nature, high proliferation, and resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. GBM exhibit high
expression of Src tyrosine kinase which regulates proliferation, survival, and invasiveness of tumor
cells, making Src a potential target for GBM therapy. Numerous Src family kinase inhibitors (SFKI)
were reported to induce autophagy, thus protecting cells from undergoing cell death. However,
inhibition of autophagy was shown to sensitize cells to SFKI in several cancer types.
Material and Methods:
Human GBM cell line U87 and its multidrug-resistant (MDR) counterpart U87-TxR were transfected
with RFP-LC3, an autophagy marker. The ability of two SFKIs, pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidines Si306 and
its prodrug pro-si306, to induce autophagy in RFP-LC3-transfected GBM cells was evaluated by flow
cytometry and fluorescent microscopy. Cell viability was assessed by MTT assay. The autophagy
induction and autophagic flux were evaluated by Acridine orange assay, immunocytochemistry and
immunoblotting. Cell proliferation rate was analyzed by CFSE assay. Cell death was detected by
Annexin/Propidium Iodide assay. PARP-1 cleavage was assessed by immunoblotting.
Results and Discussions:
SFKI treatment resulted in degradation of RFP-LC3 after 3 h treatment as well as in formation of
RFP-LC3 puncta in GBM cells demonstrating autophagy induction. The effect of SFKIs on autophagy
induction persisted after 48 h, as demonstrated by autophagy markers LC3 and p62. Inhibition of
autophagy by Bafilomycin A1 sensitized both U87 and U87-TxR cells to Si306 and its pro-drug after
48 h. The anti-proliferative effect of Si306 and pro-Si306 was additionally increased after autophagy
inhibition by Bafilomycin A1. Furthermore, while single SFKI treatments did not cause significant
cell death, combination treatments with autophagy inhibitor induced necrosis in U87 and U87-TxR
cells after 48 h. Detection of necrotic PARP-1 fragment further confirmed necrotic cell death.
Conclusion:
Taken together, these data suggest that autophagy induced by Si306 and pro-Si306 has a protective
role in GBM cells, and that autophagy modulation may be used to enhance the anticancer effects of
SFKIs. In addition, as the ability of the SFKIs to induce autophagy was not diminished by the
presence of the MDR phenotype makes these compounds promising for treatment of MDR cancers.",
publisher = "European Association for Cancer Research",
journal = "Congress abstracts: Annual Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research EACR 2022: Innovative Cancer Service: Translating Biology to Medicine; 2022 Jun 20-23; Seville, Spain",
title = "Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug",
pages = "P1-135",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5425"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Stepanović, A., Ljujić, M., Lupšić, E., Podolski-Renić, A., Dragoj, M., Jovanović, M., Schenone, S., Pešić, M.,& Dinić, J.. (2022). Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug. in Congress abstracts: Annual Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research EACR 2022: Innovative Cancer Service: Translating Biology to Medicine; 2022 Jun 20-23; Seville, Spain
European Association for Cancer Research., P1-135.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5425
Jovanović Stojanov S, Stepanović A, Ljujić M, Lupšić E, Podolski-Renić A, Dragoj M, Jovanović M, Schenone S, Pešić M, Dinić J. Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug. in Congress abstracts: Annual Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research EACR 2022: Innovative Cancer Service: Translating Biology to Medicine; 2022 Jun 20-23; Seville, Spain. 2022;:P1-135.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5425 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Stepanović, Ana, Ljujić, Mila, Lupšić, Ema, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović, Mirna, Schenone, Silvia, Pešić, Milica, Dinić, Jelena, "Autophagy inhibition sensitises glioblastoma cells to Src family kinase inhibitors Si306 and its prodrug" in Congress abstracts: Annual Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research EACR 2022: Innovative Cancer Service: Translating Biology to Medicine; 2022 Jun 20-23; Seville, Spain (2022):P1-135,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5425 .

Inhibicija autofagije senzitizuje ćelije glioblastoma na inhibitore Src tirozin-kinaze, derivate pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306

Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Stepanović, Ana; Ljujić, Mila; Lupšić, Ema; Dragoj, Miodrag; Jovanović, Mirna; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica

(Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Ljujić, Mila
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5394
AB  - Глиобластом је један од најагресивнијих тумора мозга који карактерише инфилтрирајућа природа, интензивна пролиферација и резистенција на терапију. Ћелије глиобластома имају високу експресију Срц тирозин-киназе која регулише пролиферацију, преживљавање и инвазивност туморских ћелија чинећи је потенцијалном метом за терапију. Инхибитори тирозин-киназа могу индуковати аутофагију која делује протективно на туморске ћелије. Способност инхибитора
Срц тирозин-киназе, деривата пиразоло[3,4-д]пиримидина Si306 и његовог пролека pro-Si306, да индукују аутофагију испитана је на ћелијској линији хуманог глиобластома U87 и њеној варијанти са вишеструком резистенцијом на лекове U87-TxR. Третман овим једињењима узроковао је појаву аутофагозома у ћелијама након 3 сата, а ефекат на индукцију аутофагије опстао је и након 48 сати што је утврђено анализом маркера аутофагије LC3 и p62. Инхибиција аутофагног флукса бафиломицином А1 значајно је увећала постојеће анти-пролиферативно дејство Si306 и pro-Si306. Такође, комбиновани третмани Срц инхибитора са бафиломицином А1 довели су до некрозе након 48 сати. Добијени резултати сугеришу да аутофагија индукована овим једињењима има заштитну улогу у ћелијама глиобластома и да се модулација аутофагије може користити за сензитизацију ћелија глиобластома на инхибиторе Срц тирозин-киназе. Поред тога, поменути ефекти Si306 и pro-Si306 нису умањени присуством вишеструкорезистентног фенотипа, што овим једињењима даје потенцијал за лечење резистентних тумора.
AB  - Glioblastom je jedan od najagresivnijih tumora mozga koji karakteriše infiltrirajuća priroda, intenzivna proliferacija i rezistencija na terapiju. Ćelije glioblastoma imaju visoku ekspresiju Src tirozin-kinaze koja reguliše proliferaciju, preživljavanje i invazivnost tumorskih ćelija čineći je potencijalnom metom za terapiju. Inhibitori tirozin-kinaza mogu indukovati autofagiju koja deluje protektivno na tumorske ćelije. Sposobnost inhibitora Src tirozin-kinaze, derivata pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i njegovog proleka pro-Si306, da indukuju autofagiju ispitana je na ćelijskoj liniji humanog glioblastoma U87 i njenoj varijanti sa višestrukom rezistencijom na lekove U87-TxR. Tretman ovim jedinjenjima uzrokovao je pojavu autofagozoma u ćelijama nakon 3 sata, a efekat na indukciju autofagije opstao je i nakon 48 sati što je utvrđeno analizom markera autofagije LC3 i p62. Inhibicija autofagnog fluksa bafilomicinom A1 značajno je uvećala postojeće anti-proliferativno dejstvo Si306 i pro-Si306. Takođe, kombinovani tretmani Src inhibitora sa bafilomicinom A1 doveli su do nekroze nakon 48 sati. Dobijeni rezultati sugerišu da autofagija indukovana ovim jedinjenjima ima zaštitnu ulogu u ćelijama glioblastoma i da se modulacija autofagije može koristiti za senzitizaciju ćelija glioblastoma na inhibitore Src tirozin-kinaze. Pored toga, pomenuti efekti Si306 i pro-Si306 nisu umanjeni prisustvom višestrukorezistentnog fenotipa, što ovim jedinjenjima daje potencijal za lečenje rezistentnih tumora.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society
C3  - Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia
T1  - Inhibicija  autofagije  senzitizuje  ćelije  glioblastoma  na inhibitore  Src  tirozin-kinaze,  derivate  pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306
T1  - Инхибиција аутофагије сензитизује ћелије глиобластома на инхибиторе Срц тирозин-киназе, деривате пиразоло[3,4- д]пиримидина Si306 и pro-Si306
SP  - 330
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5394
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Stepanović, Ana and Ljujić, Mila and Lupšić, Ema and Dragoj, Miodrag and Jovanović, Mirna and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Глиобластом је један од најагресивнијих тумора мозга који карактерише инфилтрирајућа природа, интензивна пролиферација и резистенција на терапију. Ћелије глиобластома имају високу експресију Срц тирозин-киназе која регулише пролиферацију, преживљавање и инвазивност туморских ћелија чинећи је потенцијалном метом за терапију. Инхибитори тирозин-киназа могу индуковати аутофагију која делује протективно на туморске ћелије. Способност инхибитора
Срц тирозин-киназе, деривата пиразоло[3,4-д]пиримидина Si306 и његовог пролека pro-Si306, да индукују аутофагију испитана је на ћелијској линији хуманог глиобластома U87 и њеној варијанти са вишеструком резистенцијом на лекове U87-TxR. Третман овим једињењима узроковао је појаву аутофагозома у ћелијама након 3 сата, а ефекат на индукцију аутофагије опстао је и након 48 сати што је утврђено анализом маркера аутофагије LC3 и p62. Инхибиција аутофагног флукса бафиломицином А1 значајно је увећала постојеће анти-пролиферативно дејство Si306 и pro-Si306. Такође, комбиновани третмани Срц инхибитора са бафиломицином А1 довели су до некрозе након 48 сати. Добијени резултати сугеришу да аутофагија индукована овим једињењима има заштитну улогу у ћелијама глиобластома и да се модулација аутофагије може користити за сензитизацију ћелија глиобластома на инхибиторе Срц тирозин-киназе. Поред тога, поменути ефекти Si306 и pro-Si306 нису умањени присуством вишеструкорезистентног фенотипа, што овим једињењима даје потенцијал за лечење резистентних тумора., Glioblastom je jedan od najagresivnijih tumora mozga koji karakteriše infiltrirajuća priroda, intenzivna proliferacija i rezistencija na terapiju. Ćelije glioblastoma imaju visoku ekspresiju Src tirozin-kinaze koja reguliše proliferaciju, preživljavanje i invazivnost tumorskih ćelija čineći je potencijalnom metom za terapiju. Inhibitori tirozin-kinaza mogu indukovati autofagiju koja deluje protektivno na tumorske ćelije. Sposobnost inhibitora Src tirozin-kinaze, derivata pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i njegovog proleka pro-Si306, da indukuju autofagiju ispitana je na ćelijskoj liniji humanog glioblastoma U87 i njenoj varijanti sa višestrukom rezistencijom na lekove U87-TxR. Tretman ovim jedinjenjima uzrokovao je pojavu autofagozoma u ćelijama nakon 3 sata, a efekat na indukciju autofagije opstao je i nakon 48 sati što je utvrđeno analizom markera autofagije LC3 i p62. Inhibicija autofagnog fluksa bafilomicinom A1 značajno je uvećala postojeće anti-proliferativno dejstvo Si306 i pro-Si306. Takođe, kombinovani tretmani Src inhibitora sa bafilomicinom A1 doveli su do nekroze nakon 48 sati. Dobijeni rezultati sugerišu da autofagija indukovana ovim jedinjenjima ima zaštitnu ulogu u ćelijama glioblastoma i da se modulacija autofagije može koristiti za senzitizaciju ćelija glioblastoma na inhibitore Src tirozin-kinaze. Pored toga, pomenuti efekti Si306 i pro-Si306 nisu umanjeni prisustvom višestrukorezistentnog fenotipa, što ovim jedinjenjima daje potencijal za lečenje rezistentnih tumora.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society",
journal = "Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia",
title = "Inhibicija  autofagije  senzitizuje  ćelije  glioblastoma  na inhibitore  Src  tirozin-kinaze,  derivate  pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306, Инхибиција аутофагије сензитизује ћелије глиобластома на инхибиторе Срц тирозин-киназе, деривате пиразоло[3,4- д]пиримидина Si306 и pro-Si306",
pages = "330",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5394"
}
Jovanović Stojanov, S., Stepanović, A., Ljujić, M., Lupšić, E., Dragoj, M., Jovanović, M., Dinić, J.,& Pešić, M.. (2022). Inhibicija  autofagije  senzitizuje  ćelije  glioblastoma  na inhibitore  Src  tirozin-kinaze,  derivate  pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306. in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Biological Society., 330.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5394
Jovanović Stojanov S, Stepanović A, Ljujić M, Lupšić E, Dragoj M, Jovanović M, Dinić J, Pešić M. Inhibicija  autofagije  senzitizuje  ćelije  glioblastoma  na inhibitore  Src  tirozin-kinaze,  derivate  pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306. in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia. 2022;:330.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5394 .
Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Stepanović, Ana, Ljujić, Mila, Lupšić, Ema, Dragoj, Miodrag, Jovanović, Mirna, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, "Inhibicija  autofagije  senzitizuje  ćelije  glioblastoma  na inhibitore  Src  tirozin-kinaze,  derivate  pirazolo[3,4-d]pirimidina Si306 i pro-Si306" in Knjiga sažetaka: Treći Kongres biologa Srbije: Osnovna i primenjena istraživanja: Metodika nastave; 2022 Sep 21-25; Zlatibor, Serbia (2022):330,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5394 .

Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species

Jovanović, Mirna; Bangay, Gabrielle; Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija; Dragoj, Miodrag; Stepanović, Ana; Lupšić, Ema; Podolski-Renić, Ana; Dinić, Jelena; Rijo, Patricia; Pešić, Milica

(Belgrade: Serbian Plant Physiology Society, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Jovanović, Mirna
AU  - Bangay, Gabrielle
AU  - Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija
AU  - Dragoj, Miodrag
AU  - Stepanović, Ana
AU  - Lupšić, Ema
AU  - Podolski-Renić, Ana
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Rijo, Patricia
AU  - Pešić, Milica
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5369
AB  - Plants of the genus Plectranthus (Lamiaceae) are used in traditional medicine. Here, the anti-cancer effects of the three abietane diterpenoid derivatives from Plectranthus species are described. Compounds’ effects (comp. 1 = VI31.1.1, comp. 2 = VI20.1.1, comp. 3 = RoyBz) were tested
in human lung cancer cells, in sensitive NCI-H460 and chemoresistant NCI-H460/R, as well as in colon cancer cells, sensitive DLD1, and hemoresistant DLD1-TxR. The resistant cells were more sensitive than corresponding parental cells to 1 and 2 in MTT assay, with IC50 values ranging from 3 to 10 μM. For the most potent 3 (IC50 as low as 1 μM), resistant cells had up to 2 times higher IC50 values than sensitive cells. The growth inhibition effect by all three compounds was more ronounced in cancer cells, compared to normal human fibroblasts (MRC-5). Only 2 induced a significant cell death effect showing 70% non-viable cells in NCI-H460. The effect the compoundsmight have on the P-gp extrusion pump was also tested using doxorubicin and rhodamine 123 accumulation assays. Compounds 1 and 2 caused a significant increase in the accumulation of both P-gp substrates, doxorubicin, and rhodamine 123. The compounds isolated from Plectranthus showed anticancer potential in lung and colon cancer cells. Importantly, they displayed colateral sensitivity - a phenomenon when the chemoresistant cells are more sensitive to the compounds than corresponding sensitive cells. The compounds inhibited the P-gp activity implying MDR modulating potential.
PB  - Belgrade: Serbian Plant Physiology Society
C3  - 4th International Conference on Plant Biology [and] 23rd SPPS Meeting; 2022 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia
T1  - Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5369
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Jovanović, Mirna and Bangay, Gabrielle and Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija and Dragoj, Miodrag and Stepanović, Ana and Lupšić, Ema and Podolski-Renić, Ana and Dinić, Jelena and Rijo, Patricia and Pešić, Milica",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Plants of the genus Plectranthus (Lamiaceae) are used in traditional medicine. Here, the anti-cancer effects of the three abietane diterpenoid derivatives from Plectranthus species are described. Compounds’ effects (comp. 1 = VI31.1.1, comp. 2 = VI20.1.1, comp. 3 = RoyBz) were tested
in human lung cancer cells, in sensitive NCI-H460 and chemoresistant NCI-H460/R, as well as in colon cancer cells, sensitive DLD1, and hemoresistant DLD1-TxR. The resistant cells were more sensitive than corresponding parental cells to 1 and 2 in MTT assay, with IC50 values ranging from 3 to 10 μM. For the most potent 3 (IC50 as low as 1 μM), resistant cells had up to 2 times higher IC50 values than sensitive cells. The growth inhibition effect by all three compounds was more ronounced in cancer cells, compared to normal human fibroblasts (MRC-5). Only 2 induced a significant cell death effect showing 70% non-viable cells in NCI-H460. The effect the compoundsmight have on the P-gp extrusion pump was also tested using doxorubicin and rhodamine 123 accumulation assays. Compounds 1 and 2 caused a significant increase in the accumulation of both P-gp substrates, doxorubicin, and rhodamine 123. The compounds isolated from Plectranthus showed anticancer potential in lung and colon cancer cells. Importantly, they displayed colateral sensitivity - a phenomenon when the chemoresistant cells are more sensitive to the compounds than corresponding sensitive cells. The compounds inhibited the P-gp activity implying MDR modulating potential.",
publisher = "Belgrade: Serbian Plant Physiology Society",
journal = "4th International Conference on Plant Biology [and] 23rd SPPS Meeting; 2022 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia",
title = "Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5369"
}
Jovanović, M., Bangay, G., Jovanović Stojanov, S., Dragoj, M., Stepanović, A., Lupšić, E., Podolski-Renić, A., Dinić, J., Rijo, P.,& Pešić, M.. (2022). Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species. in 4th International Conference on Plant Biology [and] 23rd SPPS Meeting; 2022 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia
Belgrade: Serbian Plant Physiology Society..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5369
Jovanović M, Bangay G, Jovanović Stojanov S, Dragoj M, Stepanović A, Lupšić E, Podolski-Renić A, Dinić J, Rijo P, Pešić M. Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species. in 4th International Conference on Plant Biology [and] 23rd SPPS Meeting; 2022 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5369 .
Jovanović, Mirna, Bangay, Gabrielle, Jovanović Stojanov, Sofija, Dragoj, Miodrag, Stepanović, Ana, Lupšić, Ema, Podolski-Renić, Ana, Dinić, Jelena, Rijo, Patricia, Pešić, Milica, "Multidrug-resistant cancer cells are sensitive to abietane diterpenoids from Plectranthus species" in 4th International Conference on Plant Biology [and] 23rd SPPS Meeting; 2022 Oct 6-8; Belgrade, Serbia (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5369 .

Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy

Isca, Vera; Bangay, Gabrielle; Princiotto, Salvatore; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica; Saraíva, Lucília; Afonso, Carlos; Rijo, Patrícia

(STRATAGEM COST Action, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Isca, Vera
AU  - Bangay, Gabrielle
AU  - Princiotto, Salvatore
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Saraíva, Lucília
AU  - Afonso, Carlos
AU  - Rijo, Patrícia
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://stratagem-cost.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Abstract-Book-Coimbra.pdf
UR  - https://stratagem-cost.eu/2022/04/stratagems-5th-co-located-annual-conference-and-wg3-4-training-school-to-be-held-in-coimbra-portugal-june-july-2022/
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5622
AB  - Plectranthus genus (Lamiaceae family) is widely used in traditional medicine, and the presence of
pharmacologically active compounds, specifically diterpenes, is well reported. The cytotoxic diterpene
royleanones 7α-acetoxy-6β-hydroxyroyleanone (Roy) and 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy) are the
major compounds of P. grandidentatus Gürke (acetonic extract) and P. madagascariensis (Pers.) Benth.
(essential oil), respectively. In this work, Roy and DeRoy were investigated as potential antitumor
agents through the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms (α, βI, δ, ε and ζ) and inhibition of
the efflux pump, P-glycoprotein (P-gp). Additionally, the reactivity of Roy and DeRoy was explored
to synthesize a library of new derivatives to be also evaluated as cytotoxic agents. PKC-α, βI, δ, ε, and
ζ activation was tested on a yeast-based screening assay. Interestingly, one benzoylated derivative
showed selective PKC-δ activation, while DeRoy exhibited enhanced PKC activity in all tested
isoforms, compared to the positive control. Moreover, inhibition of P-gp activity was evaluated in
human non-small cell lung carcinoma NCI-H460 and its MDR counterpart NCI-H460/R. It was
possible to identify an analogue with P-gp inhibitory activity higher than the natural diterpenes Roy
and DeRoy, and comparable to Dexverapamil (positive control). Several other semi-synthetic
products are currently under investigation as potential chemotherapeutic agents.
PB  - STRATAGEM COST Action
C3  - Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal
T1  - Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy
SP  - 73
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5622
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Isca, Vera and Bangay, Gabrielle and Princiotto, Salvatore and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica and Saraíva, Lucília and Afonso, Carlos and Rijo, Patrícia",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Plectranthus genus (Lamiaceae family) is widely used in traditional medicine, and the presence of
pharmacologically active compounds, specifically diterpenes, is well reported. The cytotoxic diterpene
royleanones 7α-acetoxy-6β-hydroxyroyleanone (Roy) and 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy) are the
major compounds of P. grandidentatus Gürke (acetonic extract) and P. madagascariensis (Pers.) Benth.
(essential oil), respectively. In this work, Roy and DeRoy were investigated as potential antitumor
agents through the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms (α, βI, δ, ε and ζ) and inhibition of
the efflux pump, P-glycoprotein (P-gp). Additionally, the reactivity of Roy and DeRoy was explored
to synthesize a library of new derivatives to be also evaluated as cytotoxic agents. PKC-α, βI, δ, ε, and
ζ activation was tested on a yeast-based screening assay. Interestingly, one benzoylated derivative
showed selective PKC-δ activation, while DeRoy exhibited enhanced PKC activity in all tested
isoforms, compared to the positive control. Moreover, inhibition of P-gp activity was evaluated in
human non-small cell lung carcinoma NCI-H460 and its MDR counterpart NCI-H460/R. It was
possible to identify an analogue with P-gp inhibitory activity higher than the natural diterpenes Roy
and DeRoy, and comparable to Dexverapamil (positive control). Several other semi-synthetic
products are currently under investigation as potential chemotherapeutic agents.",
publisher = "STRATAGEM COST Action",
journal = "Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal",
title = "Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy",
pages = "73",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5622"
}
Isca, V., Bangay, G., Princiotto, S., Dinić, J., Pešić, M., Saraíva, L., Afonso, C.,& Rijo, P.. (2022). Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy. in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal
STRATAGEM COST Action., 73.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5622
Isca V, Bangay G, Princiotto S, Dinić J, Pešić M, Saraíva L, Afonso C, Rijo P. Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy. in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal. 2022;:73.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5622 .
Isca, Vera, Bangay, Gabrielle, Princiotto, Salvatore, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, Saraíva, Lucília, Afonso, Carlos, Rijo, Patrícia, "Cytotoxic Activity of diterpenes from Plectranthus spp. for MDR cancer therapy" in Abstract Book: STRATAGEM’s 5th Annual Meeting: New Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tools against Multidrug Resistant Tumours; 2022 Jun 29 - Jul 1; Coimbra, Portugal (2022):73,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_5622 .

Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents

Isca, Vera; Ntungwe, Epole; Bangay, Gabrielle; Princiotto, Salvatore; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica; Saraiva, Lucilia; Afonso, Carlos; Rijo, Patricia

(Thieme Medical Publishers, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Isca, Vera
AU  - Ntungwe, Epole
AU  - Bangay, Gabrielle
AU  - Princiotto, Salvatore
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Saraiva, Lucilia
AU  - Afonso, Carlos
AU  - Rijo, Patricia
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5611
AB  - Natural products are an important source of lead compounds for drug discovery. Plectranthus (Lamiaceae family) is an Old-World genus widely used in traditional medicine, whose species are rich in pharmacologically active compounds, specifically diterpenes. Two important lead molecules reported in Plectranthus spp. are the diterpenoids 7α-acetoxy-6β-hydroxyroyleanone (Roy, [Fig. 1]) and 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy, [Fig. 1]) [1]. Previous studies reported in vitro activity of Roy and DeRoy against several breast cancer cell lines [1], [2]. Furthermore, in silico studies suggested promising interactions of these natural royleanones with protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms [2]. The key point of this work was to prepare new functionalized derivatives of Roy and DeRoy and evaluate their effect on two cancer targets, PKC isoforms and the efflux pump, P-glycoprotein (P-gp). New royleanone derivatives were obtained by hemi-synthesis, starting from Roy and DeRoy. Some of these compounds were evaluated as PKC (α, βI, δ, ε and ζ) activators. One benzoylated analogue showed the ability to selectively activate PKC-δ, while DeRoy displayed improved PKC activity, compared with the positive control, in all tested isoforms. Additionally, P-gp inhibitory potential was evaluated in human non-small cell lung carcinoma NCI-H460 and its MDR counterpart NCI-H460/R. Natural royleanones Roy and DeRoy showed similar cytotoxic activity against both NCI-H460 and MDR cancer cell lines. Interestingly, the benzoylated derivatives displayed the most promising results, showing an increased P-gp inhibitory activity and suggesting a relevant role of this moiety for the cytotoxic activity. Several other derivatives are currently under investigation as potential chemotherapeutic agents.
PB  - Thieme Medical Publishers
C3  - 70th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA); 2022 Aug 28-31; Thessaloniki, Greece
T1  - Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents
DO  - 10.1055/s-0042-1759260
SP  - 1540
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Isca, Vera and Ntungwe, Epole and Bangay, Gabrielle and Princiotto, Salvatore and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica and Saraiva, Lucilia and Afonso, Carlos and Rijo, Patricia",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Natural products are an important source of lead compounds for drug discovery. Plectranthus (Lamiaceae family) is an Old-World genus widely used in traditional medicine, whose species are rich in pharmacologically active compounds, specifically diterpenes. Two important lead molecules reported in Plectranthus spp. are the diterpenoids 7α-acetoxy-6β-hydroxyroyleanone (Roy, [Fig. 1]) and 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy, [Fig. 1]) [1]. Previous studies reported in vitro activity of Roy and DeRoy against several breast cancer cell lines [1], [2]. Furthermore, in silico studies suggested promising interactions of these natural royleanones with protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms [2]. The key point of this work was to prepare new functionalized derivatives of Roy and DeRoy and evaluate their effect on two cancer targets, PKC isoforms and the efflux pump, P-glycoprotein (P-gp). New royleanone derivatives were obtained by hemi-synthesis, starting from Roy and DeRoy. Some of these compounds were evaluated as PKC (α, βI, δ, ε and ζ) activators. One benzoylated analogue showed the ability to selectively activate PKC-δ, while DeRoy displayed improved PKC activity, compared with the positive control, in all tested isoforms. Additionally, P-gp inhibitory potential was evaluated in human non-small cell lung carcinoma NCI-H460 and its MDR counterpart NCI-H460/R. Natural royleanones Roy and DeRoy showed similar cytotoxic activity against both NCI-H460 and MDR cancer cell lines. Interestingly, the benzoylated derivatives displayed the most promising results, showing an increased P-gp inhibitory activity and suggesting a relevant role of this moiety for the cytotoxic activity. Several other derivatives are currently under investigation as potential chemotherapeutic agents.",
publisher = "Thieme Medical Publishers",
journal = "70th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA); 2022 Aug 28-31; Thessaloniki, Greece",
title = "Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents",
doi = "10.1055/s-0042-1759260",
pages = "1540"
}
Isca, V., Ntungwe, E., Bangay, G., Princiotto, S., Dinić, J., Pešić, M., Saraiva, L., Afonso, C.,& Rijo, P.. (2022). Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents. in 70th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA); 2022 Aug 28-31; Thessaloniki, Greece
Thieme Medical Publishers., 1540.
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-1759260
Isca V, Ntungwe E, Bangay G, Princiotto S, Dinić J, Pešić M, Saraiva L, Afonso C, Rijo P. Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents. in 70th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA); 2022 Aug 28-31; Thessaloniki, Greece. 2022;:1540.
doi:10.1055/s-0042-1759260 .
Isca, Vera, Ntungwe, Epole, Bangay, Gabrielle, Princiotto, Salvatore, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, Saraiva, Lucilia, Afonso, Carlos, Rijo, Patricia, "Natural and semi-synthetic royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp. as potential anti-tumoral agents" in 70th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA); 2022 Aug 28-31; Thessaloniki, Greece (2022):1540,
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-1759260 . .

Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells

Isca, Vera; Duro, Ana; Bangay, Gabrielle; Princiotto, Salvatore; Dinić, Jelena; Pešić, Milica; Saraiva, Lucilia; Afonso, Carlos; Rijo, Patricia

(ALIES - Associação Lusófona para o Desenvolvimento da Investigação e do Ensino das Ciências da Saúde, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Isca, Vera
AU  - Duro, Ana
AU  - Bangay, Gabrielle
AU  - Princiotto, Salvatore
AU  - Dinić, Jelena
AU  - Pešić, Milica
AU  - Saraiva, Lucilia
AU  - Afonso, Carlos
AU  - Rijo, Patricia
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5612
AB  - Nature is the most important source of novel pharmacologically active compounds for cancer
treatment. Plectranthus genus (Lamiaceae) has been widely used in traditional medicine and
seems to be promising for the research of new drug leads. In fact, Plectranthus spp. are rich in
cytotoxic diterpenoids, such as the 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy) and the 7α-acetoxy-6β-
hydroxyroyleanone (Roy). (1) Royleanone diterpenoids are commonly very low water-soluble
compounds and nanotechnology can be employed to improve drug solubility and targeted
delivery: moreover, nanoformulations are often able to decrease the most frequent side effects
associated to chemotherapy. (2) Hybrid nanoparticles of DeRoy have shown an increased efficacy
of the natural royleanone on NCI-H460 and NCI-H460/R cell lines. (3) Additionally, self-
assembling nanoparticles combined with Roy reduced the cytotoxicity against normal cells (Vero-
E6) compared to parent compound (Roy) and displayed a low release of Roy at physiological pH.
(2) These results suggest that nano-assemblies of royleanones may act as a promising anticancer
strategy.
In this report, we describe the extraction and isolation of Roy from P. grandidentatus. Also, Roy
was derivatized with the goal of improving its antitumoral proprieties. Several derivatives were
prepared with overall good yields and are currently under in vitro antitumoral evaluation. So far,
two benzoylated derivatives revealed promising cytotoxic properties to be further exploited in
nanoformulations. Overall, we expect that derivatives in nanosystems can improve the drug
delivery and lead to an enhanced anticancer activity.
PB  - ALIES - Associação Lusófona para o Desenvolvimento da Investigação e do Ensino das Ciências da Saúde
C3  - Book of abstracts: InnovDelivery '22; I Lusophone Meeting on Innovative Delivery Systems; 2022 Jun 30; Virtual Meeting
T1  - Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells
DO  - 10.19277/bbr.19.2.289
SP  - 28
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Isca, Vera and Duro, Ana and Bangay, Gabrielle and Princiotto, Salvatore and Dinić, Jelena and Pešić, Milica and Saraiva, Lucilia and Afonso, Carlos and Rijo, Patricia",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Nature is the most important source of novel pharmacologically active compounds for cancer
treatment. Plectranthus genus (Lamiaceae) has been widely used in traditional medicine and
seems to be promising for the research of new drug leads. In fact, Plectranthus spp. are rich in
cytotoxic diterpenoids, such as the 6,7-dehydroroyleanone (DeRoy) and the 7α-acetoxy-6β-
hydroxyroyleanone (Roy). (1) Royleanone diterpenoids are commonly very low water-soluble
compounds and nanotechnology can be employed to improve drug solubility and targeted
delivery: moreover, nanoformulations are often able to decrease the most frequent side effects
associated to chemotherapy. (2) Hybrid nanoparticles of DeRoy have shown an increased efficacy
of the natural royleanone on NCI-H460 and NCI-H460/R cell lines. (3) Additionally, self-
assembling nanoparticles combined with Roy reduced the cytotoxicity against normal cells (Vero-
E6) compared to parent compound (Roy) and displayed a low release of Roy at physiological pH.
(2) These results suggest that nano-assemblies of royleanones may act as a promising anticancer
strategy.
In this report, we describe the extraction and isolation of Roy from P. grandidentatus. Also, Roy
was derivatized with the goal of improving its antitumoral proprieties. Several derivatives were
prepared with overall good yields and are currently under in vitro antitumoral evaluation. So far,
two benzoylated derivatives revealed promising cytotoxic properties to be further exploited in
nanoformulations. Overall, we expect that derivatives in nanosystems can improve the drug
delivery and lead to an enhanced anticancer activity.",
publisher = "ALIES - Associação Lusófona para o Desenvolvimento da Investigação e do Ensino das Ciências da Saúde",
journal = "Book of abstracts: InnovDelivery '22; I Lusophone Meeting on Innovative Delivery Systems; 2022 Jun 30; Virtual Meeting",
title = "Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells",
doi = "10.19277/bbr.19.2.289",
pages = "28"
}
Isca, V., Duro, A., Bangay, G., Princiotto, S., Dinić, J., Pešić, M., Saraiva, L., Afonso, C.,& Rijo, P.. (2022). Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells. in Book of abstracts: InnovDelivery '22; I Lusophone Meeting on Innovative Delivery Systems; 2022 Jun 30; Virtual Meeting
ALIES - Associação Lusófona para o Desenvolvimento da Investigação e do Ensino das Ciências da Saúde., 28.
https://doi.org/10.19277/bbr.19.2.289
Isca V, Duro A, Bangay G, Princiotto S, Dinić J, Pešić M, Saraiva L, Afonso C, Rijo P. Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells. in Book of abstracts: InnovDelivery '22; I Lusophone Meeting on Innovative Delivery Systems; 2022 Jun 30; Virtual Meeting. 2022;:28.
doi:10.19277/bbr.19.2.289 .
Isca, Vera, Duro, Ana, Bangay, Gabrielle, Princiotto, Salvatore, Dinić, Jelena, Pešić, Milica, Saraiva, Lucilia, Afonso, Carlos, Rijo, Patricia, "Nanosystem of royleanone diterpenoids from Plectranthus spp to improve targeted delivery into cancer cells" in Book of abstracts: InnovDelivery '22; I Lusophone Meeting on Innovative Delivery Systems; 2022 Jun 30; Virtual Meeting (2022):28,
https://doi.org/10.19277/bbr.19.2.289 . .