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Dive into the research topics where Aaron N. Chang is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron N. Chang.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Antagonism of miR-33 in mice promotes reverse cholesterol transport and regression of atherosclerosis

Katey J. Rayner; Frederick J. Sheedy; Christine Esau; Farah N. Hussain; Ryan E. Temel; Saj Parathath; Janine M. van Gils; Alistair Rayner; Aaron N. Chang; Yajaira Suárez; Carlos Fernández-Hernando; Edward A. Fisher; Kathryn J. Moore

Plasma HDL levels have a protective role in atherosclerosis, yet clinical therapies to raise HDL levels have remained elusive. Recent advances in the understanding of lipid metabolism have revealed that miR-33, an intronic microRNA located within the SREBF2 gene, suppresses expression of the cholesterol transporter ABC transporter A1 (ABCA1) and lowers HDL levels. Conversely, mechanisms that inhibit miR-33 increase ABCA1 and circulating HDL levels, suggesting that antagonism of miR-33 may be atheroprotective. As the regression of atherosclerosis is clinically desirable, we assessed the impact of miR-33 inhibition in mice deficient for the LDL receptor (Ldlr-/- mice), with established atherosclerotic plaques. Mice treated with anti-miR33 for 4 weeks showed an increase in circulating HDL levels and enhanced reverse cholesterol transport to the plasma, liver, and feces. Consistent with this, anti-miR33-treated mice showed reductions in plaque size and lipid content, increased markers of plaque stability, and decreased inflammatory gene expression. Notably, in addition to raising ABCA1 levels in the liver, anti-miR33 oligonucleotides directly targeted the plaque macrophages, in which they enhanced ABCA1 expression and cholesterol removal. These studies establish that raising HDL levels by anti-miR33 oligonucleotide treatment promotes reverse cholesterol transport and atherosclerosis regression and suggest that it may be a promising strategy to treat atherosclerotic vascular disease.


Nature Methods | 2017

Combinatorial CRISPR–Cas9 screens for de novo mapping of genetic interactions

John Paul Shen; Dongxin Zhao; Roman Sasik; Jens Luebeck; Amanda Birmingham; Ana Bojorquez-Gomez; Katherine Licon; Kristin Klepper; Daniel Pekin; Alex N. Beckett; Kyle Salinas Sanchez; Alex Thomas; Chih-Chung Kuo; Dan Du; Assen Roguev; Nathan E. Lewis; Aaron N. Chang; Jason F. Kreisberg; Nevan J. Krogan; Lei S. Qi; Trey Ideker; Prashant Mali

We developed a systematic approach to map human genetic networks by combinatorial CRISPR–Cas9 perturbations coupled to robust analysis of growth kinetics. We targeted all pairs of 73 cancer genes with dual guide RNAs in three cell lines, comprising 141,912 tests of interaction. Numerous therapeutically relevant interactions were identified, and these patterns replicated with combinatorial drugs at 75% precision. From these results, we anticipate that cellular context will be critical to synthetic-lethal therapies.


Nature Immunology | 2014

Id2 and Id3 maintain the regulatory T cell pool to suppress inflammatory disease

Masaki Miyazaki; Kazuko Miyazaki; Shuwen Chen; Manami Itoi; Marina Miller; Li-Fan Lu; Nissi M. Varki; Aaron N. Chang; David H. Broide; Cornelis Murre

Regulatory T (Treg) cells suppress the development of inflammatory disease, but our knowledge of transcriptional regulators that control this function remains incomplete. Here we show that expression of Id2 and Id3 in Treg cells was required to suppress development of fatal inflammatory disease. We found that T cell antigen receptor (TCR)-driven signaling initially decreased the abundance of Id3, which led to the activation of a follicular regulatory T (TFR) cell–specific transcription signature. However, sustained lower abundance of Id2 and Id3 interfered with proper development of TFR cells. Depletion of Id2 and Id3 expression in Treg cells resulted in compromised maintenance and localization of the Treg cell population. Thus, Id2 and Id3 enforce TFR cell checkpoints and control the maintenance and homing of Treg cells.


Nature Immunology | 2015

The chromatin remodeler Brg1 activates enhancer repertoires to establish B cell identity and modulate cell growth

Claudia Bossen; Caroline S. Murre; Aaron N. Chang; Robert Månsson; Hans Reimer Rodewald; Cornelis Murre

Early B cell development is orchestrated by the combined activities of the transcriptional regulators E2A, EBF1, Foxo1 and Ikaros. However, how the genome-wide binding patterns of these regulators are modulated during B lineage development remains to be determined. Here we found that in lymphoid progenitor cells, the chromatin remodeler Brg1 specified the B cell fate. In committed pro-B cells, Brg1 regulated contraction of the locus encoding the immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) and controlled expression of the gene encoding the transcription factor c-Myc (Myc) to modulate the expression of genes encoding products that regulate ribosome biogenesis. In committed pro-B cells, Brg1 suppressed a pre-B lineage–specific pattern of gene expression. Finally, we found that Brg1 acted mechanistically to establish B cell fate and modulate cell growth by facilitating access of lineage-specific transcription factors to enhancer repertoires.


Genes & Development | 2015

The E–Id protein axis modulates the activities of the PI3K–AKT–mTORC1–Hif1a and c-myc/p19Arf pathways to suppress innate variant TFH cell development, thymocyte expansion, and lymphomagenesis

Masaki Miyazaki; Kazuko Miyazaki; Shuwen Chen; Vivek Chandra; Keisuke Wagatsuma; Yasutoshi Agata; Hans Reimer Rodewald; Rintaro Saito; Aaron N. Chang; Nissi M. Varki; Hiroshi Kawamoto; Cornelis Murre

It is now well established that the E and Id protein axis regulates multiple steps in lymphocyte development. However, it remains unknown how E and Id proteins mechanistically enforce and maintain the naïve T-cell fate. Here we show that Id2 and Id3 suppressed the development and expansion of innate variant follicular helper T (TFH) cells. Innate variant TFH cells required major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I-like signaling and were associated with germinal center B cells. We found that Id2 and Id3 induced Foxo1 and Foxp1 expression to antagonize the activation of a TFH transcription signature. We show that Id2 and Id3 acted upstream of the Hif1a/Foxo/AKT/mTORC1 pathway as well as the c-myc/p19Arf module to control cellular expansion. We found that mice depleted for Id2 and Id3 expression developed colitis and αβ T-cell lymphomas. Lymphomas depleted for Id2 and Id3 expression displayed elevated levels of c-myc, whereas p19Arf abundance declined. Transcription signatures of Id2- and Id3-depleted lymphomas revealed similarities to genetic deficiencies associated with Burkitt lymphoma. We propose that, in response to antigen receptor and/or cytokine signaling, the E-Id protein axis modulates the activities of the PI3K-AKT-mTORC1-Hif1a and c-myc/p19Arf pathways to control cellular expansion and homeostatic proliferation.


Oncotarget | 2016

Downregulation of 26S proteasome catalytic activity promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition

Asoka Banno; Daniel A. Garcia; Eric D. van Baarsel; Patrick J. Metz; Kathleen M. Fisch; Christella E. Widjaja; Stephanie H. Kim; Justine Lopez; Aaron N. Chang; Paul P. Geurink; Bogdan I. Florea; Hermen S. Overkleeft; Huib Ovaa; Jack D. Bui; Jing Yang; John T. Chang

The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) endows carcinoma cells with phenotypic plasticity that can facilitate the formation of cancer stem cells (CSCs) and contribute to the metastatic cascade. While there is substantial support for the role of EMT in driving cancer cell dissemination, less is known about the intracellular molecular mechanisms that govern formation of CSCs via EMT. Here we show that β2 and β5 proteasome subunit activity is downregulated during EMT in immortalized human mammary epithelial cells. Moreover, selective proteasome inhibition enabled mammary epithelial cells to acquire certain morphologic and functional characteristics reminiscent of cancer stem cells, including CD44 expression, self-renewal, and tumor formation. Transcriptomic analyses suggested that proteasome-inhibited cells share gene expression signatures with cells that have undergone EMT, in part, through modulation of the TGF-β signaling pathway. These findings suggest that selective downregulation of proteasome activity in mammary epithelial cells can initiate the EMT program and acquisition of a cancer stem cell-like phenotype. As proteasome inhibitors become increasingly used in cancer treatment, our findings highlight a potential risk of these therapeutic strategies and suggest a possible mechanism by which carcinoma cells may escape from proteasome inhibitor-based therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Proteomic analysis of highly prevalent amyloid A amyloidosis endemic to endangered island foxes.

Patricia M. Gaffney; Denise M. Imai; Deana L. Clifford; Majid Ghassemian; Roman Sasik; Aaron N. Chang; Timothy D. O’Brien; Judith A. Coppinger; Margarita Trejo; Eliezer Masliah; Linda Munson; Christina J. Sigurdson

Amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis is a debilitating, often fatal, systemic amyloid disease associated with chronic inflammation and persistently elevated serum amyloid A (SAA). Elevated SAA is necessary but not sufficient to cause disease and the risk factors for AA amyloidosis remain poorly understood. Here we identify an extraordinarily high prevalence of AA amyloidosis (34%) in a genetically isolated population of island foxes (Urocyon littoralis) with concurrent chronic inflammatory diseases. Amyloid deposits were most common in kidney (76%), spleen (58%), oral cavity (45%), and vasculature (44%) and were composed of unbranching, 10 nm in diameter fibrils. Peptide sequencing by mass spectrometry revealed that SAA peptides were dominant in amyloid-laden kidney, together with high levels of apolipoprotein E, apolipoprotein A-IV, fibrinogen-α chain, and complement C3 and C4 (false discovery rate ≤0.05). Reassembled peptide sequences showed island fox SAA as an 111 amino acid protein, most similar to dog and artic fox, with 5 unique amino acid variants among carnivores. SAA peptides extended to the last two C-terminal amino acids in 5 of 9 samples, indicating that near full length SAA was often present in amyloid aggregates. These studies define a remarkably prevalent AA amyloidosis in island foxes with widespread systemic amyloid deposition, a unique SAA sequence, and the co-occurrence of AA with apolipoproteins.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2016

Id3 Orchestrates Germinal Center B Cell Development

Shuwen Chen; Masaki Miyazaki; Vivek Chandra; Kathleen M. Fisch; Aaron N. Chang; Cornelis Murre

ABSTRACT Previous studies have demonstrated that E proteins induce activation-induced deaminase (AID) expression in activated B cells. Here, we examined the role of Id3 in germinal center (GC) cells. We found that Id3 expression is high in follicular B lineage cells but declines in GC cells. Immunized mice with Id3 expression depleted displayed a block in germinal center B cell maturation, showed reduced numbers of marginal zone B cells and class-switched cells, and were associated with decreased antibody titers and lower numbers of plasma cells. In vitro, Id3-depleted B cells displayed a defect in class switch recombination. Whereas AID levels were not altered in Id3-depleted activated B cells, the expression of a subset of genes encoding signaling components of antigen receptor-, cytokine receptor-, and chemokine receptor-mediated signaling was significantly impaired. We propose that during the GC reaction, Id3 levels decline to activate the expression of genes encoding signaling components that mediate B cell receptor- and or cytokine receptor-mediated signaling to promote the differentiation of GC B cells.


Cell | 2017

Non-coding Transcription Instructs Chromatin Folding and Compartmentalization to Dictate Enhancer-Promoter Communication and T Cell Fate

Takeshi Isoda; Amanda J. Moore; Zhaoren He; Vivek Chandra; Masatoshi Aida; Matthew Denholtz; Jan Piet van Hamburg; Kathleen M. Fisch; Aaron N. Chang; Shawn P. Fahl; David L. Wiest; Cornelis Murre


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Proteasome activity regulates CD8+ T lymphocyte metabolism and fate specification

Christella E. Widjaja; Jocelyn G. Olvera; Patrick J. Metz; Anthony T. Phan; Jeffrey N. Savas; Gerjan de Bruin; Yves Leestemaker; Celia R. Berkers; Annemieke de Jong; Bogdan I. Florea; Kathleen M. Fisch; Justine Lopez; Stephanie H. Kim; Daniel A. Garcia; Stephen Searles; Jack D. Bui; Aaron N. Chang; John R. Yates; Ananda W. Goldrath; Hermen S. Overkleeft; Huib Ovaa; John T. Chang

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Cornelis Murre

University of California

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Shuwen Chen

University of California

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Vivek Chandra

University of California

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Jack D. Bui

University of California

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John T. Chang

University of California

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Justine Lopez

University of California

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