The pathway of synthesis and metabolism of bis-diphosphoinositol tetrakisphosphate (PP-InsP4-PP) was elucidated by high performance liquid chromatography using newly available 3H- and 32P-labeled substrates. Metabolites were also identified by using two purified phosphatases in a structurally diagnostic manner: tobacco "pyrophosphatase" (Shinshi, H., Miwa, M., Kato, K., Noguchi, M. Matsushima, T., and Sugimura, T. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 2185-2190) and rat hepatic multiple inositol polyphosphate phosphatase (MIPP; Craxton, A., Ali, N., and Shears, S. B. (1995) Biochem. J. 305, 491-498). The demonstration that diphosphoinositol polyphosphates were hydrolyzed by MIPP provides new information on its substrate specificity, although MIPP did not metabolize significant amounts of these polyphosphates in either rat liver homogenates or intact AR4-2J cells. In liver homogenates, inositol hexakisphosphate (InsP6) was phosphorylated first to a diphosphoinositol pentakisphosphate (PP-InsP5) and then to PP-InsP4-PP. These kinase reactions were reversed by phosphatases, establishing two coupled substrate cycles. The two dephosphorylations were probably performed by distinct phosphatases that were distinguished by their separate positional specificities, and their different sensitivities to inhibition by F- (IC50 values of 0.03 mM and 1.4 mM against PP-InsP5 and PP-InsP4-PP, respectively). In [3H]inositol-labeled AR4-2J cells, the steady-state levels of PP-[3H]InsP5 and PP-[3H]InsP4-PP were, respectively, 2-3 and 0.6% of the level of [3H]InsP6. The ongoing turnover of these polyphosphates was revealed by treatment of cells with 0.8 mM NaF for 40 min, which reduced levels of [3H]InsP6 by 50%, increased the levels of PP-[3H]InsP5 16-fold, and increased levels of PP-[3H]InsP4-PP 5-fold. A large increase in levels of PP-[3H]InsP5 also occurred in cells treated with 10 mM NaF, but then no significant change to levels of PP-[3H]InsP4-PP were observed; there may be important differences in the control of the turnover of these two compounds.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has recently reported a 66% increase in the global number of cancer deaths since 1960. In the US alone, about one in eight women is expected to develop invasive breast cancer(s) (breast cancer) at some point in their lifetime. Traditionally, a BC diagnosis includes mammography, ultrasound, and some high-end molecular bioimaging. Unfortunately, these techniques detect BC at a later stage. So early and advanced molecular diagnostic tools are still in demand. In the past decade, various histological and immuno-molecular studies have demonstrated that BC is highly heterogeneous in nature. Its growth pattern, cytological features, and expression of key biomarkers in BC cells including hormonal receptor markers can be utilized to develop advanced diagnostic and therapeutic tools. A cancer cell's progression to malignancy exhibits various vital biomarkers, many of which are still underrepresented in BC diagnosis and treatment. Advances in genetics have also enabled the development of multigene assays to detect genetic heterogeneity in BC. However, thus far, the FDA has approved only four such biomarkers—cancer antigens (CA); CA 15-3, CA 27-29, Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), and circulating tumor cells (CTC) in assessing BC in body fluids. An adequately structured portable-biosensor with its non-invasive and inexpensive point-of-care analysis can quickly detect such biomarkers without significantly compromising its specificity and selectivity. Such advanced techniques are likely to discriminate between BC and a healthy patient by accurately measuring the cell shape, structure, depth, intracellular and extracellular environment, and lipid membrane compositions. Presently, BC treatments include surgery and systemic chemo- and targeted radiation therapy. A biopsied sample is then subjected to various multigene assays to predict the heterogeneity and recurrence score, thus guiding a specific treatment by providing complete information on the BC subtype involved. Thus far, we have seven prognostic multigene signature tests for BC providing a risk profile that can avoid unnecessary treatments in low-risk patients. Many comparative studies on multigene analysis projected the importance of integrating clinicopathological information with genomic-imprint analysis. Current cohort studies such as MINDACT, TAILORx, Trans-aTTOM, and many more, are likely to provide positive impact on long-term patient outcome. This review offers consolidated information on currently available BC diagnosis and treatment options. It further describes advanced biomarkers for the development of state-of-the-art early screening and diagnostic technologies.
Graphitic carbon-coated ferromagnetic cobalt nanoparticles (C-Co-NPs) with diameters of around 7 nm and cubic crystalline structures were synthesized by catalytic chemical vapor deposition. X-ray diffraction and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis indicated that the cobalt nanoparticles inside the carbon shells were preserved in the metallic state. Fluorescence microscopy images and Raman spectroscopy revealed effective penetrations of the C-Co-NPs through the cellular plasma membrane of the cultured HeLa cells, both inside the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. Low radio frequency (RF) radiation of 350 kHz induced localized heat into the metallic nanoparticles, which triggered the killing of the cells, a process that was found to be dependent on the RF application time and nanoparticle concentration. When compared to carbon nanostructures such as single-wall carbon nanotubes, these coated magnetic cobalt nanoparticles demonstrated higher specificity for RF absorption and heating. DNA gel electrophoresis assays of the HeLa cells after the RF treatment showed a strong broadening of the DNA fragmentation spectrum, which further proved the intense localized thermally induced damages such as DNA and nucleus membrane disintegration, under RF exposure in the presence of C-Co-NPs. The data presented in this report indicate a great potential of this new process for in vivo tumor thermal ablation, bacteria killing, and various other biomedical applications.
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