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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 8 papers out of 8 papers

Deletion of the voltage-gated calcium channel, CaV 1.3, causes deficits in motor performance and associative learning.

  • Marisol Lauffer‎ et al.
  • Genes, brain, and behavior‎
  • 2022‎

L-type voltage-gated calcium channels are important regulators of neuronal activity and are widely expressed throughout the brain. One of the major L-type voltage-gated calcium channel isoforms in the brain is CaV 1.3. Mice lacking CaV 1.3 are reported to have impairments in fear conditioning and depressive-like behaviors, which have been linked to CaV 1.3 function in the hippocampus and amygdala. Genetic variation in CaV 1.3 has been linked to a variety of psychiatric disorders, including autism and schizophrenia, which are associated with altered motor learning, associative learning and social function. Here, we explored whether CaV 1.3 plays a role in these behaviors. We found that CaV 1.3 knockout mice have deficits in rotarod learning despite normal locomotor function. Deletion of CaV 1.3 is also associated with impaired gait adaptation and associative learning on the Erasmus Ladder. We did not observe any impairments in CaV 1.3 knockout mice on assays of anxiety-like, depression-like or social preference behaviors. Our results suggest an important role for CaV 1.3 in neural circuits involved in motor learning and concur with previous data showing its involvement in associative learning.


FBG1 Is the Final Arbitrator of A1AT-Z Degradation.

  • John H Wen‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2015‎

Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency is the leading cause of childhood liver failure and one of the most common lethal genetic diseases. The disease-causing mutant A1AT-Z fails to fold correctly and accumulates in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of the liver, resulting in hepatic fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in a subset of patients. Furthermore, A1AT-Z sequestration in hepatocytes leads to a reduction in A1AT secretion into the serum, causing panacinar emphysema in adults. The purpose of this work was to elucidate the details by which A1AT-Z is degraded in hepatic cell lines. We identified the ubiquitin ligase FBG1, which has been previously shown to degrade proteins by both the ubiquitin proteasome pathway and autophagy, as being key to A1AT-Z degradation. Using chemical and genetic approaches we show that FBG1 degrades A1AT-Z through both the ubiquitin proteasome system and autophagy. Overexpression of FBG1 decreases the half-life of A1AT-Z and knocking down FBG1 in a hepatic cell line, and in mice results in an increase in ATAT. Finally, we show that FBG1 degrades A1AT-Z through a Beclin1-dependent arm of autophagy. In our model, FBG1 acts as a safety ubiquitin ligase, whose function is to re-ubiquitinate ER proteins that have previously undergone de-ubiquitination to ensure they are degraded.


Metabolomics assessment reveals oxidative stress and altered energy production in the heart after ischemic acute kidney injury in mice.

  • Benjamin M Fox‎ et al.
  • Kidney international‎
  • 2019‎

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a systemic disease associated with widespread effects on distant organs, including the heart. Normal cardiac function is dependent on constant ATP generation, and the preferred method of energy production is via oxidative phosphorylation. Following direct ischemic cardiac injury, the cardiac metabolome is characterized by inadequate oxidative phosphorylation, increased oxidative stress, and increased alternate energy utilization. We assessed the impact of ischemic AKI on the metabolomics profile in the heart. Ischemic AKI was induced by 22 minutes of renal pedicle clamping, and 124 metabolites were measured in the heart at 4 hours, 24 hours, and 7 days post-procedure. Forty-one percent of measured metabolites were affected, with the most prominent changes observed 24 hours post-AKI. The post-AKI cardiac metabolome was characterized by amino acid depletion, increased oxidative stress, and evidence of alternative energy production, including a shift to anaerobic forms of energy production. These metabolomic effects were associated with significant cardiac ATP depletion and with echocardiographic evidence of diastolic dysfunction. In the kidney, metabolomics analysis revealed shifts suggestive of energy depletion and oxidative stress, which were reflected systemically in the plasma. This is the first study to examine the cardiac metabolome after AKI, and demonstrates that effects of ischemic AKI on the heart are akin to the effects of direct ischemic cardiac injury.


Tubular Mitochondrial Pyruvate Carrier Disruption Elicits Redox Adaptations that Protect from Acute Kidney Injury.

  • Adam J Rauckhorst‎ et al.
  • bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology‎
  • 2023‎

Energy-intensive kidney reabsorption processes essential for normal whole-body function are maintained by tubular epithelial cell metabolism. Tubular metabolism changes markedly following acute kidney injury (AKI), but which changes are adaptive versus maladaptive remain poorly understood. In publicly available data sets, we noticed a consistent downregulation of the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) after AKI, which we experimentally confirmed. To test the functional consequences of MPC downregulation, we generated novel tubular epithelial cell-specific Mpc1 knockout (MPC TubKO) mice. 13 C-glucose tracing, steady-state metabolomic profiling, and enzymatic activity assays revealed that MPC TubKO coordinately increased activities of the pentose phosphate pathway and the glutathione and thioredoxin oxidant defense systems. Following rhabdomyolysis-induced AKI, MPC TubKO decreased markers of kidney injury and oxidative damage and strikingly increased survival. Our findings suggest that decreased mitochondrial pyruvate uptake is a central adaptive response following AKI and raise the possibility of therapeutically modulating the MPC to attenuate AKI severity.


Neuronal deletion of CaV1.2 is associated with sex-specific behavioral phenotypes in mice.

  • Annette J Klomp‎ et al.
  • Scientific reports‎
  • 2022‎

The gene CACNA1C, which encodes the pore forming subunit of the L-type calcium channel CaV1.2, is associated with increased risk for neuropsychiatric disorders including schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, major depression, and bipolar disorder. Previous rodent work identified that loss or reduction of CaV1.2 results in cognitive, affective, and motor deficits. Most previous work has either included non-neuronal cell populations (haploinsufficient and Nestin-Cre) or investigated a discrete neuronal cell population (e.g. CaMKII-Cre, Drd1-Cre), but few studies have examined the effects of more broad neuron-specific deletion of CaV1.2. Additionally, most of these studies did not evaluate for sex-specific effects or used only male animals. Here, we sought to clarify whether there are sex-specific behavioral consequences of neuron-specific deletion of CaV1.2 (neuronal CaV1.2 cKO) using Syn1-Cre-mediated conditional deletion. We found that neuronal CaV1.2 cKO mice have normal baseline locomotor function but female cKO mice display impaired motor performance learning. Male neuronal CaV1.2 cKO display impaired startle response with intact pre-pulse inhibition. Male neuronal CaV1.2 cKO mice did not display normal social preference, whereas female neuronal CaV1.2 cKO mice did. Neuronal CaV1.2 cKO mice displayed impaired associative learning in both sexes, as well as normal anxiety-like behavior and hedonic capacity. We conclude that deletion of neuronal CaV1.2 alters motor performance, acoustic startle reflex, and social behaviors in a sex-specific manner, while associative learning deficits generalize across sexes. Our data provide evidence for both sex-specific and sex-independent phenotypes related to neuronal expression of CaV1.2.


Persistent increase in mitochondrial superoxide mediates cisplatin-induced chronic kidney disease.

  • Kranti A Mapuskar‎ et al.
  • Redox biology‎
  • 2019‎

Severe and recurrent cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury (AKI) as part of standard cancer therapy is a known risk factor for development of chronic kidney disease (CKD). The specific role of superoxide (O2•-)-mediated disruption of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in CKD after cisplatin treatment is unexplored. Cisplatin is typically administered in weekly or tri-weekly cycles as part of standard cancer therapy. To investigate the role of O2•- in predisposing patients to future renal injury and in CKD, mice were treated with cisplatin and a mitochondrial-specific, superoxide dismutase (SOD) mimetic, GC4419. Renal function, biomarkers of oxidative stress, mitochondrial oxidative metabolism, and kidney injury markers, as well as renal histology, were assessed to evaluate the cellular changes that occur one week and one month (CKD phase) after the cisplatin insult. Cisplatin treatment resulted in persistent upregulation of kidney injury markers, increased steady-state levels of O2•-, increased O2•--mediated renal tubules damage, and upregulation of mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) complex I activity both one week and one month following cisplatin treatment. Treatment with a novel, clinically relevant, small-molecule superoxide dismutase (SOD) mimetic, GC4419, restored mitochondrial ETC complex I activity to control levels without affecting complexes II-IV activity, as well as ameliorated cisplatin-induced kidney injury. These data support the hypothesis that increased mitochondrial O2•- following cisplatin administration, as a result of disruptions of mitochondrial metabolism, may be an important contributor to both AKI and CKD progression.


IL-6-mediated hepatocyte production is the primary source of plasma and urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin during acute kidney injury.

  • Nataliya I Skrypnyk‎ et al.
  • Kidney international‎
  • 2020‎

Neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin (NGAL, Lcn2) is the most widely studied biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI). Previous studies have demonstrated that NGAL is produced by the kidney and released into the urine and plasma. Consequently, NGAL is currently considered a tubule specific injury marker of AKI. However, the utility of NGAL to predict AKI has been variable suggesting that other mechanisms of production are present. IL-6 is a proinflammatory cytokine increased in plasma by two hours of AKI and mediates distant organ effects. Herein, we investigated the role of IL-6 in renal and extra-renal NGAL production. Wild type mice with ischemic AKI had increased plasma IL-6, increased hepatic NGAL mRNA, increased plasma NGAL, and increased urine NGAL; all reduced in IL-6 knockout mice. Intravenous IL-6 in normal mice increased hepatic NGAL mRNA, plasma NGAL and urine NGAL. In mice with hepatocyte specific NGAL deletion (Lcn2hep-/-) and ischemic AKI, hepatic NGAL mRNA was absent, and plasma and urine NGAL were reduced. Since urine NGAL levels appear to be dependent on plasma levels, the renal handling of circulating NGAL was examined using recombinant human NGAL. After intravenous recombinant human NGAL administration to mice, human NGAL in mouse urine was detected by ELISA during proximal tubular dysfunction, but not in pre-renal azotemia. Thus, during AKI, IL-6 mediates hepatic NGAL production, hepatocytes are the primary source of plasma and urine NGAL, and plasma NGAL appears in the urine during proximal tubule dysfunction. Hence, our data change the paradigm by which NGAL should be interpreted as a biomarker of AKI.


The antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities of avasopasem manganese in age-associated, cisplatin-induced renal injury.

  • Kranti A Mapuskar‎ et al.
  • Redox biology‎
  • 2024‎

Cisplatin contributes to acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) that occurs with greater frequency and severity in older patients. Age-associated cisplatin sensitivity in human fibroblasts involves increased mitochondrial superoxide produced by older donor cells.


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