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Dive into the research topics where Amin Khalifeh-Soltani is active.

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Featured researches published by Amin Khalifeh-Soltani.


Nature Medicine | 2014

Mfge8 promotes obesity by mediating the uptake of dietary fats and serum fatty acids

Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; William McKleroy; Stephen Sakuma; Yuk Yin Cheung; Kevin M. Tharp; Yifu Qiu; Scott M. Turner; Ajay Chawla; Andreas Stahl; Kamran Atabai

Fatty acids are integral mediators of energy storage, membrane formation and cell signaling. The pathways that orchestrate uptake of fatty acids remain incompletely understood. Expression of the integrin ligand Mfge8 is increased in human obesity and in mice on a high-fat diet, but its role in obesity is unknown. We show here that Mfge8 promotes the absorption of dietary triglycerides and the cellular uptake of fatty acid and that Mfge8-deficient (Mfge8−/−) mice are protected from diet-induced obesity, steatohepatitis and insulin resistance. Mechanistically, we found that Mfge8 coordinates fatty acid uptake through αvβ3 integrin– and αvβ5 integrin–dependent phosphorylation of Akt by phosphatidylinositide-3 kinase and mTOR complex 2, leading to translocation of Cd36 and Fatp1 from cytoplasmic vesicles to the cell surface. Collectively, our results imply a role for Mfge8 in regulating the absorption and storage of dietary fats, as well as in the development of obesity and its complications.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2014

Functional genomic screen identifies novel mediators of collagen uptake

Ting-Hein Lee; William McKleroy; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Stephen Sakuma; Stanislav Lazarev; Kirsi Riento; Stephen L. Nishimura; Ben J. Nichols; Kamran Atabai

Novel mediators of cell-mediated collagen turnover are identified through an RNAi screen targeting Drosophila genes with metazoan orthologues. Flotillin genes are key regulators of collagen turnover in mammalian cells and work by stabilizing expression of collagen endocytic receptors.


JCI insight | 2016

Mfge8 regulates enterocyte lipid storage by promoting enterocyte triglyceride hydrolase activity

Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Deepti Gupta; Arnold Ha; Jahangir Iqbal; M. Mahmood Hussain; Michael J. Podolsky; Kamran Atabai

The small intestine has an underappreciated role as a lipid storage organ. Under conditions of high dietary fat intake, enterocytes can minimize the extent of postprandial lipemia by storing newly absorbed dietary fat in cytoplasmic lipid droplets. Lipid droplets can be subsequently mobilized for the production of chylomicrons. The mechanisms that regulate this process are poorly understood. We report here that the milk protein Mfge8 regulates hydrolysis of cytoplasmic lipid droplets in enterocytes after interacting with the αvβ3 and αvβ5 integrins. Mice deficient in Mfge8 or the αvβ3 and αvβ5 integrins accumulate excess cytoplasmic lipid droplets after a fat challenge. Mechanistically, interruption of the Mfge8-integrin axis leads to impaired enterocyte intracellular triglyceride hydrolase activity in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, Mfge8 increases triglyceride hydrolase activity through a PI3 kinase/mTORC2-dependent signaling pathway. These data identify a key role for Mfge8 and the αvβ3 and αvβ5 integrins in regulating enterocyte lipid processing.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

IQGAP1-dependent scaffold suppresses RhoA and inhibits airway smooth muscle contraction.

Mallar Bhattacharya; Aparna Sundaram; Makoto Kudo; Jessica Farmer; Previn Ganesan; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Mehrdad Arjomandi; Kamran Atabai; Xiaozhu Huang; Dean Sheppard

The intracellular scaffold protein IQGAP1 supports protein complexes in conjunction with numerous binding partners involved in multiple cellular processes. Here, we determined that IQGAP1 modulates airway smooth muscle contractility. Compared with WT controls, at baseline as well as after immune sensitization and challenge, Iqgap1-/- mice had higher airway responsiveness. Tracheal rings from Iqgap1-/- mice generated greater agonist-induced contractile force, even after removal of the epithelium. RhoA, a regulator of airway smooth muscle contractility, was activated in airway smooth muscle lysates from Iqgap1-/- mice. Likewise, knockdown of IQGAP1 in primary human airway smooth muscle cells increased RhoA activity. Immunoprecipitation studies indicated that IQGAP1 binds to both RhoA and p190A-RhoGAP, a GTPase-activating protein that normally inhibits RhoA activation. Proximity ligation assays in primary airway human smooth muscle cells and mouse tracheal sections revealed colocalization of p190A-RhoGAP and RhoA; however, these proteins did not colocalize in IQGAP1 knockdown cells or in Iqgap1-/- trachea. Compared with healthy controls, human subjects with asthma had decreased IQGAP1 expression in airway biopsies. Together, these data demonstrate that IQGAP1 acts as a scaffold that colocalizes p190A-RhoGAP and RhoA, inactivating RhoA and suppressing airway smooth muscle contraction. Furthermore, our results suggest that IQGAP1 has the potential to modulate airway contraction severity in acute asthma.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2017

Cd36 knockout mice are protected against lithogenic diet-induced gallstones

Yan Xie; Vincenza Cifarelli; Terri Pietka; Elizabeth P. Newberry; Susan M. Kennedy; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Robin D. Clugston; Kamran Atabai; Nada A. Abumrad; Nicholas O. Davidson

The scavenger receptor and multiligand transporter CD36 functions to promote cellular free fatty acid uptake and regulates aspects of both hepatic and intestinal cholesterol metabolism. However, the role of CD36 in regulating canalicular and biliary cholesterol transport and secretion is unknown. Here, we show that germline Cd36 knockout (KO) mice are protected against lithogenic diet (LD)-induced gallstones compared with congenic (C57BL6/J) controls. Cd36 KO mice crossed into congenic L-Fabp KO mice (DKO mice) demonstrated protection against LD-induced gallstones, reversing the susceptibility phenotype observed in L-Fabp KO mice. DKO mice demonstrated reduced biliary cholesterol secretion and a shift into more hydrophophilic bile acid species, without changes in either BA pool size or fecal excretion. In addition, we found that the mean and maximum force of gallbladder contraction was increased in germline Cd36 KO mice, and gallbladder lipid content was reduced compared with wild-type controls. Finally, whereas germline Cd36 KO mice were protected against LD-induced gallstones, neither liver- nor intestine-specific Cd36 KO mice were protected. Taken together, our findings show that CD36 plays an important role in modifying gallstone susceptibility in mice, at least in part by altering biliary lipid composition, but also by promoting gallbladder contractility.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Targeting integrin α5β1 ameliorates severe airway hyperresponsiveness in experimental asthma

Aparna Sundaram; Chun Chen; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Amha Atakilit; Xin Ren; Wenli Qiu; Hyunil Jo; William F. DeGrado; Xiaozhu Huang; Dean Sheppard

Treatment options are limited for severe asthma, and the need for additional therapies remains great. Previously, we demonstrated that integrin &agr;v&bgr;6-deficient mice are protected from airway hyperresponsiveness, due in part to increased expression of the murine ortholog of human chymase. Here, we determined that chymase protects against cytokine-enhanced bronchoconstriction by cleaving fibronectin to impair tension transmission in airway smooth muscle (ASM). Additionally, we identified a pathway that can be therapeutically targeted to mitigate the effects of airway hyperresponsiveness. Administration of chymase to human bronchial rings abrogated IL-13–enhanced contraction, and this effect was not due to alterations in calcium homeostasis or myosin light chain phosphorylation. Rather, chymase cleaved fibronectin, inhibited ASM adhesion, and attenuated focal adhesion phosphorylation. Disruption of integrin ligation with an RGD-containing peptide abrogated IL-13–enhanced contraction, with no further effect from chymase. We identified &agr;5&bgr;1 as the primary fibronectin-binding integrin in ASM, and &agr;5&bgr;1-specific blockade inhibited focal adhesion phosphorylation and IL-13–enhanced contraction, with no additional effect from chymase. Delivery of an &agr;5&bgr;1 inhibitor into murine airways abrogated the exaggerated bronchoconstriction induced by allergen sensitization and challenge. Finally, &agr;5&bgr;1 blockade enhanced the effect of the bronchodilator isoproterenol on airway relaxation. Our data identify the &agr;5&bgr;1 integrin as a potential therapeutic target to mitigate the severity of airway contraction in asthma.


eLife | 2016

α8β1 integrin regulates nutrient absorption through an Mfge8-PTEN dependent mechanism.

Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Arnold Ha; Michael J. Podolsky; Donald Mccarthy; William McKleroy; Saeedeh Azary; Stephen Sakuma; Kevin M. Tharp; Nanyan Wu; Yasuyuki Yokosaki; Daniel O. Hart; Andreas Stahl; Kamran Atabai

Coordinated gastrointestinal smooth muscle contraction is critical for proper nutrient absorption and is altered in a number of medical disorders. In this work, we demonstrate a critical role for the RGD-binding integrin α8β1 in promoting nutrient absorption through regulation of gastrointestinal motility. Smooth muscle-specific deletion and antibody blockade of α8 in mice result in enhanced gastric antral smooth muscle contraction, more rapid gastric emptying, and more rapid transit of food through the small intestine leading to malabsorption of dietary fats and carbohydrates as well as protection from weight gain in a diet-induced model of obesity. Mechanistically, ligation of α8β1 by the milk protein Mfge8 reduces antral smooth muscle contractile force by preventing RhoA activation through a PTEN-dependent mechanism. Collectively, our results identify a role for α8β1 in regulating gastrointestinal motility and identify α8 as a potential target for disorders characterized by hypo- or hyper-motility. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.13063.001


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2016

Prevention of gallbladder hypomotility via FATP2 inhibition protects from lithogenic diet-induced cholelithiasis

Kevin M. Tharp; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; Hyo Min Park; David A Yurek; Alaric Falcon; Louis Wong; Rouying Feng; Kamran Atabai; Andreas Stahl

Gallstone disease is a widespread disorder costing billions for annual treatment in the United States. The primary mechanisms underlying gallstone formation are biliary cholesterol supersaturation and gallbladder hypomotility. The relative contribution of these two processes has been difficult to dissect, as experimental lithogenic diets cause both bile supersaturation and alterations in gallbladder motility. Importantly, there is no mechanistic explanation for obesity as a major risk factor for cholelithiasis. We discovered that lithogenic diets induce ectopic triacylglycerol (TAG) accumulation, a major feature of obesity and a known muscle contraction impairing condition. We hypothesized that prevention of TAG accumulation in gallbladder walls may prevent gallbladder contractile dysfunction without impacting biliary cholesterol saturation. We utilized adeno-associated virus-mediated knock down of the long-chain fatty acid transporter 2 (FATP2; Slc27A2), which is highly expressed by gallbladder epithelial cells, to downregulate lithogenic diet-associated TAG accumulation. FATP2-knockdown significantly reduced gallbladder TAG, but did not affect key bile composition parameters. Importantly, measurements with force displacement transducers showed that contractile strength in FATP2-knockdown gallbladders was significantly greater than in control gallbladders following lithogenic diet administration, and the magnitude of this effect was sufficient to prevent the formation of gallstones. FATP2-driven fatty acid uptake and the subsequent TAG accumulation in gallbladder tissue plays a pivotal role in cholelithiasis, and prevention of this process can protect from gallstone formation, even in the context of supersaturated bile cholesterol levels, thus pointing to new treatment approaches and targets.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2018

Cell division cycle 7 kinase is a negative regulator of cell-mediated collagen degradation

Michael J. Podolsky; Deepti Gupta; Arnold Ha; Ryan Ta; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani; William McKleroy; Ritwik Datta; Dean Sheppard; Kamran Atabai

Although extensive work has delineated many of the mechanisms of extracellular matrix (ECM) production, far less is known about pathways that regulate ECM degradation. This is particularly true of cellular internalization and degradation of matrix, which play an underappreciated role in ECM metabolism and lung fibrosis. For example, genetic perturbation of this pathway leads to exacerbated fibrosis in experimental animal models. In this work, we present the results of an unbiased screen of Drosophila phagocytes that yielded multiple genes that, when silenced, led to increased collagen uptake. We further describe the function of cell division cycle 7 kinase (CDC7) as a specific suppressor of collagen uptake. We show that the genetic or pharmacological inhibition of CDC7 results in increased expression of the collagen endocytic receptor Endo180. Chromobox 5 (CBX5) is a putative target of CDC7, and genetic silencing of CBX5 also results in increased Endo180 and collagen uptake. Finally, CRISPR-mediated activation of Endo180 expression results in increased collagen uptake, suggesting that CDC7 regulates collagen internalization through increased Endo180 expression. Targeting the regulatory elements of the collagen degradative machinery may be a useful therapeutic approach in diseases of fibrosis or malignancy.


Iranian Journal of Pediatrics | 2013

Intrasphincteric botulinum toxin injection in treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation in children.

Javad Ahmadi; Saeedeh Azary; Bahar Ashjaei; Pedram Paragomi; Amin Khalifeh-Soltani

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Kamran Atabai

University of California

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Arnold Ha

University of California

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Stephen Sakuma

University of California

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Andreas Stahl

University of California

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Dean Sheppard

University of California

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Deepti Gupta

University of California

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Kevin M. Tharp

University of California

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Ritwik Datta

University of California

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