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Browsing by Author "Anderson, Ryan"
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Item 12-lipoxygenase Promotes Macrophage Infiltration and Pancreatic Islet Dysfunction in the Vertebrate Models of Diabetes Pathogenesis(2020-05) Kulkarni, Abhishek Anant; Harrington, Maureen; Mirmira, Raghavendra; Anderson, Ryan; Goebl, Mark; Mosley, Amber; Marrs, JamesDiabetes is a morbid metabolic disorder that affects almost 500 million people worldwide. Although multiple factors contribute to diabetes pathogenesis, pancreatic islet inflammation and dysfunction are shared characteristics of its major forms. 12- lipoxygenase (12-LOX), an enzyme involved in lipid metabolism, has been implicated in islet inflammation. 12-LOX generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that activate inflammation and serve as major contributors to islet dysfunction. Importantly, since ROS are transient moieties, they are challenging to study in vivo. Hence, establishing better animal models of ROS-mediated stress is critical to facilitate the discovery and preclinical testing of novel diabetes therapeutics. Here, I have adapted a zebrafish model of conditional β-cell injury, which is regulated by the administration of the prodrug metronidazole (MTZ), to study responses to ROS in vivo. I demonstrate that with MTZ treatment, ROS are generated within β-cells and subsequently exhibit recruitment of macrophages into the islet and induction of β-cell death. I utilized this model to uncover roles for macrophages and 12-LOX during islet injury. Excessive macrophage infiltration exacerbates islet inflammation and dysfunction. Interestingly, on the depletion of macrophages in zebrafish, I observed that β-cells recovered normal function upon cessation of prodrug treatment. This suggests that infiltrating macrophages promote maladaptive inflammation and premature removal of damaged β-cells. Thus, limiting the macrophage infiltration may be a therapeutic approach to restoring β-cell function. Based on the established roles of 12-LOX in other contexts, I hypothesized that its inhibition would prevent the localized infiltration of proinflammatory macrophages. To test this, I used both zebrafish and mouse models and observed a significant reduction in macrophage migration upon loss of 12- LOX activity. Furthermore, I found that expression of CXCR3, a crucial receptor regulating migration, was significantly reduced in 12-LOX loss-of-function macrophages. These data suggest a role for 12-LOX in macrophages, which is conserved across species. Collectively, my study reveals novel roles for 12-LOX in macrophage function and provides testable therapeutic targets for the resolution of inflammation-induced damage in the pancreatic islets.Item Novel targets of eiF2 kinases determine cell fate during the integrated stress response(2014-12) Baird, Thomas; Wek, Ronald C.; Turchi, John J.; Anderson, Ryan; Liu, Yunlong; Quilliam, LawrenceEukaryotic cells rapidly modulate protein synthesis in response to environmental cues through the reversible phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2α~P) by a family of eIF2α kinases. The eIF2 delivers initiator Met-tRNAiMet to the translational apparatus, and eIF2α~P transforms its function from a translation initiation factor into a competitive inhibitor of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) eIF2B, which is responsible for the recycling of eIF2-GDP to the translationally-competent eIF2-GTP state. Reduced eIF2-GTP levels lower general protein synthesis, which allows for the conservation of energy and nutrients, and a restructuring of gene expression. Coincident with global translational control, eIF2α~P directs the preferential translation of mRNA encoding ATF4, a transcriptional activator of genes important for stress remediation. The term Integrated Stress Response (ISR) describes this pathway in which multiple stresses converge to phosphorylate eIF2α and enhance synthesis of ATF4 and its downstream effectors. In this study, we used sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation and a genome-wide microarray approach to measure changes in mRNA translation during ER stress. Our analysis suggests that translational efficiencies vary across a broad range during ER stress, with the majority of transcripts being either repressed or resistant to eIF2α~P, while a notable cohort of key regulators are subject to preferential translation. From this latter group, we identify IBTKα as being subject to both translational and transcriptional induction during eIF2α~P in both cell lines and a mouse model of ER stress. Translational regulation of IBTKα mRNA involves the stress-induced relief of two inhibitory uORFs in the 5’-leader of the transcript. Also identified as being subject to preferential translation is mRNA encoding the bifunctional aminoacyl tRNA synthetase EPRS. During eIF2α~P, translational regulation of EPRS is suggested to occur through the bypass of a non-canonical upstream ORF encoded by a CUG start codon, highlighting the diversity by which upstream translation initiation events can regulate expression of a downstream coding sequence. This body of work provides for a better understanding of how translational control during stress is modulated genome-wide and for the processes by which this mode of gene regulation in the ISR contributes to cell fate.Item OR05-3 Mir-21 Contributes to Cytokine-Induced Beta Cell Dysfunction via Inhibition of mRNAs Regulating Beta Cell Identity(Oxford University Press, 2019-04-15) Ibrahim, Sara; Anderson, Ryan; Mirmira, Raghavendra; Sims, Emily; Medicine, School of MedicineA hallmark of diabetes is the loss of physical or functional β cell mass. Alterations in β cell microRNA (miRNA) profiles have been described in diabetes. MiRNAs have also been shown to serve as important regulators of β cell development and function, implicating them in β cell dysfunction during diabetes development. Our lab has previously demonstrated that β cell microRNA 21 (miR-21) is increased in models of diabetes. However, a comprehensive analysis of the β cell effects of miR-21 remain poorly defined, and the effects of miR-21 on in vivo glucose homeostasis have never been explored. To this end, we performed a comprehensive in silico analysis of bioinformatics databases to identify potential β cell targets of miR-21, which yielded multiple targets in the Transforming Growth Factor Beta 2 (Tgfb2) and Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor 3 (Fgfr3) pathways associated with regulation of differentiation. We hypothesize that β cell miR-21 plays a critical role in inhibiting β cell function and inducing loss of β cell identity. To validate targets in vitro, we developed a model whereby miR-21 is upregulated using a dose dependent lentiviral Tetracycline-on system in INS1 cells. Overexpression of miR-21 led to a reduction in expression levels of several members of the Tgfb2 and Fgfr3 pathways as well as multiple transcription factors associated with β cell function and identity, and an increase in aldehyde dehydrogenase transcripts, consistent with β cell dedifferentiation. To verify direct interactions between miR-21 and candidate target mRNAs, a biotin pulldown experiment was performed using a 3’ biotinylated mature miR-21 construct and a 3’ biotinylated cel-miR-67 control construct. Several mRNAs associated with β cell identity were enriched in the pulldown, indicating a direct interaction with miR-21. Lineage tracing was performed within an in vivo zebrafish model of β cell specific oxidative stress in which β cells expressed a nuclear GFP signal. Whole body knock down of miR-21 by morpholino microinjection showed a protective effect in stressed β cells and rescued against a dedifferentiated phenotype. To test the effect of miR-21 on glucose tolerance in vivo, inducible β cell specific knockout (βmiR-21KO) and overexpression (βmiR-21) mice were generated by crossing Ins1tm1(CreERT2)Thor mice with miR-21 floxed mice and miR-21-CAG-Z-EGFP mice, respectively. When compared to littermate controls, intraperitoneal glucose tolerance tests (IPGTT) exhibited hyperglycemia in βmiR-21 mice and euglycemia in βmiR-21KO mice. Metabolic studies, including glucose stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) and insulin tolerance tests (ITT) are ongoing in our mouse models. Our results implicate miR-21 as a regulator of β cell dedifferentiation during diabetes development.Item The Roles of Danio Rerio Nrf2 Paralogs in Response to Oxidative Stress in the Pancreatic Beta Cell(2020-06) Doszpoly, Agnes; Linnemann, Amelia; Anderson, Ryan; Wek, RonaldOxidative stress can disrupt cellular homeostasis, leading to cellular dysfunction and apoptosis. The Nrf2 transcription factor regulates the antioxidant response in cells by binding to antioxidant response elements (ARE) in DNA and activating genes of enzymes that combat oxidative stress. During the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus (DM), β-cells are exposed to increased amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that cause oxidative stress. Zebrafish (ZF) are excellent models for studying the dynamic mechanisms associated with DM pathogenesis, and we recently developed a ZF model of β-cell apoptosis caused by ROS. Two paralogs of Nrf2 have been identified in ZF, Nrf2a and Nrf2b, but their roles in pancreas development and/or β-cell survival are unknown. To investigate their roles, Nrf2a and Nrf2b antisense morpholinos (MO) were injected into Day 0 ZF embryos and analyzed over time. While Nrf2a MO showed no obvious phenotypes compared to WT, Nrf2b MO exhibited reduced pancreas size and islets with disrupted morphology. Ins:NTR Nrf2a MO showed reduced β-cell loss upon exposure to Metronidazole (MTZ) under generation of ROS compared to WT. Sequence analysis of ZF nrf2b in 3-day post-fertilization (dpf) embryos revealed a novel splice variant containing an additional exon that has not been described. Further investigation of Nrf2a and Nrf2b is likely to yield additional insights regarding the function and regulation of the NRF2-signaling pathway and their roles in β-cell protection under oxidative stress.