Background: Several serum biomarkers have been studied to diagnose incidence and severity of traumatic brain injury (TBI), but a reliable biomarker in TBI has yet to be identified. Ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) has been proposed as a biomarker in clinical and preclinical studies, largely in the setting of isolated TBI or concussion. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of UCH-L1 as a serum biomarker in the setting of polytrauma and TBI. Methods: Multiple variations of murine TBI and polytrauma models were used to evaluate serum biomarkers. The different models included TBI with and without hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation, isolated extremity vascular ligation, extremity ischemia/reperfusion, and blunt tail injury. Blood was drawn at intervals after injury, and serum levels of neuron-specific enolase, UCH-L1, creatine kinase, and syndecan-1 were evaluated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results: UCH-L1 levels were not significantly different between TBI, tail injury, and sham TBI. By contrast, neuron-specific enolase levels were increased in TBI mice compared with tail injury and sham TBI mice. UCH-L1 levels increased regardless of TBI status at 30 min and 4 h after hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation. In mice that underwent femoral artery cannulation followed by hemorrhagic shock/resuscitation, UCH-L1 levels were significantly elevated compared with shock sham mice at 4 h (3158 ± 2168 pg/mL, 4 h shock versus 0 ± 0 pg/mL, 4 h shock sham; P < 0.01) and at 24 h (3253 ± 2954 pg/mL, 24 h shock versus 324 ± 482 pg/mL, 24 h shock sham; P = 0.03). No differences were observed in UCH-L1 levels between the sham shock and the arterial ligation, vein ligation, or extremity ischemia/reperfusion groups at any time point. Similar to UCH-L1, creatine kinase was elevated only after shock compared with sham mice at 4, 24, and 72 h after injury. Conclusions: Our study demonstrates that UCH-L1 is not a specific marker for TBI but is elevated in models that induce central and peripheral nerve ischemia. Given the increase in UCH-L1 levels observed after hemorrhagic shock, we propose that UCH-L1 may be a useful adjunct in quantifying severity of shock or global ischemia rather than as a specific marker of TBI.
Current FDA-approved chemotherapeutic antimetabolites elicit severe side effects that warrant their improvement; therefore, we designed compounds with mechanisms of action focusing on inhibiting DNA replication rather than targeting multiple pathways. We previously discovered that 5-(α-substituted-2-nitrobenzyloxy)methyluridine-5′-triphosphates were exquisite DNA synthesis terminators; therefore, we synthesized a library of 35 thymidine analogs and evaluated their activity using an MTT cell viability assay of MCF7 breast cancer cells chosen for their vulnerability to these nucleoside derivatives. Compound 3a, having an α-tert-butyl-2-nitro-4-(phenyl)alkynylbenzyloxy group, showed an IC50 of 9 ± 1 μM. The compound is more selective for cancer cells than for fibroblast cells compared with 5-fluorouracil. Treatment of MCF7 cells with 3a elicits the DNA damage response as indicated by phosphorylation of γ-H2A. A primer extension assay of the 5′-triphosphate of 3a revealed that 3aTP is more likely to inhibit DNA polymerase than to lead to termination events upon incorporation into the DNA replication fork.
Background: Current chemotherapeutic antimetabolites often exhibit severe side effects that limit their use as drugs; therefore, we designed nucleoside compounds with mechanisms of action focusing on inhibiting DNA replication rather than targeting multiple pathways. We previously discovered cytotoxic basemodified thymidine and thymine analogs that show higher selectivity against cancerous versus normal cells compared to the current antimetabolites used in cancer chemotherapy. We anticipated these antimetabolites have the potential to effectively inhibit viral DNA replication while showing low cytotoxicity. Methods: Base-modified thymidine and thymine analogs were synthesized and their anti-viral activity was evaluated in human cells infected with human pappiloma, John Cunningham, and BK viruses using quantitative DNA polymerase chain reaction assay. In addition, their toxicity toward host cells was determined using CellTiter-Glo assay, and compared to cytotoxicity toward human breast cancer cells. Results: Novel lead compounds with high activity against human papilloma (HPV) and John Cunningham (JCV) viruses have been identified. Their EC50 values lie in low micromolar range (1-2 µM), which is significantly less than that of cidofovir (9-10 µM), a current drug used against DNA viruses. Cytotoxicity of the leads toward the host cells was found to be in 200-300 µM range, which is generally higher than that observed toward MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. None of the tested compounds significantly inhibited BK viral DNA replication. Conclusion: The lead compounds affect the viruses substantially more selectively than the host cells, which makes them a novel class of bioactive compounds with the potential to become effective anti-viral drugs.
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