Ahmad Hegazi’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Figure 7. Role of HSF1 in copper-induced toxicity. Lipoylation allows DLAT to facilitate the transfer of acetyl groups during metabolic processes, which is essential for the proper functioning of the TCA cycle. Copper induces DLAT oligomerization and initiates PSR. HSF1 inhibits copper-induced insoluble fraction of DLAT.
The Role of Heat Shock Factor 1 in Preserving Proteomic Integrity During Copper-Induced Cellular Toxicity
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October 2024

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32 Reads

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1 Citation

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Ahmad Hegazi

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Copper is crucial for many physiological processes across mammalian cells, including energy metabolism, neurotransmitter synthesis, and antioxidant defense mechanisms. However, excessive copper levels can lead to cellular toxicity and “cuproptosis”, a form of programmed cell death characterized by the accumulation of copper within mitochondria. Tumor cells are less sensitive to this toxicity than normal cells, the mechanism for which remains unclear. We address this important issue by exploring the role of heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), a transcription factor that is highly expressed across several types of cancer and has a crucial role in tumor survival, in protecting against copper-mediated cytotoxicity. Using pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cells, we show that excessive copper triggers a proteotoxic stress response (PSR), activating HSF1 and that overexpressing HSF1 diminishes intracellular copper accumulation and prevents excessive copper-induced cell death and amyloid fibrils formation, highlighting HSF1′s role in preserving proteasomal integrity. Copper treatment decreases the lipoylation of dihydrolipoamide S-acetyltransferase (DLAT), an enzyme necessary for cuproptosis, induces DLAT oligomerization, and induces insoluble DLAT formation, which is suppressed by overexpressing HSF1, in addition to enhancing the interaction between HSF1 and DLAT. Our findings uncover how HSF1 protects against copper-induced damage in cancer cells and thus represents a novel therapeutic target for enhancing copper-mediated cancer cell death.

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Completed Antibody-Based Immunomodulatory Trials in PDAC. * = data acquired from American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Publications, + = data acquired from PubMed or peer-reviewed publication, # = data acquired from ClinicalTrials.gov. The confidence interval of 95% is included in parenthesis when available.
Completed Vaccine + Antibody-Based Trials in PDAC. * = data acquired from ASCO Publications; # = data acquired from ClinicalTrials.gov. The confidence interval of 95% is included in parentheses when available.
Advancing Immunotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer

October 2024

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29 Reads

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2 Citations

Pancreatic cancer remains one of the deadliest malignancies, with a consistently low five-year survival rate for the past several decades. This is in stark contrast to other cancers, which have seen significant improvement in survival and prognosis due to recent developments in therapeutic modalities. These modest improvements in pancreatic cancer outcomes have primarily resulted from minor advances in cytotoxic chemotherapeutics, with limited progress in other treatment approaches. A major focus of current therapeutic research is the further development of immunomodulatory therapies characterized by antibody-based approaches, cellular therapies, and vaccines. Although initial results utilizing immunotherapy in pancreatic cancer have been mixed, recent clinical trials have demonstrated significant improvements in patient outcomes. In this review, we detail these three approaches to immunomodulation, highlighting their common targets and distinct shortcomings, and we provide a narrative summary of completed and ongoing clinical trials that utilize these approaches to immunomodulation. Within this context, we aim to inform future research efforts by identifying promising areas that warrant further exploration.

Citations (2)


... HSF1 is originally characterized as a transcription factor for the expression of HSPs responsible for the initiation of the proteotoxic stress response (Alasady and Mendillo, 2020;Zhang et al., 2021). This cellular mechanism safeguards cells from protein misfolding and aggregation under stress conditions (Alasady and Mendillo, 2020;Zhang et al., 2021;Ghai et al., 2024). HSF1 has since also been recognized for its pro-oncogenic properties, contributing to cancer initiation, progression, and chemoresistance (Kijima et al., 2019;Lee et al., 2021;Cyran and Zhitkovich, 2022;Gumilar et al., 2023). ...

Reference:

HSF1 at the crossroads of chemoresistance: from current insights to future horizons in cell death mechanisms
The Role of Heat Shock Factor 1 in Preserving Proteomic Integrity During Copper-Induced Cellular Toxicity

... For example, although adagrasib can reverse multidrug resistance mediated by the MDR1 transporter , the resistance to adagrasib has emerged through heterogeneous subclonal mutations in RAS-MAPK pathway components (e.g., NRAS, BRAF, and MAP2K1) that enable NSCLC tumor cells to reactivate MAPK signaling and bypass KRAS(G12C) inhibition (Tanaka et al., 2021). In order to obtain more durable responses to KRAS inhibitors, researchers are exploring combination therapies, such as pairing KRAS inhibitors with MEK or SHP2 inhibitors or with immune checkpoint inhibitors (Khan and O'Bryan, 2021;Hegazi et al., 2024). Thus, targeting KRAS for cancer treatment remains challenging, particularly in overcoming chemoresistance. ...

Advancing Immunotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer