Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:xuy02

in-biosketch:yes

Total Results:

46


Condensed Mitochondria Assemble Into the Acrosomal Matrix During Spermiogenesis

Ren, Mindong; Xu, Yang; Phoon, Colin K L; Erdjument-Bromage, Hediye; Neubert, Thomas A; Rajan, Sujith; Hussain, M Mahmood; Schlame, Michael
Mammalian spermatogenesis is associated with the transient appearance of condensed mitochondria, a singularity of germ cells with unknown function. Using proteomic analysis, respirometry, and electron microscopy with tomography, we studied the development of condensed mitochondria. Condensed mitochondria arose from orthodox mitochondria during meiosis by progressive contraction of the matrix space, which was accompanied by an initial expansion and a subsequent reduction of the surface area of the inner membrane. Compared to orthodox mitochondria, condensed mitochondria respired more actively, had a higher concentration of respiratory enzymes and supercomplexes, and contained more proteins involved in protein import and expression. After the completion of meiosis, the abundance of condensed mitochondria declined, which coincided with the onset of the biogenesis of acrosomes. Immuno-electron microscopy and the analysis of sub-cellular fractions suggested that condensed mitochondria or their fragments were translocated into the lumen of the acrosome. Thus, it seems condensed mitochondria are formed from orthodox mitochondria by extensive transformations in order to support the formation of the acrosomal matrix.
PMCID:9068883
PMID: 35531097
ISSN: 2296-634x
CID: 5214072

Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate

Xu, Yang; Zhou, Ziyou; Brooks, Brad; Ferguson, Tammy; Obliosca, Judy; Huang, Jing; Kaneko, Izumi; Iwanaga, Shiroh; Yuda, Masao; Tsuji, Yukiko; Zhang, Huitang; Luo, Christina C; Jiang, Xunqing; Kong, Xiang-Peng; Tsuji, Moriya; Tison, Christopher K
Developing a safe and effective malaria vaccine is critical to reducing the spread and resurgence of this deadly disease, especially in children. In recent years, vaccine technology has seen expanded development of subunit protein, peptide, and nucleic acid vaccines. This is due to their inherent safety, the ability to tailor their immune response, simple storage requirements, easier production, and lower expense compared to using attenuated and inactivated organism-based approaches. However, these new vaccine technologies generally have low efficacy. Subunit vaccines, due to their weak immunogenicity, often necessitate advanced delivery vectors and/or the use of adjuvants. A new area of vaccine development involves design of synthetic micro- and nano-particles and adjuvants that can stimulate immune cells directly through their physical and chemical properties. Further, the unique and complex life cycle of the Plasmodium organism, with multiple stages and varying epitopes/antigens presented by the parasite, is another challenge for malaria vaccine development. Targeting multistage antigens simultaneously is therefore critical for an effective malaria vaccine. Here, we rationally design a layer-by-layer (LbL) antigen delivery platform (we called LbL NP) specifically engineered for malaria vaccines. A biocompatible modified chitosan nanoparticle (trimethyl chitosan, TMC) was synthesized and utilized for LbL loading and release of multiple malaria antigens from pre-erythrocytic and erythrocytic stages. LbL NP served as antigen/protein delivery vehicles and were demonstrated to induce the highest Plasmodium falciparum Circumsporozoite Protein (PfCSP) specific T-cell responses in mice studies as compared to multiple controls. From immunogenicity studies, it was concluded that two doses of intramuscular injection with a longer interval (4 weeks) than traditional malaria vaccine candidate dosing would be the vaccination potential for LbL NP vaccine candidates. Furthermore, in PfCSP/Py parasite challenge studies we demonstrated protective efficacy using LbL NP. These LbL NP provided a significant adjuvant effect since they may induce innate immune response that led to a potent adaptive immunity to mediate non-specific anti-malarial effect. Most importantly, the delivery of CSP full-length protein stimulated long-lasting protective immune responses even after the booster immunization 4 weeks later in mice.
PMCID:9428560
PMID: 36059505
ISSN: 1664-3224
CID: 5332302

Cardiolipin remodeling enables protein crowding in the inner mitochondrial membrane

Xu, Yang; Erdjument-Bromage, Hediye; Phoon, Colin K L; Neubert, Thomas A; Ren, Mindong; Schlame, Michael
Mitochondrial cristae are extraordinarily crowded with proteins, which puts stress on the bilayer organization of lipids. We tested the hypothesis that the high concentration of proteins drives the tafazzin-catalyzed remodeling of fatty acids in cardiolipin, thereby reducing bilayer stress in the membrane. Specifically, we tested whether protein crowding induces cardiolipin remodeling and whether the lack of cardiolipin remodeling prevents the membrane from accumulating proteins. In vitro, the incorporation of large amounts of proteins into liposomes altered the outcome of the remodeling reaction. In yeast, the concentration of proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) correlated with the cardiolipin composition. Genetic ablation of either remodeling or biosynthesis of cardiolipin caused a substantial drop in the surface density of OXPHOS proteins in the inner membrane of the mouse heart and Drosophila flight muscle mitochondria. Our data suggest that OXPHOS protein crowding induces cardiolipin remodelling and that remodeled cardiolipin supports the high concentration of these proteins in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
PMID: 34661298
ISSN: 1460-2075
CID: 5043122

Enrichment of NPC1-deficient cells with the lipid LBPA stimulates autophagy, improves lysosomal function, and reduces cholesterol storage

Ilnytska, Olga; Lai, Kimberly; Gorshkov, Kirill; Schultz, Mark L; Tran, Bruce Nguyen; Jeziorek, Maciej; Kunkel, Thaddeus J; Azaria, Ruth D; McLoughlin, Hayley S; Waghalter, Miriam; Xu, Yang; Schlame, Michael; Altan-Bonnet, Nihal; Zheng, Wei; Lieberman, Andrew P; Dobrowolski, Radek; Storch, Judith
Niemann-Pick C (NPC) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by mutations in the NPC1 or NPC2 genes encoding endo-lysosomal lipid transport proteins, leading to cholesterol accumulation and autophagy dysfunction. We have previously shown that enrichment of NPC1-deficient cells with the anionic lipid lysobisphosphatidic acid (LBPA; also called bis(monoacylglycerol)phosphate, BMP) via treatment with its precursor phosphatidylglycerol (PG) results in a dramatic decrease in cholesterol storage. However, the mechanisms underlying this reduction are unknown. In the present study, we showed using biochemical and imaging approaches in both NPC1-deficient cellular models and an NPC1 mouse model that PG incubation/LBPA enrichment significantly improved the compromised autophagic flux associated with NPC1 disease, providing a route for NPC1-independent endo-lysosomal cholesterol mobilization. PG/LBPA enrichment specifically enhanced the late stages of autophagy, and effects were mediated by activation of the lysosomal enzyme acid sphingomyelinase (ASM). PG incubation also led to robust and specific increases in LBPA species with polyunsaturated acyl chains, potentially increasing the propensity for membrane fusion events, which are critical for late-stage autophagy progression. Finally, we demonstrated that PG/LBPA treatment efficiently cleared cholesterol and toxic protein aggregates in Purkinje neurons of the NPC1I1061T mouse model. Collectively, these findings provide a mechanistic basis supporting cellular LBPA as a potential new target for therapeutic intervention in NPC disease.
PMID: 34023384
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 4887402

Increased ROS-Mediated CaMKII Activation Contributes to Calcium Handling Abnormalities and Impaired Contraction in Barth Syndrome

Liu, Xujie; Wang, Suya; Guo, Xiaoling; Li, Yifei; Ogurlu, Roza; Lu, Fujian; Prondzynski, Maksymilian; de la Serna Buzon, Sofia; Ma, Qing; Zhang, Donghui; Wang, Gang; Cotton, Justin; Guo, Yuxuan; Xiao, Ling; Milan, David J; Xu, Yang; Schlame, Michael; Bezzerides, Vassilios J; Pu, William T
Background: Mutations in tafazzin (TAZ), a gene required for biogenesis of cardiolipin, the signature phospholipid of the inner mitochondrial membrane, causes Barth syndrome (BTHS). Cardiomyopathy and risk of sudden cardiac death are prominent features of BTHS, but the mechanisms by which impaired cardiolipin biogenesis causes cardiac muscle weakness and arrhythmia are poorly understood. Methods: We performed in vivo electrophysiology to define arrhythmia vulnerability in cardiac specific TAZ knockout mice. Using cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC-CMs) and cardiac specific TAZ knockout mice as model systems, we investigated the effect of TAZ inactivation on Ca2+ handling. Through genome editing and pharmacology, we defined a molecular link between TAZ mutation and abnormal Ca2+ handling and contractility. Results: A subset of mice with cardiac-specific TAZ inactivation developed arrhythmias including bidirectional ventricular tachycardia, atrial tachycardia, and complete atrioventricular block. Compared to WT, BTHS iPSC-CMs had increased diastolic Ca2+ and decreased Ca2+ transient amplitude. BTHS iPSC-CMs had higher levels of mitochondrial and cellular ROS than WT, which activated Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII). Activated CaMKII phosphorylated the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RYR2) on serine 2814, increasing Ca2+ leak through RYR2. Inhibition of this ROS-CaMKII-RYR2 pathway through pharmacological inhibitors or genome editing normalized aberrant Ca2+ handling in BTHS iPSC-CMs and improved their contractile function. Murine Taz knockout cardiomyocytes also exhibited elevated diastolic Ca2+ and decreased Ca2+ transient amplitude. These abnormalities were ameliorated by CaMKII or ROS inhibition. Conclusions: This study identified a molecular pathway that links TAZ mutation to abnormal Ca2+ handling and decreased cardiomyocyte contractility. This pathway may offer therapeutic opportunities to treat BTHS and potentially other diseases with elevated mitochondrial ROS production.
PMID: 33793303
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 4831022

Glycemic Control and the Risk of Acute Kidney Injury in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease: Parallel Population-Based Cohort Studies in U.S. and Swedish Routine Care

Xu, Yang; Surapaneni, Aditya; Alkas, Jim; Evans, Marie; Shin, Jung-Im; Selvin, Elizabeth; Chang, Alex; Grams, Morgan E; Carrero, Juan Jesus
OBJECTIVE:Patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease (CKD) have increased susceptibility to acute kidney injury (AKI), but mechanisms are unclear. We investigated the association of glycemic control with risk of AKI. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS:) with the incident AKI (defined as increase in creatinine ≥0.3 mg/dL over 48 h or 1.5 times creatinine over 7 days). RESULTS:. CONCLUSIONS:was associated with AKI in adults with type 2 diabetes and CKD, suggesting that improving glycemic control may reduce the risk of AKI.
PMCID:7770276
PMID: 33023987
ISSN: 1935-5548
CID: 5101742

The Function of Tafazzin, a Mitochondrial Phospholipid-Lysophospholipid Acyltransferase

Schlame, Michael; Xu, Yang
Tafazzin is a mitochondrial enzyme that exchanges fatty acids between phospholipids by phospholipid-lysophospholipid transacylation. The reaction alters the molecular species composition and, as a result, the physical properties of lipids. In vivo, the most important substrate of tafazzin is the mitochondria-specific lipid cardiolipin. Tafazzin mutations cause the human disease Barth syndrome, which presents with cardiomyopathy, skeletal muscle weakness, fatigue, and other symptoms, probably all related to mitochondrial dysfunction. The reason why mitochondria require tafazzin is still not known but recent evidence suggests that tafazzin may lower the energy cost associated with protein crowding in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
PMID: 32234310
ISSN: 1089-8638
CID: 4370322

AAV Gene Therapy Prevents and Reverses Heart Failure in A Murine Knockout Model of Barth Syndrome

Wang, Suya; Li, Yifei; Xu, Yang; Ma, Qing; Lin, Zhiqiang; Schlame, Michael; Bezzerides, Vassilios J; Strathdee, Douglas; Pu, William T
Rationale: Barth syndrome (BTHS) is an X-linked cardiac and skeletal myopathy caused by mutation of the gene Tafazzin (TAZ). Currently there is no targeted treatment for BTHS. Lack of a proper genetic animal model that recapitulates the features of BTHS has hindered understanding of disease pathogenesis and therapeutic development. Objective: We characterized murine germline (TAZ-KO) and cardiac specific (TAZ-CKO) Taz knockout models and tested the efficacy of AAV-mediated TAZ gene replacement therapy. Methods and Results: TAZ-KO caused embryonic and neonatal lethality, impaired growth, dilated cardiomyopathy, and skeletal myopathy. TAZ-KO mice that survived the neonatal period developed progressive, severe cardiac dysfunction and fibrosis. Cardiomyocyte specific inactivation of floxed Taz in CMs using Myh6-Cre caused progressive dilated cardiomyopathy without fetal or perinatal loss. Using both constitutive and conditional knockout models, we tested the efficacy and durability of Taz replacement by AAV gene therapy. Neonatal AAV-TAZ rescued neonatal death, cardiac dysfunction, and fibrosis in TAZ-KO mice, and both prevented and reversed established cardiac dysfunction in TAZ-KO and TAZ-CKO models. However, both neonatal and adult therapies required high CM transduction (~70%) for durable efficacy. Conclusions: TAZ-KO and TAZ-CKO mice recapitulate many of the key clinical features of BTHS. AAV-mediated gene replacement is efficacious when a sufficient fraction of CMs are transduced.
PMID: 32146862
ISSN: 1524-4571
CID: 4348582

Lipidome-wide 13C flux analysis: a novel tool to estimate the turnover of lipids in organisms and cultures

Schlame, Michael; Xu, Yang; Erdjument-Bromage, Hediye; Neubert, Thomas A; Ren, Mindong
Lipid metabolism plays an important role in the regulation of cellular homeostasis. However, since it is difficult to measure the actual rates of synthesis and degradation of individual lipid species, lipid compositions are used often as a surrogate to evaluate lipid metabolism even though they provide only static snapshots of the lipodome. Here, we designed a simple method to determine the turnover rate of phospholipid and acylglycerol species based on the incorporation of 13C6-glucose combined with LC-MS/MS. We labeled adult Drosophila melanogaster with 13C6-glucose that incorporates into the entire lipidome, derived kinetic parameters from mass spectra, and studied effects of deletion of CG6718, the fly homologue of the calcium-independent phospholipase A2β, on lipid metabolism. Although 13C6-glucose gave rise to a complex pattern of 13C incorporation, we were able to identify discrete isotopomers in which 13C atoms were confined to the glycerol group. With these isotopomers, we calculated turnover rate constants, half-life times, and fluxes of the glycerol backbone of multiple lipid species. To perform these calculations, we estimated the fraction of labeled molecules in glycerol-3-phosphate, the lipid precursor, by mass isotopomer distribution analysis of the spectra of phosphatidylglycerol. When we applied this method to D. melanogaster, we found a range of lipid half-lives from 2 to 200 days, demonstrated tissue-specific fluxes of individual lipid species, and identified a novel function of CG6718 in triacylglycerol metabolism. This method provides fluxomics-type data with significant potential to improve the understanding of complex lipid regulation in a variety of research models.
PMID: 31712250
ISSN: 1539-7262
CID: 4185092

Activated Thiol Sepharose-based proteomic approach to quantify reversible protein oxidation

Xu, Yang; Andrade, Joshua; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Neel, Benjamin G
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) can act as second messengers in various signaling pathways, and abnormal oxidation contributes to multiple diseases, including cancer. Detecting and quantifying protein oxidation is crucial for a detailed understanding of reduction-oxidation reaction (redox) signaling. We developed an Activated Thiol Sepharose-based proteomic (ATSP) approach to quantify reversible protein oxidation. ATSP can enrich H2O2-sensitive thiol peptides, which are more likely to contain reactive cysteines involved in redox signaling. We applied our approach to analyze hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC), a type of kidney cancer that harbors fumarate hydratase (FH)-inactivating mutations and has elevated ROS levels. Multiple proteins were oxidized in FH-deficient cells, including many metabolic proteins such as the pyruvate kinase M2 isoform (PKM2). Treatment of HLRCC cells with dimethyl fumarate or PKM2 activators altered PKM2 oxidation levels. Finally, we found that ATSP could detect Src homology region 2 domain-containing phosphatase-2 and PKM2 oxidation in cells stimulated with platelet-derived growth factor. This newly developed redox proteomics workflow can detect reversible oxidation of reactive cysteines and can be employed to analyze multiple physiologic and pathologic conditions.-Xu, Y., Andrade, J., Ueberheide, B., Neel, B. G. Activated Thiol Sepharose-based proteomic approach to quantify reversible protein oxidation.
PMID: 31451050
ISSN: 1530-6860
CID: 4054242