• Accumulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 is limited by transcription-dependent depletion. Zoya N Demidenko

     

    Accumulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 is limited by transcription-dependent depletion

    Abstract
    In the presence of oxygen and iron, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1alpha) is rapidly degraded via the prolyl hydroxylases (PHD)/VHL pathways. Given striking similarities between p53 and HIF-1alpha regulation, we previously suggested that HIF-1 transcriptionally initiates its own degradation and therefore inhibitors of transcription must induce HIF-1alpha. Under normoxia, while inducing p53, inhibitors of transcription did not induce HIF-1alpha. Under hypoxia or low iron (DFX), inhibitors of transcription dramatically super-induced HIF-1alpha. Removal of inhibitors resulted in outburst of the HIF-1-dependent transcription followed by depletion of HIF-1alpha. Although hypoxia/DFX induced PHD3, we excluded the PHD/VHL pathway in the regulation of HIF-1alpha under hypoxia/DFX. The transcription-dependent degradation of HIF-1alpha under hypoxia occurs via the proteasome and is accelerated by protein acetylation. Thus, HIF-1alpha is regulated by two distinct mechanisms. Under normoxia, HIF-1alpha is degraded via the classic PHD/VHL pathway, is expressed at low levels and therefore does not activate the feedback loop. But under hypoxia, HIF-1alpha accumulates and transcriptionally activates its own degradation that is independent from the PHD/VHL pathway. https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/39445053_Zoya_N_Demidenko
     

    oncotarget removed from pubmed Zoya Demidenko Dr. Zoya N. Demidenko Zoya N. Demidenko , Ph.D. is Executive Manager of the Oncotarget journal . Oncotarget publishes high-impact research papers of general interest and outstanding significance and novelty in all areas of biology and medicine: in translational, basic and clinical research including but not limited to cancer research, oncogenes, oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, signaling pathways as potential targets for therapeutic intervention, shared targets in different diseases (cancer, benign tumors, atherosclerosis, eukaryotic infections, metabolic syndrome and other age-related diseases), chemotherapy, and new therapeutic strategies. After earning her Ph.D. in molecular biology, Zoya was awarded a Fogarty post-doctoral Fellowship from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. After successful completion of post-doctoral training, she continued her professional career at George Washington University and Albert Einstein School of Medicine . In 2005 she cofounded the startup company Oncotarget Inc. which is focused on the development of anti-aging and anti-cancer drugs. Her research interests include signal transduction, cell cycle and cellular senescence, and their pharmacological targeting. In 2009 she cofounded the publishing house Impact Journals which specializes in publishing scientific journals. In 2011 she was selected to be a Member of the National Association of Professional Women .
     
     
    When general population discuss today’s medicine, accuracy plays one of the most crucial roles and people’s lives are literally dependent on it. Likewise, any researches pertaining to medicine are necessary to meet the highest standards. The challenge today is that any outcomes of researches can be posted online and used as a reference without being thoroughly checked and validated. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny of Oncotarget perfectly understood this issue and decided to generate an alternative solution. That’s how a weekly oncology-focused research journal called “Oncotarget” has been established back in 2010. The major principle of this journal is based on Altmetric scores that are used as a quality indicator. That allows both readers and authors to quality-check publications with Altmetric Article Reports that generate “real-time feedback containing data summary related to a particular publication.” Oncotarget website demonstrates a complete publications list with respective scores above 100 as well as reports discussed previously. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny glad to share his new approach and hopes it provides the required help to anybody, who has interest in oncology.
    “A diagnostic autoantibody signature for primary cutaneous melanoma” has the Altmetric score of 594. This study was released back in 2018 by Oncotarget and written by different experts from Hollywood Private Hospital, Edith Cowan University, Dermatology Specialist Group, St. John of God Hospital and The University of Western Australia. The introduction of the study discusses “recent data shows that Australians are four times more likely to develop a cancer of the skin than any other type of cancer”, and shares an insight on melanoma that “is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage.”
    The publication has got an Altmetric score of 594. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny realizes that majority of readers are aiming to understand the very meaning of it. Based on the Altmetric website, the score indicates “how many people have been exposed to and engaged with a scholarly output.” Likewise, the publication about melanoma, was used for citations in different news articles 69 times. In addition, it was referred to in 2 online blogs, as well as 25 Tweets on Twitter and 1 Facebook post. FOX23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma has headlined their news on July 20, 2018 as “New blood test could detect skin cancer early”, using the main content of Australia study 
    Another Oncotarget’s research with a top score of 476, is “Biomarkers for early diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma: Do we need another moon-shot,”. This research has appeared in 60 news stories, 1 online blog post and 6 Twitter posts. The majority of public may have come across a concise overview only, however those who visit Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny at Oncotarget, do get helpful scientific facts. Oncotarget is glad to have the chance to share with online readers this highly appreciated and top-quality information, that is trustworthy and reliable.
    http://vivo.med.cornell.edu/display/journal1949-2553

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  • Cytostatic Activity of Paclitaxel in Coronary Artery Smooth Muscle Cells is Mediated Through Transient Mitotic Arrest Followed by Permanent Post-Mitotic Arrest: Comparison with Cancer Cells. Zoya N Demidenko. Mikhail Blagosklonny

     

    Cytostatic Activity of Paclitaxel in Coronary Artery Smooth Muscle Cells is Mediated Through Transient Mitotic Arrest Followed by Permanent Post-Mitotic Arrest: Comparison with Cancer Cells

    Abstract
    The anti-cancer agent paclitaxel (PTX) is an effective anti-restenosis agent on drug eluting stents, primarily due to growth inhibition of coronary artery smooth muscle cells (CASMC) across a wide dose range. In this study, we compared the effects of PTX on CASMC to apoptotic-prone HL60 leukemia cells and apoptotic-reluctant A549 lung cancer cells to assess cell survival mechanisms. In comparison to HL60 and A549 cells, CASMC had a shorter mitotic arrest and a lower mitotic index. While CASMC and A549 cells did not become apoptotic and displayed a multi-nucleated phenotype, HL60 cells showed prolonged mitotic arrest followed by apoptosis. CASMC exiting mitosis were arrested in G1 as MN tetraploid cells, with decreased levels of cyclin B1 and PCNA. CASMC remained metabolically active, becoming permanently arrested as evidenced by increased levels of beta-galactosidase activity. These cells did not demonstrate elevated levels of inflammatory markers. Our findings suggest that a weak mitotic checkpoint or inhibited apoptotic cascade, or a combination of both, determine cell survival following PTX treatment. These in vitro findings suggest a mechanism for the cytostatic activity of PTX in CASMC for the inhibition of restenosis. https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/39445053_Zoya_N_Demidenko

    oncotarget acceptance rate Zoya Demidenko Dr. Zoya N. Demidenko Zoya N. Demidenko , Ph.D. is Executive Manager of the Oncotarget journal . Oncotarget publishes high-impact research papers of general interest and outstanding significance and novelty in all areas of biology and medicine: in translational, basic and clinical research including but not limited to cancer research, oncogenes, oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, signaling pathways as potential targets for therapeutic intervention, shared targets in different diseases (cancer, benign tumors, atherosclerosis, eukaryotic infections, metabolic syndrome and other age-related diseases), chemotherapy, and new therapeutic strategies. After earning her Ph.D. in molecular biology, Zoya was awarded a Fogarty post-doctoral Fellowship from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. After successful completion of post-doctoral training, she continued her professional career at George Washington University and Albert Einstein School of Medicine . In 2005 she cofounded the startup company Oncotarget Inc. which is focused on the development of anti-aging and anti-cancer drugs. Her research interests include signal transduction, cell cycle and cellular senescence, and their pharmacological targeting. In 2009 she cofounded the publishing house Impact Journals which specializes in publishing scientific journals. In 2011 she was selected to be a Member of the National Association of Professional Women .
     
     
    When general population speak of today’s medicine, precision plays one of the most important roles and people’s lives are literally dependent on it. Likewise, any researches related to medicine are necessary to meet the highest standards. The issue nowadays is that any outcomes of researches can be posted online and used as a reference without being thoroughly checked and approved. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny of Oncotarget perfectly understood this issue and tried to come up with an alternative solution. That’s how a weekly oncology-focused research journal called “Oncotarget” has been founded back in 2010. The major principle of this journal is based on Altmetric scores that are used as a quality measure. That allows both readers and authors to verify publications with Altmetric Article Reports that create “real-time feedback containing data summary related to a particular publication.” Oncotarget website provides a full publications list with respective scores above 100 as well as reports discussed above. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny glad to share his new approach and hopes it creates the required help to anybody, who has interest in oncology.
    “A diagnostic autoantibody signature for primary cutaneous melanoma” has the Altmetric score of 594. This study was published back in 2018 by Oncotarget and completed by several experts from Hollywood Private Hospital, Edith Cowan University, Dermatology Specialist Group, St. John of God Hospital and The University of Western Australia. The introduction of the study discusses “recent data shows that Australians are four times more likely to develop a cancer of the skin than any other type of cancer”, and provides an insight on melanoma that “is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage.”
    The article has got an Altmetric score of 594. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny realizes that majority of readers are aiming to comprehend the very meaning of it. Based on the Altmetric website, the score indicates “how many people have been exposed to and engaged with a scholarly output.” Likewise, the article about melanoma, was used for citations in various news articles 69 times. In addition, it was referred to in 2 online blogs, as well as 25 Tweets on Twitter and 1 Facebook post. FOX23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma has headlined their news on July 20, 2018 as “New blood test could detect skin cancer early”, using the main content of Australia study 
    Another Oncotarget’s study with a top score of 476, is “Biomarkers for early diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma: Do we need another moon-shot,”. This article has appeared in 60 news stories, 1 online blog post and 6 Twitter posts. The majority of public may have seen a brief overview only, however those who visit Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny at Oncotarget, do get useful scientific facts. Oncotarget is proud to have the ability to share with online customers this highly appreciated and high-quality information, that is trustworthy and reliable.

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  • Pharmacological induction of Hsp70 protects apoptosis-prone cells from doxorubicin: Comparison with caspase-inhibitor- and cycle-arrest-mediated cytoprotection. Z N Demidenko

     

    Pharmacological induction of Hsp70 protects apoptosis-prone cells from doxorubicin: Comparison with caspase-inhibitor- and cycle-arrest-mediated cytoprotection

    Abstract
    Selective modulation of cell death is important for rational chemotherapy. By depleting Hsp90-client oncoproteins, geldanamycin (GA) and 17-allylamino-17-demethoxy-GA (17-AAG) (heat-shock protein-90-active drugs) render certain oncoprotein-addictive cancer cells sensitive to chemotherapy. Here we investigated effects of GA and 17-AAG in apoptosis-prone cells such as HL60 and U937. In these cells, doxorubicin (DOX) caused rapid apoptosis, whereas GA-induced heat-shock protein-70 (Hsp70) (a potent inhibitor of apoptosis) and G1 arrest without significant apoptosis. GA blocked caspase activation and apoptosis and delayed cell death caused by DOX. Inhibitors of translation and transcription and siRNA Hsp70 abrogated cytoprotective effects of GA. Also GA failed to protect HL60 cells from cytotoxicity of actinomycin D and flavopiridol (FL), inhibitors of transcription. We next compared cytoprotection by GA-induced Hsp70, caspase inhibitors (Z-VAD-fmk) and cell-cycle arrest. Whereas cell-cycle arrest protected HL60 cells from paclitaxel (PTX) but not from FL and DOX, Z-VAD-fmk prevented FL-induced apoptosis but was less effective against DOX and PTX. Thus, by inducing Hsp70, GA protected apoptosis-prone cells in unique and cell-type selective manner. Since GA does not protect apoptosis-reluctant cancer cells, we envision a therapeutic strategy to decrease side effects of chemotherapy without affecting its therapeutic efficacy.https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/39445053_Zoya_N_Demidenko

    oncoscience impact factor Zoya Demidenko Dr. Zoya N. Demidenko Zoya N. Demidenko , Ph.D. is Executive Manager of the Oncotarget journal . Oncotarget publishes high-impact research papers of general interest and outstanding significance and novelty in all areas of biology and medicine: in translational, basic and clinical research including but not limited to cancer research, oncogenes, oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, signaling pathways as potential targets for therapeutic intervention, shared targets in different diseases (cancer, benign tumors, atherosclerosis, eukaryotic infections, metabolic syndrome and other age-related diseases), chemotherapy, and new therapeutic strategies. After earning her Ph.D. in molecular biology, Zoya was awarded a Fogarty post-doctoral Fellowship from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. After successful completion of post-doctoral training, she continued her professional career at George Washington University and Albert Einstein School of Medicine . In 2005 she cofounded the startup company Oncotarget Inc. which is focused on the development of anti-aging and anti-cancer drugs. Her research interests include signal transduction, cell cycle and cellular senescence, and their pharmacological targeting. In 2009 she cofounded the publishing house Impact Journals which specializes in publishing scientific journals. In 2011 she was selected to be a Member of the National Association of Professional Women .
    https://patents.justia.com/inventor/zoya-n-demidenko


    When people speak of modern medicine, precision plays one of the most important roles and human lives are directly dependent on it. Hereby, any researches related to medicine are required to comply with the top standards. The issue today is that any conclusions of researches can be published online and used as a reference without being thoroughly verified and approved. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny of Oncotarget perfectly understood this challenge and tried to develop an alternative solution. That’s how a weekly oncology-focused research journal named “Oncotarget” has been founded back in 2010. The main principle of this journal is based on Altmetric scores that are used as a quality indicator. That allows both readers and authors to quality-check publications with Altmetric Article Reports that generate “real-time feedback containing data summary related to a particular publication.” Oncotarget website provides a complete publications list with respective scores higher than 100 as well as reports discussed above. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny glad to share his new approach and hopes it creates the necessary help to anyone, who has interest in oncology.
    “A diagnostic autoantibody signature for primary cutaneous melanoma” has the Altmetric score of 594. This study was published back in 2018 by Oncotarget and completed by different experts from Hollywood Private Hospital, Edith Cowan University, Dermatology Specialist Group, St. John of God Hospital and The University of Western Australia. The introduction of the study mentions that “recent data shows that Australians are four times more likely to develop a cancer of the skin than any other type of cancer”, and provides an insight on melanoma that “is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage.”
    The paper has got an Altmetric score of 594. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny realizes that majority of readers are aiming to comprehend the very meaning of it. Based on the Altmetric website, the score relates to “how many people have been exposed to and engaged with a scholarly output.” Hereby, the publication about melanoma, was used for citations in different news articles 69 times. In addition, it was referred to in 2 online blogs, as well as 25 Tweets on Twitter and 1 Facebook post. FOX23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma has headlined their report on July 20, 2018 as “New blood test could detect skin cancer early”, using the main content of Australia study 
    Another Oncotarget’s study with a top score of 476, is “Biomarkers for early diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma: Do we need another moon-shot,”. This research has appeared in 60 news stories, 1 online blog post and 6 Twitter posts. The majority of public may have seen a brief overview only, however those who visit Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny at Oncotarget, do receive useful scientific facts. Oncotarget is glad to have the ability to share with online viewers this highly appreciated and top-quality information, that is trustworthy and reliable.

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  • Rapamycin decelerates cellular senescence. Zoya N Demidenko

     

    Rapamycin decelerates cellular senescence

     
     
    Abstract
    When the cell cycle is arrested but cellular growth is not, then cells senesce, permanently losing proliferative potential. Here we demonstrated that the duration of cell cycle arrest determines a progressive loss of proliferative capacity. In human and rodent cell lines, rapamycin (an inhibitor of mTOR) dramatically decelerated loss of proliferative potential caused by ectopic p21, p16 and sodium butyrate-induced p21. Thus, when the cell cycle was arrested by these factors in the presence of rapamycin, cells retained the capacity to resume proliferation, once p21, p16 or sodium butyrate were removed. While rapamycin prevented the permanent loss of proliferative potential in arrested cells, it did not force the arrested cells into proliferation. During cell cycle arrest, rapamycin transformed the irreversible arrest into a reversible condition. Our data demonstrate that senescence can be pharmacologically suppressed.

    oncotarget impact Zoya Demidenko Dr. Zoya N. Demidenko Zoya N. Demidenko , Ph.D. is Executive Manager of the Oncotarget journal . Oncotarget publishes high-impact research papers of general interest and outstanding significance and novelty in all areas of biology and medicine: in translational, basic and clinical research including but not limited to cancer research, oncogenes, oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, signaling pathways as potential targets for therapeutic intervention, shared targets in different diseases (cancer, benign tumors, atherosclerosis, eukaryotic infections, metabolic syndrome and other age-related diseases), chemotherapy, and new therapeutic strategies. After earning her Ph.D. in molecular biology, Zoya was awarded a Fogarty post-doctoral Fellowship from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. After successful completion of post-doctoral training, she continued her professional career at George Washington University and Albert Einstein School of Medicine . In 2005 she cofounded the startup company Oncotarget Inc. which is focused on the development of anti-aging and anti-cancer drugs. Her research interests include signal transduction, cell cycle and cellular senescence, and their pharmacological targeting. In 2009 she cofounded the publishing house Impact Journals which specializes in publishing scientific journals. In 2011 she was selected to be a Member of the National Association of Professional Women .
    https://www.semanticscholar.org/author/Zoya-N.-Demidenko/4772760


    When public refer to contemporary medicine, accuracy plays one of the most significant roles and people’s lives are literally dependent on it. Hence, any researches related to medicine are required to meet the highest standards. The problem nowadays is that any outcomes of researches can be shared online and used as a reference without being precisely verified and approved. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny of Oncotarget clearly understood this issue and tried to generate an alternative solution. That’s how a weekly oncology-focused research journal called “Oncotarget” has been founded back in 2010. The key principle of this journal is related to Altmetric scores that are used as a quality indicator. That allows both readers and authors to validate publications with Altmetric Article Reports that create “real-time feedback containing data summary related to a particular publication.” Oncotarget website has a complete publications list with respective scores higher than 100 as well as reports mentioned above. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny proud to share his new approach and hopes it creates the necessary help to anybody, who has interest in oncology.
    “A diagnostic autoantibody signature for primary cutaneous melanoma” has the Altmetric score of 594. This paper was released back in 2018 by Oncotarget and written by diversified experts from Hollywood Private Hospital, Edith Cowan University, Dermatology Specialist Group, St. John of God Hospital and The University of Western Australia. The introduction of the study discusses “recent data shows that Australians are four times more likely to develop a cancer of the skin than any other type of cancer”, and shares an insight on melanoma that “is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage.”
    The publication has got an Altmetric score of 594. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny realizes that majority of readers are willing to comprehend the very meaning of it. Based on the Altmetric website, the score relates to “how many people have been exposed to and engaged with a scholarly output.” Likewise, the publication about melanoma, was used for citations in various news articles 69 times. In addition, it was referred to in 2 online blogs, as well as 25 Tweets on Twitter and 1 Facebook post. FOX23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma has headlined their report on July 20, 2018 as “New blood test could detect skin cancer early”, using the main content of Australia study 
    Another Oncotarget’s research with a top score of 476, is “Biomarkers for early diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma: Do we need another moon-shot,”. This study has appeared in 60 news stories, 1 online blog post and 6 Twitter posts. The majority of public may have seen a short overview only, however those who visit Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny at Oncotarget, do receive useful scientific facts. Oncotarget is proud to have the ability to share with online customers this highly appreciated and top-quality information, that is trustworthy and reliable.
    https://twitter.com/oncotargetjrnl
     

     


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  • Recent progress in targeting cancer. Zoya N. Demidenko

     

    Recent progress in targeting cancer

    Abstract

    In recent years, numerous new targets have been identified and new experimental therapeutics have been developed. Importantly, existing non-cancer drugs found novel use in cancer therapy. And even more importantly, new original therapeutic strategies to increase potency, selectivity and decrease detrimental side effects have been evaluated. Here we review some recent advances in targeting cancer.

     

    In 1977, Andrzej “Andrew” V. Schally won Nobel Prize in medicine for his research into peptide hormone production in the brain. He described the neurohormone GnRH and other releasing hormones (RH). As initially unexpected application, agonists and antagonists of these hormones have become investigational anti-cancer agents [1-3]. As further developments, Schally and coworkers described targeting gastrin releasing peptide receptors. Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) is involved in cancer growth and GRP receptors are expressed in a variety of cancer cells and have limited distribution in normal human tissue. Thus inhibition of GRP receptors represents an attractive target for pharmacological treatment of certain human malignancies [4]. Also, MZ-5-156, an antagonist of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), decreased cell proliferation and activated AMPK and inhibited Akt, the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and its downstream target eIF4E which controls protein synthesis and cell growth [5]. GHRH antagonists also caused cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in human colon cancer cells [67].

    Yet, this is only one of hundreds examples for new therapeutic targets and new types of drugs that have been developed recently in cellular and animal models. Searche for new targets has continued with many promising lead compounds identified [8-38].

    Among promising targets are cancer stem cells [39-42], microRNAs [43-50], the MEK/ERK pathway [51-64] and especially its upstream activator BRAF [6165-67] and the NF-kB pathway [68], Myc and HIF-1 [69-72], The CtBP transcriptional corepressors [73], Polycomb group (PcG) proteins [74], autophagy [75-77], translation [78], the proteasome [35], HSP70 [7980], Hsp90 [81-84], the AMPK-FoxO3A axis [85], STAT3 and MEK/ERK/BCL-2 signaling [86], the Hh signal transducer Smoothened [87], ErbBs receptor tyrosine kinases [88], and anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L) and Mcl-1 [89]. Stromal and endothelial cells are also targets [9091]. There are also new targets for anti-angiogenic therapy [71757892-94]. Also, epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a critical mechanism for the acquisition of malignant phenotypes by epithelial cells [95]. In colorectal cancer, such cells are histologically represented by tumor buds defined as single cells or small clusters of de-differentiated tumor cells at the invasive front. These buds are also considered as targets for novel cancer therapy [9697]. Recently, leukocytes in the ovarian cancer microenvironment such as regulatory T cells and immature pro-angiogenic myeloid cells have been demonstrated to play a fundamental role in tumor progression and have been suggested as potential target [98]. Cdk4/6 is an attractive target for cancer therapy. Thus, a 2-aminothiazole-derived Cdk4/6 selective inhibitor, named Compound A potently inhibits Cdk4 and Cdk6 with high selectivity [99]. Among 82 human cell line examined, leukemia and lymphoma cell lines tended to be more sensitive to Compound A. In a nude rat xenograft model, Compound A inhibited cell proliferation in xenograft tumors at a plasma concentration of 510 nM. Compound A only moderately inhibited cell cycle progression of normal crypt cells in small intestine even at 5 times higher plasma concentration and did not cause immunosuppression even at 17 times higher concentration [99].

    Targeting the androgen receptor also has also shown significant progress [100-103]. An interesting example is targeting androgen receptor in estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer [104]. Also, a small-molecule inhibitor of the amino-terminus domain of the androgen receptor causes regression of castrate-recurrent prostate cancer [105106]. Recent discoveries revealed a transcription-independent function of androgen receptor that is essential for prostate cancer cell viability and, therefore, is an ideal target for anticancer treatment. Several of the identified AR inhibitors demonstrated in vivo efficacy in mouse models of PCa and are candidates for pharmacologic optimization [107].

    Among numerous new experimental therapeutics, a small-molecule inducer of polyploidy, R1530, interferes with tubulin polymerization, leads to abortive mitosis, endoreduplication and polyploidy. In the presence of R1530, polyploid cancer cells underwent apoptosis or became senescent which translated into potent in vitro and in vivo efficacy. Normal proliferating cells were resistant to R1530-induced polyploidy thus supporting the rationale for cancer therapy by induced polyploidy. BubR1 plays a key role in polyploidy induction by R1530 and could be exploited as a target for designing more specific polyploidy inducers [108]. Vosaroxin (formerly voreloxin) is a first-in-class anticancer quinolone derivative that intercalates DNA and inhibits topoisomerase II, inducing site-selective double-strand breaks (DSB), G2 arrest and apoptosis. Homologous recombination repair (HRR) is critical for recovery from DNA damage induced by both agents, identifying the potential to clinically exploit synthetic lethality [109]. Depletion of POLQ (DNA polymerase theta) renders tumor cells more sensitive to radiotherapy without effecting normal tissues, providing ways to increase therapeutic window [110]. Mycoplasma is also a target for cancer prevention [111] and therapy [112]. Among additional targets is activating transcription factor 5 (ATF5), an anti-apoptotic protein that is highly expressed in malignant glioma but not normal brain tissues, and is essential for glioma cell survival [113].

    There were several developments in targeting p53 and its cousins, p73 and p63 [114-121]. Nutlin-3a is a non-genotoxic inducer of p53 and causes the transcription-independent mitochondrial p53 program of nutlin-induced apoptosis in tumor cells [122] p53-dependent inhibition of TrxR1 contributes to the tumor-specific induction of apoptosis by RITA [123]. A new therapeutic basis for treating Li-Fraumeni syndrome breast tumors expressing mutated p53 has been suggested [124]. Importang breakthrough was the development of curaxins: anticancer compounds that simultaneously suppress NF-kB and activate p53 by targeting FACT [30125126].

    There was continued development of new ways of drug delivery including liposomes and nanoparticles [91127-130]. There are several highly innovative strategies such as targeting tumors with Salmonella Typhimurium [131-133] and use of low-level doses of [(32)P]ATP to inhibit tumor growth [134]. Several cancer treatment approaches, such as proteasome inhibitor Bortezomib and hsp90 inhibitor geldanamycin, involve accumulation of misfolded proteins creating proteotoxic stress. Low efficacy of these therapies is likely due to the protective effects of heat shock response (HSR) induced in treated cells, making this pathway an attractive target for pharmacological suppression. It was shown that the anti-malaria drugs quinacrine prevented HSR in cancer cells. Quinacrine did not affect protein synthesis, but rather suppressed inducible HSF1-dependent transcription of the hsp70 gene. A combination of non-toxic concentrations of quinacrine and proteotoxic stress inducers resulted in rapid induction of apoptosis in cancer cells. Therefore, quinacrine, a non-toxic drug long used for treatment of malaria, has significant clinical potential in cancer therapy [80135-137]. Another example is proteotoxic stress targeted therapy (PSTT), where the induction of protein misfolding enhances the antitumor effect of the proteasome inhibitor Bortezomib [138]. Also it was shown that hypoxia enhances the replication of oncolytic herpes simplex virus in p53- breast cancer cells [139]. https://www.aging-us.com/article/100421/text

    oncotarget news Zoya Demidenko Dr. Zoya N. Demidenko Zoya N. Demidenko , Ph.D. is Executive Manager of the Oncotarget journal . Oncotarget publishes high-impact research papers of general interest and outstanding significance and novelty in all areas of biology and medicine: in translational, basic and clinical research including but not limited to cancer research, oncogenes, oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, signaling pathways as potential targets for therapeutic intervention, shared targets in different diseases (cancer, benign tumors, atherosclerosis, eukaryotic infections, metabolic syndrome and other age-related diseases), chemotherapy, and new therapeutic strategies. After earning her Ph.D. in molecular biology, Zoya was awarded a Fogarty post-doctoral Fellowship from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. After successful completion of post-doctoral training, she continued her professional career at George Washington University and Albert Einstein School of Medicine . In 2005 she cofounded the startup company Oncotarget Inc. which is focused on the development of anti-aging and anti-cancer drugs. Her research interests include signal transduction, cell cycle and cellular senescence, and their pharmacological targeting. In 2009 she cofounded the publishing house Impact Journals which specializes in publishing scientific journals. In 2011 she was selected to be a Member of the National Association of Professional Women .
    http://vivo.med.cornell.edu/display/person484997


    oncotarget impact factor 2021
    When public discuss contemporary medicine, accuracy plays one of the most important roles and people’s lives are directly dependent on it. Likewise, any researches pertaining to medicine are required to comply with the top standards. The challenge nowadays is that any outcomes of researches can be shared online and used as a reference without being precisely verified and approved. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny of Oncotarget clearly understood this problem and tried to come up with an alternative solution. That’s how a weekly oncology-focused research journal named “Oncotarget” has been founded back in 2010. The main principle of this journal is based on Altmetric scores that are used as a quality indicator. That allows both readers and authors to verify publications with Altmetric Article Reports that generate “real-time feedback containing data summary related to a particular publication.” Oncotarget website provides a full publications list with respective scores higher than 100 as well as reports mentioned above. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny glad to share his new approach and hopes it creates the required help to anybody, who has interest in oncology.
    “A diagnostic autoantibody signature for primary cutaneous melanoma” has the Altmetric score of 594. This study was released back in 2018 by Oncotarget and written by several experts from Hollywood Private Hospital, Edith Cowan University, Dermatology Specialist Group, St. John of God Hospital and The University of Western Australia. The introduction of the study mentions that “recent data shows that Australians are four times more likely to develop a cancer of the skin than any other type of cancer”, and provides an insight on melanoma that “is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage.”
    The publication has got an Altmetric score of 594. Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny realizes that majority of readers are aiming to understand the very meaning of it. Based on the Altmetric website, the score indicates “how many people have been exposed to and engaged with a scholarly output.” Hence, the paper about melanoma, was utilized for citations in various news articles 69 times. Moreover, it was quoted in 2 online blogs, as well as 25 Tweets on Twitter and 1 Facebook post. FOX23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma has headlined their report on July 20, 2018 as “New blood test could detect skin cancer early”, using the main content of Australia study 
    Another Oncotarget’s research with a top score of 476, is “Biomarkers for early diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma: Do we need another moon-shot,”. This research has appeared in 60 news stories, 1 online blog post and 6 Twitter posts. The majority of public may have come across a brief overview only, however those who visit Mikhail (Misha) Blagosklonny at Oncotarget, do receive useful scientific facts. Oncotarget is proud to have the ability to share with online readers this highly appreciated and top-quality information, that is trustworthy and reliable.
    https://soundcloud.com/oncotarget

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