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Dive into the research topics where Andrew M. Cheng is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew M. Cheng.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Trans Fatty Acids Induce Vascular Inflammation and Reduce Vascular Nitric Oxide Production in Endothelial Cells

Naomi G. Iwata; Matilda Pham; Norma O. Rizzo; Andrew M. Cheng; Ezekiel Maloney; Francis Y. Kim

Intake of trans fatty acids (TFA), which are consumed by eating foods made from partially hydrogenated vegetable oils, is associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular disease. This relation can be explained by many factors including TFAs negative effect on endothelial function and reduced nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. In this study we investigated the effects of three different TFA (2 common isomers of C18 found in partially hydrogenated vegetable oil and a C18 isomer found from ruminant-derived—dairy products and meat) on endothelial NF-κB activation and nitric oxide (NO) production. Human endothelial cells were treated with increasing concentrations of Elaidic (trans-C18:1 (9 trans)), Linoelaidic (trans-C18:2 (9 trans, 12 trans)), and Transvaccenic (trans-C18:1 (11 trans)) for 3 h. Both Elaidic and Linoelaidic acids were associated with increasing NF-κB activation as measured by IL-6 levels and phosphorylation of IκBα, and impairment of endothelial insulin signaling and NO production, whereas Transvaccenic acid was not associated with these responses. We also measured superoxide production, which has been hypothesized to be necessary in fatty acid-dependent activation of NF-κB. Both Elaidic acid and Linoelaidic acid are associated with increased superoxide production, whereas Transvaccenic acid (which did not induce inflammatory responses) did not increase superoxide production. We observed differential activation of endothelial superoxide production, NF-κB activation, and reduction in NO production by different C18 isomers suggesting that the location and number of trans double bonds effect endothelial NF-κB activation.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2011

Reduced Vascular Nitric Oxide–cGMP Signaling Contributes to Adipose Tissue Inflammation During High-Fat Feeding

Priya Handa; Sanshiro Tateya; Norma O. Rizzo; Andrew M. Cheng; Vicki Morgan-Stevenson; Chang Yeop Han; Alexander W. Clowes; Guenter Daum; Kevin D. O'Brien; Michael W. Schwartz; Alan Chait; Francis Kim

Objective—Obesity is characterized by chronic inflammation of adipose tissue, which contributes to insulin resistance and diabetes. Although nitric oxide (NO) signaling has antiinflammatory effects in the vasculature, whether reduced NO contributes to adipose tissue inflammation is unknown. We sought to determine whether (1) obesity induced by high-fat (HF) diet reduces endothelial nitric oxide signaling in adipose tissue, (2) reduced endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) signaling is sufficient to induce adipose tissue inflammation independent of diet, and (3) increased cGMP signaling can block adipose tissue inflammation induced by HF feeding. Methods and Results—Relative to mice fed a low-fat diet, an HF diet markedly reduced phospho-eNOS and phospho-vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (phospho-VASP), markers of vascular NO signaling. Expression of proinflammatory cytokines was increased in adipose tissue of eNOS−/− mice. Conversely, enhancement of signaling downstream of NO by phosphodiesterase-5 inhibition using sildenafil attenuated HF-induced proinflammatory cytokine expression and the recruitment of macrophages into adipose tissue. Finally, we implicate a role for VASP, a downstream mediator of NO-cGMP signaling in mediating eNOS-induced antiinflammatory effects because VASP−/− mice recapitulated the proinflammatory phenotype displayed by eNOS−/− mice. Conclusion—These results imply a physiological role for endothelial NO to limit obesity-associated inflammation in adipose tissue and hence identify the NO-cGMP-VASP pathway as a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of diabetes.


Diabetes | 2011

Endothelial NO/cGMP/VASP Signaling Attenuates Kupffer Cell Activation and Hepatic Insulin Resistance Induced by High-Fat Feeding

Sanshiro Tateya; Norma O. Rizzo; Priya Handa; Andrew M. Cheng; Vicki Morgan-Stevenson; Guenter Daum; Alexander W. Clowes; Gregory J. Morton; Michael W. Schwartz; Francis Kim

OBJECTIVE Proinflammatory activation of Kupffer cells is implicated in the effect of high-fat feeding to cause liver insulin resistance. We sought to determine whether reduced endothelial nitric oxide (NO) signaling contributes to the effect of high-fat feeding to increase hepatic inflammatory signaling and if so, whether this effect 1) involves activation of Kupffer cells and 2) is ameliorated by increased NO signaling. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Effect of NO/cGMP signaling on hepatic inflammation and on isolated Kupffer cells was examined in C57BL/6 mice, eNos−/− mice, and Vasp−/− mice fed a low-fat or high-fat diet. RESULTS We show that high-fat feeding induces proinflammatory activation of Kupffer cells in wild-type mice coincident with reduced liver endothelial nitric oxide synthase activity and NO content while, conversely, enhancement of signaling downstream of endogenous NO by phosphodiesterase-5 inhibition protects against high fat–induced inflammation in Kupffer cells. Furthermore, proinflammatory activation of Kupffer cells is evident in eNos−/− mice even on a low-fat diet. Targeted deletion of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), a key downstream target of endothelially derived NO, similarly predisposes to hepatic and Kupffer cell inflammation and abrogates the protective effect of NO signaling in both macrophages and hepatocytes studied in a cell culture model. CONCLUSIONS These results collectively imply a physiological role for endothelial NO to limit obesity-associated inflammation and insulin resistance in hepatocytes and support a model in which Kupffer cell activation during high-fat feeding is dependent on reduced NO signaling. Our findings also identify the NO/VASP pathway as a novel potential target for the treatment of obesity-associated liver insulin resistance.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Apolipoprotein A-I Attenuates Palmitate-Mediated NF-κB Activation by Reducing Toll-Like Receptor-4 Recruitment into Lipid Rafts

Andrew M. Cheng; Priya Handa; Sanshiro Tateya; Jay Schwartz; Chongren Tang; Poulami Mitra; John F. Oram; Alan Chait; Francis Kim

While high-density lipoprotein (HDL) is known to protect against a wide range of inflammatory stimuli, its anti-inflammatory mechanisms are not well understood. Furthermore, HDLs protective effects against saturated dietary fats have not been previously described. In this study, we used endothelial cells to demonstrate that while palmitic acid activates NF-κB signaling, apolipoprotein A–I, (apoA-I), the major protein component of HDL, attenuates palmitate-induced NF-κB activation. Further, vascular NF-κB signaling (IL-6, MCP-1, TNF-α) and macrophage markers (CD68, CD11c) induced by 24 weeks of a diabetogenic diet containing cholesterol (DDC) is reduced in human apoA-I overexpressing transgenic C57BL/6 mice compared to age-matched WT controls. Moreover, WT mice on DDC compared to a chow diet display increased gene expression of lipid raft markers such as Caveolin-1 and Flotillin-1, and inflammatory Toll-like receptors (TLRs) (TLR2, TLR4) in the vasculature. However apoA-I transgenic mice on DDC show markedly reduced expression of these genes. Finally, we show that in endothelial cells TLR4 is recruited into lipid rafts in response to palmitate, and that apoA-I prevents palmitate-induced TLR4 trafficking into lipid rafts, thereby blocking NF-κB activation. Thus, apoA-I overexpression might be a useful therapeutic tool against vascular inflammation.


Diabetes | 2015

M2 Macrophage Polarization Mediates Anti-inflammatory Effects of Endothelial Nitric Oxide Signaling

Woo J e Lee; Sanshiro Tateya; Andrew M. Cheng; Norma Rizzo-DeLeon; Nicholas F. Wang; Priya Handa; Carole L. Wilson; Alexander W. Clowes; Ian R. Sweet; Karol Bomsztyk; Michael W. Schwartz; Francis Kim

Endothelial nitric oxide (NO) signaling plays a physiological role in limiting obesity-associated insulin resistance and inflammation. This study was undertaken to investigate whether this NO effect involves polarization of macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype. Mice with transgenic endothelial NO synthase overexpression were protected against high-fat diet (HFD)-induced hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance, and this effect was associated with reduced proinflammatory M1 and increased anti-inflammatory M2 activation of Kupffer cells. In cell culture studies, exposure of macrophages to endothelial NO similarly reduced inflammatory (M1) and increased anti-inflammatory (M2) gene expression. Similar effects were induced by macrophage overexpression of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), a key downstream mediator of intracellular NO signaling. Conversely, VASP deficiency induced proinflammatory M1 macrophage activation, and the transplantation of bone marrow from VASP-deficient donor mice into normal recipients caused hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance resembling that induced in normal mice by consumption of an HFD. These data suggest that proinflammatory macrophage M1 activation and macrophage-mediated inflammation are tonically inhibited by NO → VASP signal transduction, and that reduced NO → VASP signaling is involved in the effect of HFD feeding to induce M1 activation of Kupffer cells and associated hepatic inflammation. Our data implicate endothelial NO → VASP signaling as a physiological determinant of macrophage polarization and show that signaling via this pathway is required to prevent hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance.


Diabetes | 2013

VASP Increases Hepatic Fatty Acid Oxidation by Activating AMPK in Mice

Sanshiro Tateya; Norma RizzoDe Leon; Priya Handa; Andrew M. Cheng; Vicki Morgan-Stevenson; Kayoko Ogimoto; Jenny E. Kanter; Karin E. Bornfeldt; Guenter Daum; Alexander W. Clowes; Alan Chait; Francis Kim

Activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) signaling reduces hepatic steatosis and hepatic insulin resistance; however, its regulatory mechanisms are not fully understood. In this study, we sought to determine whether vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) signaling improves lipid metabolism in the liver and, if so, whether VASP’s effects are mediated by AMPK. We show that disruption of VASP results in significant hepatic steatosis as a result of significant impairment of fatty acid oxidation, VLDL-triglyceride (TG) secretion, and AMPK signaling. Overexpression of VASP in hepatocytes increased AMPK phosphorylation and fatty acid oxidation and reduced hepatocyte TG accumulation; however, these responses were suppressed in the presence of an AMPK inhibitor. Restoration of AMPK phosphorylation by administration of 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide riboside in Vasp−/− mice reduced hepatic steatosis and normalized fatty acid oxidation and VLDL-TG secretion. Activation of VASP by the phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor, sildenafil, in db/db mice reduced hepatic steatosis and increased phosphorylated (p-)AMPK and p-acetyl CoA carboxylase. In Vasp−/− mice, however, sildendafil treatment did not increase p-AMPK or reduce hepatic TG content. These studies identify a role of VASP to enhance hepatic fatty acid oxidation by activating AMPK and to promote VLDL-TG secretion from the liver.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2014

Vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein protects against vascular inflammation and insulin resistance.

Andrew M. Cheng; Norma Rizzo-DeLeon; Carole L. Wilson; Woo Je Lee; Sanshiro Tateya; Alexander W. Clowes; Michael W. Schwartz; Francis Kim

Among the pleotropic effects of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) is protection against vascular inflammation during high-fat diet (HFD) feeding. The current work investigated the role of the enzyme vasodilatory-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) as a downstream mediator of the anti-inflammatory effect of NO signaling in vascular tissue. Relative to mice fed a low-fat diet (LFD), levels of VASP Ser(239) phosphorylation, a marker of VASP activation, were dramatically reduced in aortic tissue of mice with obesity induced by consuming a HFD. As reported previously, the effect of the HFD was associated with increased aortic inflammation, as measured by increased NF-κB-dependent gene expression, and reduced vascular insulin sensitivity (including insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of eNOS and Akt). These effects of the HFD were recapitulated by VASP knockout, implying a physiological role for VASP to constrain inflammatory signaling and thereby maintain vascular insulin sensitivity. Conversely, overexpression of VASP in endothelial cells blocked inflammation and insulin resistance induced by palmitate. The finding that transplantation of bone marrow from VASP-deficient donors into normal recipients does not recapitulate the vascular effects of whole body VASP deficiency suggests that the protective effects of this enzyme are not mediated in immune or other bone marrow-derived cells. These studies implicate VASP as a downstream mediator of the NO/cGMP pathway that is both necessary and sufficient to protect against vascular inflammation and insulin resistance. As such, this work identifies VASP as a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of obesity-related vascular dysfunction.


Heart | 2015

Marfan syndrome, inherited aortopathies and exercise: what is the right answer?

Andrew M. Cheng; David S. Owens

Exercise recommendations for those who have Marfan syndrome or other genetic predisposition for thoracic aortic disease remain controversial and at times ambiguous. There are no outcomes studies to help guide recommendations. In this review, we examine the guidelines regarding exercise and inherited aortic conditions, the theoretical reasoning and circumstantial evidence that support the guidelines, as well as the knowledge gaps that continue to exist.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2017

6q25.1 (TAB2) microdeletion syndrome: Congenital heart defects and cardiomyopathy

Andrew M. Cheng; Mary Beth P. Dinulos; Whitney Neufeld-Kaiser; Jill A. Rosenfeld; McKenna Kyriss; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Hiba Risheg; Peter H. Byers; Yajuan J. Liu

Congenital heart defects (CHD) are the most frequent type of congenital anomaly and are often associated with genetic and chromosomal syndromes. Haploinsufficiency of TAB2 (TGF‐beta activated kinase 1/MAP3K7 binding protein 2) has been proposed to cause valvular and cardiac outflow tract structural abnormalities. In this study, we describe 13 newly identified individuals with microdeletions of chromosome 6q25.1 that involve TAB2. One of the patients in our study cohort has the smallest deletion yet reported, affecting only TAB2. These were compared to 27 other patients reported in the published literature or DECIPHER to have similar microdeletions, for a total study group of 40 patients. Our study shows that individuals with TAB2 deletions are predisposed to developing a primary cardiomyopathy with reduced systolic function, even in the absence of CHD. Our study cohort also shares a number of non‐cardiac phenotypic findings: characteristic dysmorphic facial features, intrauterine growth restriction and/or postnatal proportionate short stature, hypotonia, developmental delay and/or intellectual disability, and connective tissue abnormalities. We conclude that a microdeletion of 6q25.1 that includes TAB2 causes a distinctive, multi‐systemic syndrome. The 6q25.1 microdeletion syndrome should be considered in a patient with cardiomyopathy or a CHD, especially valve and/or atrial or ventricular septal abnormalities, and with phenotypic features described in this study. We recommend that patients with a TAB2 deletion be screened longitudinally for systolic heart failure, even if an initial echocardiogram is normal.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2016

Marfan syndrome, inherited aortopathies and exercise: What is the right answer?

Andrew M. Cheng; David S. Owens

Exercise recommendations for those who have Marfan syndrome or other genetic predisposition for thoracic aortic disease remain controversial and at times ambiguous. There are no outcomes studies to help guide recommendations. In this review, we examine the guidelines regarding exercise and inherited aortic conditions, the theoretical reasoning and circumstantial evidence that support the guidelines, as well as the knowledge gaps that continue to exist.

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Francis Kim

University of Washington

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Priya Handa

University of Washington

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Sanshiro Tateya

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Alan Chait

University of Washington

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Guenter Daum

University of Washington

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David S. Owens

University of Washington

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Norma O. Rizzo

University of Washington

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