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Dive into the research topics where Amir I. Mina is active.

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Featured researches published by Amir I. Mina.


Cell Metabolism | 2017

Genetic Depletion of Adipocyte Creatine Metabolism Inhibits Diet-Induced Thermogenesis and Drives Obesity

Lawrence Kazak; Edward T. Chouchani; Gina Z. Lu; Mark P. Jedrychowski; Curtis J. Bare; Amir I. Mina; Manju Kumari; Song Zhang; Ivan Vuckovic; Dina Laznik-Bogoslavski; Petras P. Dzeja; Alexander S. Banks; Evan D. Rosen; Bruce M. Spiegelman

Diet-induced thermogenesis is an important homeostatic mechanism that limits weight gain in response to caloric excess and contributes to the relative stability of body weight in most individuals. We previously demonstrated that creatine enhances energy expenditure through stimulation of mitochondrial ATP turnover, but the physiological role and importance of creatine energetics in adipose tissue have not been explored. Here, we have inactivated the first and rate-limiting enzyme of creatine biosynthesis, glycine amidinotransferase (GATM), selectively in fat (Adipo-Gatm KO). Adipo-Gatm KO mice are prone to diet-induced obesity due to the suppression of elevated energy expenditure that occurs in response to high-calorie feeding. This is paralleled by a blunted capacity for β3-adrenergic activation of metabolic rate, which is rescued by dietary creatine supplementation. These results provide strong inxa0vivo genetic support for a role of GATM and creatine metabolism in energy expenditure, diet-induced thermogenesis, and defense against diet-induced obesity.


Nature Immunology | 2018

γδ T cells producing interleukin-17A regulate adipose regulatory T cell homeostasis and thermogenesis

Ayano C. Kohlgruber; Shani T. Gal-Oz; Nelson M. LaMarche; Moto Shimazaki; Danielle Duquette; Hung N. Nguyen; Amir I. Mina; Tyler Paras; Ali Tavakkoli; Ulrich H. von Andrian; Alexander S. Banks; Tal Shay; Michael B. Brenner; Lydia Lynch

Abstractγδ T cells are situated at barrier sites and guard the body from infection and damage. However, little is known about their roles outside of host defense in nonbarrier tissues. Here, we characterize a highly enriched tissue-resident population of γδ T cells in adipose tissue that regulate age-dependent regulatory T cell (Treg) expansion and control core body temperature in response to environmental fluctuations. Mechanistically, innate PLZF+ γδ T cells produced tumor necrosis factor and interleukin (IL) 17u2009A and determined PDGFRα+ and Pdpn+ stromal-cell production of IL-33 in adipose tissue. Mice lacking γδ T cells or IL-17A exhibited decreases in both ST2+ Treg cells and IL-33 abundance in visceral adipose tissue. Remarkably, these mice also lacked the ability to regulate core body temperature at thermoneutrality and after cold challenge. Together, these findings uncover important physiological roles for resident γδ T cells in adipose tissue immune homeostasis and body-temperature control.Lynch, Brenner and colleagues find that tissue-resident γδ T cells reside in adipose tissues in both mice and humans. These cells play essential roles in regulating thermogenesis and supporting age-dependent increases in adipose-tissue regulatory T cell populations.


Cell Metabolism | 2018

CalR: A Web-Based Analysis Tool for Indirect Calorimetry Experiments

Amir I. Mina; Raymond A. LeClair; Katherine B. LeClair; David E. Cohen; Louise Lantier; Alexander S. Banks

We report a web-based tool for analysis of experiments using indirect calorimetry to measure physiological energy balance. CalR simplifies the process to import raw data files, generate plots, and determine the most appropriate statistical tests for interpretation. Analysis using the generalized linear model (which includes ANOVA and ANCOVA) allows for flexibility in interpreting diverse experimental designs, including those of obesity and thermogenesis. Users also may produce standardized output files for an experiment that can be shared and subsequently re-evaluated using CalR. This framework will provide the transparency necessary to enhance consistency, rigor, and reproducibility. The CalR analysis software will greatly increase the speed and efficiency with which metabolic experiments can be organized, analyzed per accepted norms, and reproduced and will likely become a standard tool for the field. CalR is accessible at https://CalRapp.org/.


Molecular metabolism | 2018

Phosphorylation of Beta-3 adrenergic receptor at serine 247 by ERK MAP kinase drives lipolysis in obese adipocytes

Shangyu Hong; Wei Song; Peter-James H. Zushin; Bingyang Liu; Mark P. Jedrychowski; Amir I. Mina; Zhaoming Deng; Dimitrije Cabarkapa; Jessica A. Hall; Colin J. Palmer; Hassan Aliakbarian; John Szpyt; Steven P. Gygi; Ali Tavakkoli; Lydia Lynch; Norbert Perrimon; Alexander S. Banks

Objective The inappropriate release of free fatty acids from obese adipose tissue stores has detrimental effects on metabolism, but key molecular mechanisms controlling FFA release from adipocytes remain undefined. Although obesity promotes systemic inflammation, we find activation of the inflammation-associated Mitogen Activated Protein kinase ERK occurs specifically in adipose tissues of obese mice, and provide evidence that adipocyte ERK activation may explain exaggerated adipose tissue lipolysis observed in obesity. Methods and Results We provide genetic and pharmacological evidence that inhibition of the MEK/ERK pathway in human adipose tissue, mice, and flies all effectively limit adipocyte lipolysis. In complementary findings, we show that genetic and obesity-mediated activation of ERK enhances lipolysis, whereas adipose tissue specific knock-out of ERK2, the exclusive ERK1/2 protein in adipocytes, dramatically impairs lipolysis in explanted mouse adipose tissue. In addition, acute inhibition of MEK/ERK signaling also decreases lipolysis in adipose tissue and improves insulin sensitivity in obese mice. Mice with decreased rates of adipose tissue lipolysis in vivo caused by either MEK or ATGL pharmacological inhibition were unable to liberate sufficient White Adipose Tissue (WAT) energy stores to fuel thermogenesis from brown fat during a cold temperature challenge. To identify a molecular mechanism controlling these actions, we performed unbiased phosphoproteomic analysis of obese adipose tissue at different time points following acute pharmacological MEK/ERK inhibition. MEK/ERK inhibition decreased levels of adrenergic signaling and caused de-phosphorylation of the β3-adrenergic receptor (β3AR) on serine 247. To define the functional implications of this phosphorylation, we showed that CRISPR/Cas9 engineered cells expressing wild type β3AR exhibited β3AR phosphorylation by ERK2 and enhanced lipolysis, but this was not seen when serine 247 of β3AR was mutated to alanine. Conclusion Taken together, these data suggest that ERK activation in adipocytes and subsequent phosphorylation of the β3AR on S247 are critical regulatory steps in the enhanced adipocyte lipolysis of obesity.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Association Between Precautionary Behaviors and Breast Cancer–Related Lymphedema in Patients Undergoing Bilateral Surgery

Maria S. Asdourian; Meyha N. Swaroop; Hoda E. Sayegh; Cheryl L. Brunelle; Amir I. Mina; Hui Zheng; Melissa N. Skolny; Alphonse G. Taghian

Purpose This study examined the lifestyle and clinical risk factors for lymphedema in a cohort of patients who underwent bilateral breast cancer surgery. Patients and Methods Between 2013 and 2016, 327 patients who underwent bilateral breast cancer surgery were prospectively screened for arm lymphedema as quantified by the weight-adjusted volume change (WAC) formula. Arm perometry and subjective data were collected preoperatively and at regular intervals postoperatively. At the time of each measurement, patients completed a risk assessment survey that reported the number of blood draws, injections, blood pressure readings, trauma to the at-risk arm, and number of flights since the previous measurement. Generalized estimating equations were applied to ascertain the association among arm volume changes, clinical factors, and risk exposures. Results The cohort comprised 327 patients and 654 at-risk arms, with a median postoperative follow-up that ranged from 6.1 to 68.2 months. Of the 654 arms, 83 developed lymphedema, defined as a WAC ≥ 10% relative to baseline. On multivariable analysis, none of the lifestyle risk factors examined through the risk assessment survey were significantly associated with increased WAC. Multivariable analysis demonstrated that having a body mass index ≥ 25 kg/m2 at the time of breast cancer diagnosis ( P = .0404), having undergone axillary lymph node dissection ( P = .0464), and receipt of adjuvant chemotherapy ( P = .0161) were significantly associated with increased arm volume. Conclusion Blood pressure readings, blood draws, injections, and number or duration of flights were not significantly associated with increases in arm volume in this cohort. These findings may help to guide patient education about lymphedema risk reduction strategies for those who undergo bilateral breast cancer surgery.


eLife | 2018

A selective gut bacterial bile salt hydrolase alters host metabolism

Lina Yao; Sarah Craven Seaton; Sula Ndousse-Fetter; Arijit A. Adhikari; Nicholas DiBenedetto; Amir I. Mina; Alexander S. Banks; Lynn Bry; A. Sloan Devlin

The human gut microbiota impacts host metabolism and has been implicated in the pathophysiology of obesity and metabolic syndromes. However, defining the roles of specific microbial activities and metabolites on host phenotypes has proven challenging due to the complexity of the microbiome-host ecosystem. Here, we identify strains from the abundant gut bacterial phylum Bacteroidetes that display selective bile salt hydrolase (BSH) activity. Using isogenic strains of wild-type and BSH-deleted Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, we selectively modulated the levels of the bile acid tauro-β-muricholic acid in monocolonized gnotobiotic mice. B. thetaiotaomicron BSH mutant-colonized mice displayed altered metabolism, including reduced weight gain and respiratory exchange ratios, as well as transcriptional changes in metabolic, circadian rhythm, and immune pathways in the gut and liver. Our results demonstrate that metabolites generated by a single microbial gene and enzymatic activity can profoundly alter host metabolism and gene expression at local and organism-level scales.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Ablation of PM20D1 reveals N-acyl amino acid control of metabolism and nociception

Jonathan Z. Long; Alexander M. Roche; Charles A. Berdan; Sharon M. Louie; Amanda J. Roberts; Katrin J. Svensson; Florence Y. Dou; Leslie A. Bateman; Amir I. Mina; Zhaoming Deng; Mark P. Jedrychowski; Hua Lin; Theodore M. Kamenecka; John M. Asara; Patrick R. Griffin; Alexander S. Banks; Daniel K. Nomura; Bruce M. Spiegelman

Significance Bioactive lipids control a wide variety of physiologic processes. We have recently identified a branch of bioactive lipid signaling mediated by N-acyl amino acids (NAAs) and the circulating enzyme peptidase M20 domain-containing 1 (PM20D1). Here we generate and characterize mice globally deficient in PM20D1. These PM20D1-KO mice have bidirectional changes in NAA levels in blood and tissues and exhibit a variety of metabolic and nociceptive phenotypes. Our findings elucidate the endogenous physiologic functions for NAA signaling in vivo and suggest PM20D1 inhibitors might be useful for the treatment of pain. N-acyl amino acids (NAAs) are a structurally diverse class of bioactive signaling lipids whose endogenous functions have largely remained uncharacterized. To clarify the physiologic roles of NAAs, we generated mice deficient in the circulating enzyme peptidase M20 domain-containing 1 (PM20D1). Global PM20D1-KO mice have dramatically reduced NAA hydrolase/synthase activities in tissues and blood with concomitant bidirectional dysregulation of endogenous NAAs. Compared with control animals, PM20D1-KO mice exhibit a variety of metabolic and pain phenotypes, including insulin resistance, altered body temperature in cold, and antinociceptive behaviors. Guided by these phenotypes, we identify N-oleoyl-glutamine (C18:1-Gln) as a key PM20D1-regulated NAA. In addition to its mitochondrial uncoupling bioactivity, C18:1-Gln also antagonizes certain members of the transient receptor potential (TRP) calcium channels including TRPV1. Direct administration of C18:1-Gln to mice is sufficient to recapitulate a subset of phenotypes observed in PM20D1-KO animals. These data demonstrate that PM20D1 is a dominant enzymatic regulator of NAA levels in vivo and elucidate physiologic functions for NAA signaling in metabolism and nociception.


Molecular metabolism | 2017

Cdkal1, a type 2 diabetes susceptibility gene, regulates mitochondrial function in adipose tissue

Colin J. Palmer; Raphael J. Bruckner; Joao A. Paulo; Lawrence Kazak; Jonathan Z. Long; Amir I. Mina; Zhaoming Deng; Katherine B. LeClair; Jessica A. Hall; Shangyu Hong; Peter-James H. Zushin; Kyle L. Smith; Steven P. Gygi; Susan J. Hagen; David E. Cohen; Alexander S. Banks

Objectives Understanding how loci identified by genome wide association studies (GWAS) contribute to pathogenesis requires new mechanistic insights. Variants within CDKAL1 are strongly linked to an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes and obesity. Investigations in mouse models have focused on the function of Cdkal1 as a tRNALys modifier and downstream effects of Cdkal1 loss on pro-insulin translational fidelity in pancreatic β−cells. However, Cdkal1 is broadly expressed in other metabolically relevant tissues, including adipose tissue. In addition, the Cdkal1 homolog Cdk5rap1 regulates mitochondrial protein translation and mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle. We tested whether adipocyte-specific Cdkal1 deletion alters systemic glucose homeostasis or adipose mitochondrial function independently of its effects on pro-insulin translation and insulin secretion. Methods We measured mRNA levels of type 2 diabetes GWAS genes, including Cdkal1, in adipose tissue from lean and obese mice. We then established a mouse model with adipocyte-specific Cdkal1 deletion. We examined the effects of adipose Cdkal1 deletion using indirect calorimetry on mice during a cold temperature challenge, as well as by measuring cellular and mitochondrial respiration in vitro. We also examined brown adipose tissue (BAT) mitochondrial morphology by electron microscopy. Utilizing co-immunoprecipitation followed by mass spectrometry, we performed interaction mapping to identify new CDKAL1 binding partners. Furthermore, we tested whether Cdkal1 loss in adipose tissue affects total protein levels or accurate Lys incorporation by tRNALys using quantitative mass spectrometry. Results We found that Cdkal1 mRNA levels are reduced in adipose tissue of obese mice. Using adipose-specific Cdkal1 KO mice (A-KO), we demonstrated that mitochondrial function is impaired in primary differentiated brown adipocytes and in isolated mitochondria from A-KO brown adipose tissue. A-KO mice displayed decreased energy expenditure during 4 °C cold challenge. Furthermore, mitochondrial morphology was highly abnormal in A-KO BAT. Surprisingly, we found that lysine codon representation was unchanged in Cdkal1 A-KO adipose tissue. We identified novel protein interactors of CDKAL1, including SLC25A4/ANT1, an inner mitochondrial membrane ADP/ATP translocator. ANT proteins can account for the UCP1-independent basal proton leak in BAT mitochondria. Cdkal1 A-KO mice had increased ANT1 protein levels in their white adipose tissue. Conclusions Cdkal1 is necessary for normal mitochondrial morphology and function in adipose tissue. These results suggest that the type 2 diabetes susceptibility gene CDKAL1 has novel functions in regulating mitochondrial activity.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2018

Enhanced Systemic and Intestinal Glucose Metabolism after Sleeve Gastrectomy Is Independent of Weight Loss

David A. Harris; Amir I. Mina; Dimitrije Cabarkapa; Keyvan Heshmati; Renuka Subramaniam; Alexander S. Banks; Ali Tavakkoli; Eric G. Sheu


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2018

Sleeve Gastrectomy Protects Against Obesogenic Insults Through Enhanced Energy Expenditure

David A. Harris; Amir I. Mina; Dimitrije Cabarkapa; Keyvan Heshmati; Renuka Subramaniam; Alexander S. Banks; Ali Tavakkoli; Eric G. Sheu

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Alexander S. Banks

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Ali Tavakkoli

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Dimitrije Cabarkapa

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Zhaoming Deng

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Colin J. Palmer

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Curtis J. Bare

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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