National Repository of Grey Literature 14 records found  1 - 10next  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Measurement of antioxidant markers at children with malignant tumours
Hořavová, Lenka ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Provazník, Ivo (advisor)
Tumour disease belongs to one of the most serious health problems of our time. Finding of new indicators to recognise the beginning of the illness is the key role for today‘s research. Oxidative stress is known to be related to the disharmony between the prooxidant concentration and antioxidant mechanisms. Moreover, it is shown that these changes are very important for patients. Further it appears that these changes are very significant with path physiologically critically ill patients. Direct measuring of the reactive oxygen radicals or oxidative stress’ markers is still very hard in clinical medicine. The oxidative stress’ level is watched as the change of the antioxidant activity or alternatively as the antioxidant status. Work is focused on the spectrophotometric fixing of the antioxidant activity and markers signalising the damage of organism. The automated photometric analyzer is going to be used to gain the experimental data. Data will be processed statically.
Spectrophotometry of natural drugs - secondary metabolites of plants
Hořavová, Lenka ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Provazník, Ivo (advisor)
Plants are an important source of secondary metabolites, such as substances that have a beneficial biological effect on the health of humans and they are irreplaceable in the modern medicine. They may operate in prevention and in the treatment of civilization diseases. In terms of content substances, the phenolic come to fore, especially polyphenols, which have been related to a number of overview studies due to their wide distribution and high concentration in plants. They also represent an important part of substances with redox effects present in the human diet and have an important role for the plant itself. Currently, many laboratories are dedicated to pharmaceutical and biological testing of plants. Individual polyphenols in plant matrices are determined primarily by chromatography, electrophoresis methods, mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance. Valuable information on the content of polyphenols in plant extract can be obtained also by using spectrophotometric methods. The subject of this thesis is to provide information, characterization and comparison of conventional and modern techniques for the determination of natural substances – phenolic compounds using spectral techniques.
Studies of intercellular interactions in tumours
Jechová, Alžběta ; Smetana, Karel (advisor) ; Skalníková, Helena (referee) ; Masařík, Michal (referee)
Beside tumor cells themselves, tumors consist of many non-malignantly transformed cellular elements and an extracellular matrix. This so-called tumor microenvironment, or stroma, significantly influences the biological properties of the tumor through intercellular interactions. In this thesis I have focused on the study of tumor-associated fibroblasts in squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck, malignant melanoma and glioblastoma. The data show the presence of cells with mesenchymal characteristics, present even in the glioblastoma stroma, which could potentially have a positive effect on proliferative activity and invasiveness of glioblastoma cells. In malignant melanoma, the presence of keratinocytes should also be considered, as they are the major cells of the epidermis influencing tumor melanocytes. The conditioned medium from UVB irradiated keratinocytes and non-irradiated fibroblasts stimulates the invasion of malignant melanoma cells. Targeting the tumor stroma may be a new direction in oncological therapy, so we have focused on the influence of synthetic polyamine on the formation of myofibroblasts, which are an active part of the population of tumor-associated fibroblasts. The tested polyamine prevents the formation of myofibroblasts but has no effect on those already formed nor on...
Intercellular interactions in skin tumors.
Kučera, Jan ; Smetana, Karel (advisor) ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Kovář, Marek (referee)
The dissertation is focused on the study of intercellular interactions in skin tumors. It is based on 5 original publications that cover several topics. We studied the origin of tumor-associated fibroblasts concerning the primary tumor population. We demonstrated using a mouse model that tumor-associated fibroblasts are produced from the host organism and thus did not arise from transformation directly from tumor cells. We also investigated the relationship between tumor-associated fibroblasts and keratinocytes. We have shown that tumor-associated melanoma fibroblasts affect keratinocytes which, under their influence, acquire the features typically observed in migrating cells and cells undergoing epithelial-mesenchymal transition. We studied the interactions between healthy fibroblasts and tumor cells. We have demonstrated that fibroblasts acquired from healthy skin from a patient suffering from melanoma are significantly different from control fibroblasts of healthy donors in the expression profile. Changes in distal fibroblasts support the view of melanoma as a systemic disease. We have further demonstrated that melanoma-associated fibroblasts do not carry a BRAF mutation, in contrast to BRAF positivity of melanoma cells. And therefore, they did not arise from the transition from melanoma. The...
Mitochondria and their role in carcinogenesis
Bajzíková, Martina ; Neužil, Jiří (advisor) ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Mráček, Tomáš (referee)
(EN) Mitochondria are the principal intracellular organelles responsible for fuel generation; however, they are not just cell powerhouses but are involved in a range of other intracellular functions including cell metabolism, proliferation, death, and immune responses. Loss of function in mitochondria will result in oxidative stress, which is one of the underlying causal factors for a variety of diseases including cancer. Cancer cells can predominantly produce energy by glycolysis even in the presence of oxygen. This alternative metabolic behavior is known as the "Warburg Effect." Linked to this, cancer cell mitochondria can switch between glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) for their energy requirements and survival. The electron transport chain (ETC) function is pivotal for mitochondrial respiration, which is also needed for dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) activity that is essential for de novo pyrimidine synthesis. In our research, we have used respiration-deficient cancer cells to challenge the dogma that mitochondria with their DNA are constrained within cells in the body. Our results document that mitochondria move from normal cells within the tumor stroma to tumor cells without mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), resulting in long-lasting recovery of mitochondrial functions and,...
Role of fibroblasts in wound healing and cancer
Mateu Sanz, Rosana ; Smetana, Karel (advisor) ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Mokrý, Jaroslav (referee)
Fibroblasts are stromal cells ubiquitously present in the human body. They often appear in a quiescent state and can become activated in response to tissue remodeling signals. Activated fibroblasts acquire biosynthetic, pro-inflammatory and contractile properties, key functions for wound healing. In addition, the presence of permanently activated fibroblasts is one of the hallmarks of cancer. The purpose of this work is to investigate the differences between newborn and adult fibroblasts and keratinocytes in their implication in scarless wound healing, the origin of cancer associated fibroblasts (CAF)s and the influence of fibroblasts in melanoma invasion. Evidence suggests that wounds heal almost without scar in newborns. To understand the mechanisms that contribute to scarless wound healing we focused on the differences between newborn and adult fibroblasts and keratinocytes, which are cells present in human skin and participating in wound healing process. A comparison of the expression profile between newborn and adult fibroblasts showed differentially regulated genes related to the acute phase of the inflammatory response and ECM organization, traits involved in wound healing. We also found that newborn fibroblast showed higher differentiation potential, exhibited markers of pluripotency and...
Signalling pathways in pancreatic cancer and its treatment by targeting of mitochondria
Ezrová, Zuzana ; Neužil, Jiří (advisor) ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Divoký, Vladimír (referee)
Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest types of malignant diseases. Asymptomatic early tumour stages, tumour heterogeneity, cancer cell plasticity and unusually dense pancreatic stroma are responsible for the poor prognosis attributed to late diagnosis and therapy resistance. Therefore, targeting of a pivotal element common for any cell type within the tumour, e.g. mitochondria, may bring significant improvement. In this work, we demonstrate mitochondrial targeting of metformin, an anti-diabetic drug associated with reduced risk of developing pancreatic cancer, substantially increases accumulation of the compound in mitochondria. In consequence, we show that mitochondrially targeted metformin, MitoMet, eliminates pancreatic cancer cells in more than 1000-fold lower concentration than used for its parental compound. Following interaction with respiratory complex I (CI), MitoMet inhibits mitochondrial respiration, activates AMP-activated protein kinase pathway and causes depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential in pancreatic cancer cells. Moreover, MitoMet induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, which is partially mediated via increased level of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and suppresses pancreatic tumour growth in vivo. Interestingly, SMAD4-deficient pancreatic cancer cells manifest...
Intercellular interactions in skin tumors.
Kučera, Jan ; Smetana, Karel (advisor) ; Masařík, Michal (referee) ; Kovář, Marek (referee)
The dissertation is focused on the study of intercellular interactions in skin tumors. It is based on 5 original publications that cover several topics. We studied the origin of tumor-associated fibroblasts concerning the primary tumor population. We demonstrated using a mouse model that tumor-associated fibroblasts are produced from the host organism and thus did not arise from transformation directly from tumor cells. We also investigated the relationship between tumor-associated fibroblasts and keratinocytes. We have shown that tumor-associated melanoma fibroblasts affect keratinocytes which, under their influence, acquire the features typically observed in migrating cells and cells undergoing epithelial-mesenchymal transition. We studied the interactions between healthy fibroblasts and tumor cells. We have demonstrated that fibroblasts acquired from healthy skin from a patient suffering from melanoma are significantly different from control fibroblasts of healthy donors in the expression profile. Changes in distal fibroblasts support the view of melanoma as a systemic disease. We have further demonstrated that melanoma-associated fibroblasts do not carry a BRAF mutation, in contrast to BRAF positivity of melanoma cells. And therefore, they did not arise from the transition from melanoma. The...
Studies of intercellular interactions in tumours
Jechová, Alžběta ; Smetana, Karel (advisor) ; Skalníková, Helena (referee) ; Masařík, Michal (referee)
Beside tumor cells themselves, tumors consist of many non-malignantly transformed cellular elements and an extracellular matrix. This so-called tumor microenvironment, or stroma, significantly influences the biological properties of the tumor through intercellular interactions. In this thesis I have focused on the study of tumor-associated fibroblasts in squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck, malignant melanoma and glioblastoma. The data show the presence of cells with mesenchymal characteristics, present even in the glioblastoma stroma, which could potentially have a positive effect on proliferative activity and invasiveness of glioblastoma cells. In malignant melanoma, the presence of keratinocytes should also be considered, as they are the major cells of the epidermis influencing tumor melanocytes. The conditioned medium from UVB irradiated keratinocytes and non-irradiated fibroblasts stimulates the invasion of malignant melanoma cells. Targeting the tumor stroma may be a new direction in oncological therapy, so we have focused on the influence of synthetic polyamine on the formation of myofibroblasts, which are an active part of the population of tumor-associated fibroblasts. The tested polyamine prevents the formation of myofibroblasts but has no effect on those already formed nor on...

National Repository of Grey Literature : 14 records found   1 - 10next  jump to record:
See also: similar author names
2 Masarik, Miloš
2 Masařík, Marek
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