PubMed İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / PubMed Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7645
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Article Notum1a Inhibition Promotes Neurogenesis in the Adult Zebrafish Brain(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Kocagoz, Yigit; Erdogan, Nuray Sogunmez; Ozdinc, Sevval; Ipekgil, Dogac; Katkat, Esra; Ozhan, GunesNotum is a carboxylesterase enzyme that modulates extracellular signaling by hydrolyzing palmitoleoyl residues from proteins, thereby influencing key pathways involved in cell differentiation, survival, and proliferation. While notum1 expression has been identified in the brain, its role in adult neurogenesis remains poorly understood. Using the adult zebrafish brain as a model system, we demonstrate that the notum1a homolog is broadly expressed across various brain cell types but is absent in undifferentiated radial glial cells. Pharmacological inhibition of Notum activity with the small molecule inhibitor ABC99 stimulates activation of radial glial cells, leading to increased neurogenesis. A BrdU pulse-chase assay confirms that ABC99-induced proliferation enhances the production of mature neurons. Despite Notum's established role in Wnt signaling, transcriptional analysis following ABC99 treatment reveals no sustained impact on Wnt pathway targets, suggesting that Notum may regulate neurogenesis through alternative mechanisms. Our findings highlight notum1a as a potential modulator of neural progenitor cell dynamics in the adult brain and suggest that targeting Notum could represent a novel therapeutic strategy for neurodegenerative conditions characterized by impaired neurogenesis.Correction Database Covering the Prayer Movements Which Were Not Available Previously (Vol 10, 276, 2023)(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Mihcin, Senay; Sahin, Ahmet Mert; Yilmaz, Mehmet; Alpkaya, Alican Tuncay; Tuna, Merve; Akdeniz, Sevinc; Sahin, SerapArticle Integrated Spectroscopic and Morphological Analyses Reveal Cellular Shifts in Gene-Silenced Melanoma CSCs(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Ozdil, Berrin; Guler, Gunnur; Ataman, Evren; Aktug, HuseyinIntratumoral heterogeneity remains a major barrier to durable cancer therapies, largely driven by the persistence of cancer stem cells (CSCs). In this study, we employed an integrated, multi-scale approach to investigate how melanoma CSCs respond to siRNA-mediated silencing of three key regulatory genes: KLF4, SHH, and HIF1 alpha. Using a combination of morphological, molecular, spectroscopic, and elemental analyses, we explored structural and biochemical consequences of gene knockdown. Gene silencing resulted in significant changes in cell shape and size, reduced F-actin organization, and decreased PFN1 expression, indicating a loss of stem-like properties. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy revealed shifts in biomolecular composition, notably a reduction in amide III intensity and an increase in lipid ester content. SEM-EDS point-based elemental analysis revealed SEM-EDS point-based elemental analysis revealed relative differences in carbon and nitrogen levels between selected central and peripheral regions of silenced and control cells, at the micron-scale working depth, reflecting broader elemental distribution trends rather than precise subcellular compartmentalization. XPS analysis further confirmed these differences, providing additional insights into the elemental composition of the cellular surface. The integration of FTIR spectroscopy into this study highlights the potential of infrared spectroscopy as a powerful tool in cancer research. These findings demonstrate that targeting critical regulatory pathways induces cytoskeletal and biochemical remodelling in melanoma CSCs, offering a multi-dimensional perspective on cellular plasticity.Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 2Vibrational Spectroscopy Unveils Distinct Cell Cycle Features of Cancer Stem Cells in Melanoma(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Uslu, Bensu Ruya; Ozdil, Berrin; Tarhan, Enver; Ozcelik, Serdar; Aktug, Huseyin; Guler, GunnurCancer stem cells (CSCs) play a central role in melanoma growth, resistance to treatment, and relapse, however, their dynamic regulatory behavior remains poorly understood. Vibrational spectroscopy offers a unique, label-free approach to investigate cellular heterogeneity at the molecular level. Here, we explored the biochemical and regulatory dynamics of CSCs identified by using a time-course design, integrating infrared and Raman spectroscopies with cell cycle analysis and immunocytochemistry targeting the checkpoint proteins p16 and p21. CSCs, non-cancer stem cells (NCSCs), and bulk CHL-1 melanoma cells were monitored at 11, 24, 48, and 72 h. CSCs showed a steady S-phase with an early rise in p16 followed by a subsequent increase in p21 expression, indicating a dynamic state of cell cycle checkpoints. In contrast, NCSCs and CHL-1 cells showed more transient p16/p21 expression and CHL-1 exhibited a marked p16 increase at 24 h. Spectroscopic analysis revealed that CSCs exhibited distinct vibrational profiles, predominantly in the nucleic acid-, protein- and lipid-associated regions. These differences were further supported by principal component and hierarchical clustering analyses, which consistently distinguished CSCs from NCSCs. Our findings underline the potential of vibrational spectroscopy to sensitively detect CSC-specific regulatory patterns and support its use in detecting new therapeutic targets in melanoma.Article Citation - WoS: 10Citation - Scopus: 9Quantifying Hydrogen Bonding Using Electrically Tunable Nanoconfined Water(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Wang, Ziwei; Bhattacharya, Anupam; Yagmurcukardes, Mehmet; Kravets, Vasyl; Diaz-Nunez, Pablo; Mullan, Ciaran; Mishchenko, ArtemHydrogen bonding plays a crucial role in biology and technology, yet it remains poorly understood and quantified despite its fundamental importance. Traditional models, which describe hydrogen bonds as electrostatic interactions between electropositive hydrogen and electronegative acceptors, fail to quantitatively capture bond strength, directionality, or cooperativity, and cannot predict the properties of complex hydrogen-bonded materials. Here, we introduce a concept of hydrogen bonds as elastic dipoles in an electric field, which captures a wide range of hydrogen bonding phenomena in various water systems. Using gypsum, a hydrogen bond heterostructure with two-dimensional structural crystalline water, we calibrate the hydrogen bond strength through an externally applied electric field. We show that our approach quantifies the strength of hydrogen bonds directly from spectroscopic measurements and reproduces a wide range of key properties of confined water reported in the literature. Using only the stretching vibration frequency of confined water, we can predict hydrogen bond strength, local electric field, O-H bond length, and dipole moment. Our work also introduces hydrogen bond heterostructures - a class of electrically and chemically tunable materials that offer stronger, more directional bonding compared to van der Waals heterostructures, with potential applications in areas such as catalysis, separation, and energy storage.
