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Dive into the research topics where Annette Uittenbogaard is active.

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Featured researches published by Annette Uittenbogaard.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

HIV protease inhibitors promote atherosclerotic lesion formation independent of dyslipidemia by increasing CD36-dependent cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages

James Dressman; Jeanie Kincer; Sergey Matveev; Ling Guo; Richard N. Greenberg; Theresa Guerin; David W. Meade; Xiang-An Li; Weifei Zhu; Annette Uittenbogaard; Melinda E. Wilson; Eric J. Smart

Protease inhibitors decrease the viral load in HIV patients, however the patients develop hypertriglyceridemia, hypercholesterolemia, and atherosclerosis. It has been assumed that protease inhibitor-dependent increases in atherosclerosis are secondary to the dyslipidemia. Incubation of THP-1 cells or human PBMCs with protease inhibitors caused upregulation of CD36 and the accumulation of cholesteryl esters. The use of CD36-blocking antibodies, a CD36 morpholino, and monocytes isolated from CD36 null mice demonstrated that protease inhibitor-induced increases in cholesteryl esters were dependent on CD36 upregulation. These data led to the hypothesis that protease inhibitors induce foam cell formation and consequently atherosclerosis by upregulating CD36 and cholesteryl ester accumulation independent of dyslipidemia. Studies with LDL receptor null mice demonstrated that low doses of protease inhibitors induce an increase in the level of CD36 and cholesteryl ester in peritoneal macrophages and the development of atherosclerosis without altering plasma lipids. Furthermore, the lack of CD36 protected the animals from protease inhibitor-induced atherosclerosis. Finally, ritonavir increased PPAR-gamma and CD36 mRNA levels in a PKC- and PPAR-gamma-dependent manner. We conclude that protease inhibitors contribute to the formation of atherosclerosis by promoting the upregulation of CD36 and the subsequent accumulation of sterol in macrophages.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

High Density Lipoprotein Binding to Scavenger Receptor, Class B, Type I Activates Endothelial Nitric-oxide Synthase in a Ceramide-dependent Manner

Xiang-An Li; William B. Titlow; Brian A. Jackson; Nathalia Giltiay; Mariana Nikolova-Karakashian; Annette Uittenbogaard; Eric J. Smart

Recently it has been demonstrated that high density lipoprotein (HDL) binding to scavenger receptors, class B, type I (SR-BI) stimulates endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) activity. In the present studies we used a Chinese hamster ovary cell system and a human microvascular endothelial cell line to confirm that HDL stimulates eNOS activity in a SR-BI-dependent manner. Importantly, we have extended these studies to examine the mechanism whereby HDL binding to SR-BI stimulates eNOS. eNOS can be stimulated by an increase in intracellular calcium, by phosphorylation by Akt kinase, or by an increase in intracellular ceramide. Calcium imagining studies and experiments with the calcium chelator, 1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid tetra(acetoxymethyl) ester demonstrated that HDL binding to SR-BI does not induce an increase in intracellular calcium. Antibodies specific for activated Akt kinase demonstrated that HDL binding to SR-BI does not induce Akt kinase activation. However, HDL binding to SR-BI caused a reversible increase in intracellular ceramide levels from 97 ± 14 pmol/mg of protein to 501 ± 21 pmol/mg of protein. In addition, C2-ceramide stimulated eNOS to the same extent as HDL, whereas C2-dihydroceramide did not stimulate eNOS. We conclude that HDL binding to SR-BI stimulates eNOS by increasing intracellular ceramide levels and is independent of an increase in intracellular calcium or Akt kinase phosphorylation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Palmitoylation of Caveolin-1 Is Required for Cholesterol Binding, Chaperone Complex Formation, and Rapid Transport of Cholesterol to Caveolae

Annette Uittenbogaard; Eric J. Smart

Abstract We previously demonstrated that a caveolin-chaperone complex transports newly synthesized cholesterol from the endoplasmic reticulum through the cytoplasm to caveolae. Caveolin-1 has a 33-amino acid hydrophobic domain and three sites of palmitoylation in proximity to the hydrophobic domain. In the present study, we hypothesized that palmitoylation of caveolin-1 is necessary for binding of cholesterol, formation of a caveolin-chaperone transport complex, and rapid, direct transport of cholesterol to caveolae. To test this hypothesis, four caveolin-1 constructs were generated that substituted an alanine for a cysteine at position 133, 143, or 156 or all three sites (triple mutant). These mutated caveolins and wild type caveolin-1 were stably expressed in the lymphoid cell line, L1210-JF, which does not express caveolin-1, does not form a caveolin-chaperone complex, and does not transport newly synthesized cholesterol to caveolae. All of the caveolins were expressed and the proteins localized to plasma membrane caveolae. Wild type caveolin-1 and mutant 133 assembled into complete transport complexes and rapidly (10–20 min) transported cholesterol to caveolae. Caveolin mutants 143 and 156 did not assemble into complete transport complexes, weakly associated with cholesterol, and transported small amounts of cholesterol to caveolae. The triple mutant did not assemble into complete transport complexes and did not associate with cholesterol. We conclude that palmitoylation of caveolin-1 at positions 143 and 156 is required for cholesterol binding and transport complex formation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

HDL-associated estradiol stimulates endothelial NO synthase and vasodilation in an SR-BI–dependent manner

Ming Gong; Melinda E. Wilson; Thomas Kelly; Wen Su; James Dressman; Jeanie Kincer; Sergey Matveev; Ling Guo; Theresa Guerin; Xiang-An Li; Weifei Zhu; Annette Uittenbogaard; Eric J. Smart

Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death in the United States. Two factors associated with a decreased risk of developing cardiovascular disease are elevated HDL levels and sex - specifically, a decreased risk is found in premenopausal women. HDL and estrogen stimulate eNOS and the production of nitric oxide, which has numerous protective effects in the vascular system including vasodilation, antiadhesion, and anti-inflammatory effects. We tested the hypothesis that HDL binds to its receptor, scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), and delivers estrogen to eNOS, thereby stimulating the enzyme. HDL isolated from women stimulated eNOS, whereas HDL isolated from men had minimal activity. Studies with ovariectomized and ovariectomized/estrogen replacement mouse models demonstrated that HDL-associated estradiol stimulation of eNOS is SR-BI dependent. Furthermore, female HDL, but not male HDL, promoted the relaxation of muscle strips isolated from C57BL/6 mice but not SR-BI null mice. Finally, HDL isolated from premenopausal women or postmenopausal women receiving estradiol replacement therapy stimulated eNOS, whereas HDL isolated from postmenopausal women did not stimulate eNOS. We conclude that HDL-associated estrodial is capable of the stimulating eNOS. These studies establish a new paradigm for examining the cardiovascular effects of HDL and estrogen.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Activated Cardiac Adenosine A1 Receptors Translocate Out of Caveolae

Robert D. Lasley; Prakash Narayan; Annette Uittenbogaard; Eric J. Smart

The cardiac affects of the purine nucleoside, adenosine, are well known. Adenosine increases coronary blood flow, exerts direct negative chronotropic and dromotropic effects, and exerts indirect anti-adrenergic effects. These effects of adenosine are mediated via the activation of specific G protein-coupled receptors. There is increasing evidence that caveolae play a role in the compartmentalization of receptors and second messengers in the vicinity of the plasma membrane. Several reports demonstrate that G protein-coupled receptors redistribute to caveolae in response to receptor occupation. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that adenosine A1 receptors would translocate to caveolae in the presence of agonists. Surprisingly, in unstimulated rat cardiac ventricular myocytes, 67 ± 5% of adenosine A1receptors were isolated with caveolae. However, incubation with the adenosine A1 receptor agonist 2-chlorocyclopentyladenosine induced the rapid translocation of the A1 receptors from caveolae into non-caveolae plasma membrane, an effect that was blocked by the adenosine A1 receptor antagonist, 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine. An adenosine A2areceptor agonist did not alter the localization of A1receptors to caveolae. These data suggest that the translocation of A1 receptors out of caveolae and away from compartmentalized signaling molecules may explain why activation of ventricular myocyte A1 receptors are associated with few direct effects.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Cholesteryl ester is transported from caveolae to internal membranes as part of a caveolin-annexin II lipid-protein complex

Annette Uittenbogaard; William V. Everson; Sergey Matveev; Eric J. Smart

This article has been retracted by the publisher. An investigation by the Office of Research Integrity determined that falsified and/or fabricated Western blots were included in Figs. 5 and 7 (https://federalregister.gov/a/2012-28209). THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY VOL. 288, NO. 9, p. 6586, March 1, 2013


Cell Reports | 2015

Iron Toxicity in the Retina Requires Alu RNA and the NLRP3 Inflammasome

Bradley D. Gelfand; Charles B Wright; Younghee Kim; Tetsuhiro Yasuma; Reo Yasuma; Shengjian Li; Benjamin J. Fowler; Ana Bastos-Carvalho; Nagaraj Kerur; Annette Uittenbogaard; Youn Seon Han; Dingyuan Lou; Mark E. Kleinman; W. Hayes McDonald; Gabriel Núñez; Philippe Georgel; Joshua L. Dunaief; Jayakrishna Ambati

Excess iron induces tissue damage and is implicated in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Iron toxicity is widely attributed to hydroxyl radical formation through Fentons reaction. We report that excess iron, but not other Fenton catalytic metals, induces activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome, a pathway also implicated in AMD. Additionally, iron-induced degeneration of the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) is suppressed in mice lacking inflammasome components caspase-1/11 or Nlrp3 or by inhibition of caspase-1. Iron overload increases abundance of RNAs transcribed from short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs): Alu RNAs and the rodent equivalent B1 and B2 RNAs, which are inflammasome agonists. Targeting Alu or B2 RNA prevents iron-induced inflammasome activation and RPE degeneration. Iron-induced SINE RNA accumulation is due to suppression of DICER1 via sequestration of the co-factor poly(C)-binding protein 2 (PCBP2). These findings reveal an unexpected mechanism of iron toxicity, with implications for AMD and neurodegenerative diseases associated with excess iron.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

Distinct CCR2+ Gr1+ Cells Control Growth of the Yersinia pestis ΔyopM Mutant in Liver and Spleen during Systemic Plague

Zhan Ye; Annette Uittenbogaard; Donald A. Cohen; Alan M. Kaplan; Jayakrishna Ambati; Susan C. Straley

ABSTRACT We are using a systemic plague model to identify the cells and pathways that are undermined by the virulence protein YopM of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis. In this study, we pursued previous findings that Gr1+ cells are required to selectively limit growth of ΔyopM Y. pestis and that CD11b+ cells other than polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) are selectively lost in spleens infected with parent Y. pestis. When PMNs were ablated from mice, ΔyopM Y. pestis grew as well as the parent strain in liver but not in spleen, showing that these cells are critical for controlling growth of the mutant in liver but not spleen. In mice lacking expression of the chemokine receptor CCR2, wild-type growth was restored to ΔyopM Y. pestis in both organs. In spleen, the Gr1+ cells differentially recruited by parent and ΔyopM Y. pestis infections were CCR2+ Gr1+ CD11b+ CD11cLo-Int MAC3+ iNOS+ (inducible nitric oxide synthase-positive) inflammatory dendritic cells (iDCs), and their recruitment to spleen from blood was blocked when YopM was present in the infecting strain. Consistent with influx of iDCs being affected by YopM in spleen, the growth defect of the ΔyopM mutant was relieved by the parent Y. pestis strain in a coinfection assay in which the parent strain could affect the fate of the mutant in trans. In a mouse model of bubonic plague, CCR2 also was shown to be required for ΔyopM Y. pestis to show wild-type growth in skin. The data imply that YopMs pathogenic effect indirectly undermines signaling through CCR2. We propose a model for how YopM exerts its different effects in liver and spleen.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Caspase-3 Mediates the Pathogenic Effect of Yersinia pestis YopM in Liver of C57BL/6 Mice and Contributes to YopM's Function in Spleen

Zhan Ye; Amanda A. Gorman; Annette Uittenbogaard; Tanya Myers-Morales; Alan M. Kaplan; Donald A. Cohen; Susan C. Straley

The virulence protein YopM of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis has different dominant effects in liver and spleen. Previous studies focused on spleen, where YopM inhibits accumulation of inflammatory dendritic cells. In the present study we focused on liver, where PMN function may be directly undermined by YopM without changes in inflammatory cell numbers in the initial days of infection, and foci of inflammation are easily identified. Mice were infected with parent and ΔyopM-1 Y. pestis KIM5, and effects of YopM were assessed by immunohistochemistry and determinations of bacterial viable numbers in organs. The bacteria were found associated with myeloid cells in foci of inflammation and in liver sinusoids. A new in-vivo phenotype of YopM was revealed: death of inflammatory cells, evidenced by TUNEL staining beginning at d 1 of infection. Based on distributions of Ly6G+, F4/80+, and iNOS+ cells within foci, the cells that were killed could have included both PMNs and macrophages. By 2 d post-infection, YopM had no effect on distribution of these cells, but by 3 d cellular decomposition had outstripped acute inflammation in foci due to parent Y. pestis, while foci due to the ΔyopM-1 strain still contained many inflammatory cells. The destruction depended on the presence of both PMNs in the mice and YopM in the bacteria. In mice that lacked the apoptosis mediator caspase-3 the infection dynamics were novel: the parent Y. pestis was limited in growth comparably to the ΔyopM-1 strain in liver, and in spleen a partial growth limitation for parent Y. pestis was seen. This result identified caspase-3 as a co-factor or effector in YopMs action and supports the hypothesis that in liver YopMs main pathogenic effect is mediated by caspase-3 to cause apoptosis of PMNs.


Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology | 2012

Toward a molecular pathogenic pathway for Yersinia pestis YopM

Annette Uittenbogaard; R. Lakshman Chelvarajan; Tanya Myers-Morales; Amanda A. Gorman; W. June Brickey; Zhan Ye; Alan M. Kaplan; Donald A. Cohen; Jenny P.-Y. Ting; Susan C. Straley

YopM is one of the six “effector Yops” of the human-pathogenic Yersinia, but its mechanism has not been defined. After delivery to J774A.1 monocyte-like cells, YopM can rapidly bind and activate the serine/threonine kinases RSK1 and PRK2. However, in infected mice, effects of Y. pestis YopM have been seen only after 24–48 h post-infection (p.i.). To identify potential direct effects of YopM in-vivo we tested for effects of YopM at 1 h and 16–18 h p.i. in mice infected systemically with 106 bacteria. At 16 h p.i., there was a robust host response to both parent and ΔyopM-1 Y. pestis KIM5. Compared to cells from non-infected mice, CD11b+ cells from spleens of infected mice produced more than 100-fold greater IFNγ. In the corresponding sera there were more than 100-fold greater amounts of IFNγ, G-CSF, and CXCL9, as well as more than 10-fold greater amounts of IL-6, CXCL10, and CXCL1. The only YopM-related differences were slightly lower CXCL10 and IL-6 in sera from mice infected 16 h with parent compared to ΔyopM-1 Y. pestis. Microarray analysis of the CD11b+ cells did not identify consistent transcriptional differences of ≥4-fold at 18 h p.i. However, at 1 h p.i. mRNA for early growth response transcription factor 1 (Egr1) was decreased when YopM was present. Bone marrow-derived macrophages infected for 1 h also expressed lower Egr1 message when YopM was present. Infected J774A.1 cells showed greater expression of Egr1 at 1 h p.i. when YopM was present, but this pattern reversed at 3 h. At 6 h p.i., Cxcl10 mRNA was lower in parent-strain infected cells. We conclude that decreased Egr1 expression is a very early transcriptional effect of YopM and speculate that a pathway may exist from RSK1 through Egr1. These studies revealed novel early transcriptional effects of YopM but point to a time after 18 h of infection when critical transitional events lead to later major effects on cytokine gene transcription.

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Ling Guo

University of Kentucky

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Weifei Zhu

University of Kentucky

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