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Browsing by Author "Hwang, Byounghoon"
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Item Additive effects of clofibric acid and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase isoenzyme 4 (PDK4) deficiency on hepatic steatosis in mice fed a high-saturated fat diet(Wiley, 2012) Hwang, Byounghoon; Wu, Pengfei; Harris, Robert A.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineAlthough improving glucose metabolism by inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) may prove beneficial in the treatment of type 2 diabetes or diet-induced obesity, it may have detrimental effects by inhibiting fatty acid oxidation. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα) agonists are often used to treat dyslipidemia in patients, especially in type 2 diabetes. Combinational treatment using a PDK4 inhibitor and PPARα agonists may prove beneficial. However, PPARα agonists may be less effective in the presence of a PDK4 inhibitor because PPARα agonists induce PDK4 expression. In the present study, the effects of clofibric acid, a PPARα agonist, on blood and liver lipids were determined in wild-type and PDK4 knockout mice fed a high-fat diet. As expected, treatment of wild-type mice with clofibric acid resulted in less body weight gain, smaller epididymal fat pads, greater insulin sensitivity, and lower levels of serum and liver triacylglycerol. Surprisingly, rather than decreasing the effectiveness of clofibric acid, PDK4 deficiency enhanced the beneficial effects of clofibric acid on hepatic steatosis, reduced blood glucose levels, and did not prevent the positive effects of clofibric acid on serum triacylglycerols and free fatty acids. The metabolic effects of clofibric acid are therefore independent of the induction of PDK4 expression. The additive beneficial effects on hepatic steatosis may be due to induction of increased capacity for fatty acid oxidation and partial uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation by clofibric acid, and a reduction in the capacity for fatty acid synthesis as a result of PDK4 deficiency.Item MondoA deficiency enhances sprint performance in mice(Portland Press, 2014-11-15) Imamura, Minako; Hung-Junn Chang, Benny; Kohjima, Motoyuki; Li, Ming; Hwang, Byounghoon; Taegtmeyer, Heinrich; Harris, Robert A.; Chan, Lawrence; Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, IU School of MedicineMondoA is a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH)/leucine zipper (ZIP) transcription factor that is expressed predominantly in skeletal muscle. Studies in vitro suggest that the Max-like protein X (MondoA:Mlx) heterodimer senses the intracellular energy status and directly targets the promoter region of thioredoxin interacting protein (Txnip) and possibly glycolytic enzymes. We generated MondoA-inactivated (MondoA-/-) mice by gene targeting. MondoA-/- mice had normal body weight at birth, exhibited normal growth and appeared to be healthy. However, they exhibited unique metabolic characteristics. MondoA-/- mice built up serum lactate and alanine levels and utilized fatty acids for fuel during exercise. Gene expression and promoter analysis suggested that MondoA functionally represses peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor γ co-activator-1α (PGC-1α)-mediated activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK-4) transcription. PDK4 normally down-regulates the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase, an enzyme complex that catalyses the decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA for entry into the Krebs cycle; in the absence of MondoA, pyruvate is diverted towards lactate and alanine, both products of glycolysis. Dynamic testing revealed that MondoA-/- mice excel in sprinting as their skeletal muscles display an enhanced glycolytic capacity. Our studies uncover a hitherto unappreciated function of MondoA in fuel selection in vivo. Lack of MondoA results in enhanced exercise capacity with sprinting.Item Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Kinase 4 Deficiency and Hepatic Steatosis(2009-06-23T21:37:16Z) Hwang, Byounghoon; Harris, Robert A.; Roach, Peter J.; Thurmond, Debbie C.; Elmendorf, Jeffrey S.; Considine, Robert V.Regulation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) is important for glucose homeostasis and control of fuel selection by tissues. Knocking out pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4), one of four kinases responsible for regulation of PDC activity, lowers blood glucose levels by limiting the supply of three carbon compounds for gluconeogenesis. Down regulation of PDK4 expression is also important for control of blood glucose by insulin. The primary goal was to determine whether PDK4 should be considered a target for the treatment of diabetes. A major concern is that inhibition of fatty acid oxidation by PDK4 deficiency may promote fat accumulation in tissues and worsen insulin sensitivity. This was examined by feeding wild type and PDK4 knockout mice a diet rich in saturated fat. Fasting blood glucose levels were lower, glucose tolerance was better, insulin sensitivity was greater, and liver fat was reduced in PDK4 knockout mice. The reduction in liver fat is contradictory to the finding that fibrate drugs increase PDK4 expression but ameliorate hepatic steatosis in rodents. To investigate this phenomenon, wild type and PDK4 knockout mice were fed the high saturated fat diet with and without clofibric acid. The beneficial effect of clofibric acid on hepatic steatosis was greater in the PDK4 knockout mice, indicating up regulation of PDK4 is not necessary and likely opposes the effect of clofibric acid on hepatic steatosis. Clofibric acid dramatically lowered the amount of hepatic CD36, a plasma membrane translocase required for fatty acid import, suggesting a novel mechanism for prevention of hepatic steatosis by fibrates. PDK4 deficiency had no effect on CD36 expression but reduced the enzymatic capacity for fatty acid synthesis, suggesting clofibric acid and PDK4 deficiency ameliorate hepatic steatosis by independent mechanisms. Investigation of the mechanism by which insulin regulates PDK4 expression revealed a novel binding site for hepatic nuclear factor 4α (HNF4α) in the PDK4 promoter. The stimulatory effect of HNF4α was sensitive to inhibition by Akt which is activated by insulin. The findings suggest PDK4 is a viable target for the treatment of hepatic steatosis and type 2 diabetes.Item Quantification of cellular NEMO content and its impact on NF-κB activation by genotoxic stress(PLoS, 2015-03-05) Hwang, Byounghoon; Phan, Funita P.; McCool, Kevin; Choi, Eun Young; You, Jinsam; Johnson, Adam; Audhya, Anjon; Miyamoto, Shigeki; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, IU School of MedicineNF-κB essential modulator, NEMO, plays a key role in canonical NF-κB signaling induced by a variety of stimuli, including cytokines and genotoxic agents. To dissect the different biochemical and functional roles of NEMO in NF-κB signaling, various mutant forms of NEMO have been previously analyzed. However, transient or stable overexpression of wild-type NEMO can significantly inhibit NF-κB activation, thereby confounding the analysis of NEMO mutant phenotypes. What levels of NEMO overexpression lead to such an artifact and what levels are tolerated with no significant impact on NEMO function in NF-κB activation are currently unknown. Here we purified full-length recombinant human NEMO protein and used it as a standard to quantify the average number of NEMO molecules per cell in a 1.3E2 NEMO-deficient murine pre-B cell clone stably reconstituted with full-length human NEMO (C5). We determined that the C5 cell clone has an average of 4 x 10(5) molecules of NEMO per cell. Stable reconstitution of 1.3E2 cells with different numbers of NEMO molecules per cell has demonstrated that a 10-fold range of NEMO expression (0.6-6x10(5) molecules per cell) yields statistically equivalent NF-κB activation in response to the DNA damaging agent etoposide. Using the C5 cell line, we also quantified the number of NEMO molecules per cell in several commonly employed human cell lines. These results establish baseline numbers of endogenous NEMO per cell and highlight surprisingly normal functionality of NEMO in the DNA damage pathway over a wide range of expression levels that can provide a guideline for future NEMO reconstitution studies.