Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Audrey Noguchi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Audrey Noguchi.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Parkin is a lipid-responsive regulator of fat uptake in mice and mutant human cells

Kye-Young Kim; Mark V. Stevens; M. Hasina Akter; Sarah E. Rusk; Robert J. Huang; Alexandra Cohen; Audrey Noguchi; Danielle A. Springer; Alexander V. Bocharov; Tomas L. Eggerman; Der-Fen Suen; Richard J. Youle; Marcelo Amar; Alan T. Remaley; Michael N. Sack

It has long been hypothesized that abnormalities in lipid biology contribute to degenerative brain diseases. Consistent with this, emerging epidemiologic evidence links lipid alterations with Parkinson disease (PD), and disruption of lipid metabolism has been found to predispose to α-synuclein toxicity. We therefore investigated whether Parkin, an E3 ubiquitin ligase found to be defective in patients with early onset PD, regulates systemic lipid metabolism. We perturbed lipid levels by exposing Parkin+/+ and Parkin-/- mice to a high-fat and -cholesterol diet (HFD). Parkin-/- mice resisted weight gain, steatohepatitis, and insulin resistance. In wild-type mice, the HFD markedly increased hepatic Parkin levels in parallel with lipid transport proteins, including CD36, Sr-B1, and FABP. These lipid transport proteins were not induced in Parkin-/- mice. The role of Parkin in fat uptake was confirmed by increased oleate accumulation in hepatocytes overexpressing Parkin and decreased uptake in Parkin-/- mouse embryonic fibroblasts and patient cells harboring complex heterozygous mutations in the Parkin-encoding gene PARK2. Parkin conferred this effect, in part, via ubiquitin-mediated stabilization of the lipid transporter CD36. Reconstitution of Parkin restored hepatic fat uptake and CD36 levels in Parkin-/- mice, and Parkin augmented fat accumulation during adipocyte differentiation. These results demonstrate that Parkin is regulated in a lipid-dependent manner and modulates systemic fat uptake via ubiquitin ligase-dependent effects. Whether this metabolic regulation contributes to premature Parkinsonism warrants investigation.


Cell Metabolism | 2013

Deletion of iron regulatory protein 1 causes polycythemia and pulmonary hypertension in mice through translational derepression of HIF2α

Manik C. Ghosh; De-Liang Zhang; Suh Young Jeong; Gennadiy Kovtunovych; Hayden Ollivierre-Wilson; Audrey Noguchi; Tiffany Tu; Thomas Senecal; Gabrielle Robinson; Daniel R. Crooks; Wing Hang Tong; Kavitha Ramaswamy; Anamika Singh; Brian B. Graham; Rubin M. Tuder; Zu Xi Yu; Michael Eckhaus; Jaekwon Lee; Danielle A. Springer; Tracey A. Rouault

Iron regulatory proteins (Irps) 1 and 2 posttranscriptionally control the expression of transcripts that contain iron-responsive element (IRE) sequences, including ferritin, ferroportin, transferrin receptor, and hypoxia-inducible factor 2α (HIF2α). We report here that mice with targeted deletion of Irp1 developed pulmonary hypertension and polycythemia that was exacerbated by a low-iron diet. Hematocrits increased to 65% in iron-starved mice, and many polycythemic mice died of abdominal hemorrhages. Irp1 deletion enhanced HIF2α protein expression in kidneys of Irp1(-/-) mice, which led to increased erythropoietin (EPO) expression, polycythemia, and concomitant tissue iron deficiency. Increased HIF2α expression in pulmonary endothelial cells induced high expression of endothelin-1, likely contributing to the pulmonary hypertension of Irp1(-/-) mice. Our results reveal why anemia is an early physiological consequence of iron deficiency, highlight the physiological significance of Irp1 in regulating erythropoiesis and iron distribution, and provide important insights into the molecular pathogenesis of pulmonary hypertension.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2009

Dietary nitrate and nitrite modulate blood and organ nitrite and the cellular ischemic stress response

Nicolaas J.H. Raat; Audrey Noguchi; Virginia B. Liu; Nalini Raghavachari; Delong Liu; Xiuli Xu; Sruti Shiva; Peter J. Munson; Mark T. Gladwin

Dietary nitrate, found in abundance in green vegetables, can be converted to the cytoprotective molecule nitrite by oral bacteria, suggesting that nitrate and nitrite may represent active cardioprotective constituents of the Mediterranean diet. We therefore tested the hypothesis that dietary nitrate and nitrite levels modulate tissue damage and ischemic gene expression in a mouse liver ischemia-reperfusion model. We found that stomach content, plasma, heart, and liver nitrite levels were significantly reduced after dietary nitrate and nitrite depletion and could be restored to normal levels with nitrite supplementation in water. Remarkably, we confirmed that basal nitrite levels significantly reduced liver injury after ischemia-reperfusion. Consistent with an effect of nitrite on the posttranslational modification of complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain, the severity of liver infarction was inversely proportional to complex I activity after nitrite repletion in the diet. The transcriptional response of dietary nitrite after ischemia was more robust than after normoxia, suggesting a hypoxic potentiation of nitrite-dependent transcriptional signaling. Our studies indicate that normal dietary nitrate and nitrite levels modulate ischemic stress responses and hypoxic gene expression programs, supporting the hypothesis that dietary nitrate and nitrite are cytoprotective components of the diet.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2013

Circulating Blood Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase Contributes to the Regulation of Systemic Blood Pressure and Nitrite Homeostasis

Katherine C. Wood; Miriam M. Cortese-Krott; Jason C. Kovacic; Audrey Noguchi; Virginia B. Liu; Xunde Wang; Nalini Raghavachari; Manfred Boehm; Gregory J. Kato; Malte Kelm; Mark T. Gladwin

Objective—Mice genetically deficient in endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS−/−) are hypertensive with lower circulating nitrite levels, indicating the importance of constitutively produced nitric oxide (NO•) to blood pressure regulation and vascular homeostasis. Although the current paradigm holds that this bioactivity derives specifically from the expression of eNOS in endothelium, circulating blood cells also express eNOS protein. A functional red cell eNOS that modulates vascular NO• signaling has been proposed. Approach and Results—To test the hypothesis that blood cells contribute to mammalian blood pressure regulation via eNOS-dependent NO• generation, we cross-transplanted wild-type and eNOS−/− mice, producing chimeras competent or deficient for eNOS expression in circulating blood cells. Surprisingly, we observed a significant contribution of both endothelial and circulating blood cell eNOS to blood pressure and systemic nitrite levels, the latter being a major component of the circulating NO• reservoir. These effects were abolished by the NOS inhibitor L-NG-nitroarginine methyl ester and repristinated by the NOS substrate L-arginine and were independent of platelet or leukocyte depletion. Mouse erythrocytes were also found to carry an eNOS protein and convert 14C-arginine into 14C-citrulline in NOS-dependent fashion. Conclusions—These are the first studies to definitively establish a role for a blood-borne eNOS, using cross-transplant chimera models, that contributes to the regulation of blood pressure and nitrite homeostasis. This work provides evidence suggesting that erythrocyte eNOS may mediate this effect.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

p21Cip1 modulates arterial wound repair through the stromal cell–derived factor-1/CXCR4 axis in mice

Michelle Olive; Jason A. Mellad; Leilani E. Beltran; Mingchao Ma; Thomas R. Cimato; Audrey Noguchi; Hong San; Richard Childs; Jason C. Kovacic; Manfred Boehm

Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, including p21Cip1, are implicated in cell turnover and are active players in cardiovascular wound repair. Here, we show that p21Cip1 orchestrates the complex interactions between local vascular and circulating immune cells during vascular wound repair. In response to femoral artery mechanical injury, mice with homozygous deletion of p21Cip1 displayed accelerated proliferation of VSMCs and increased immune cell infiltration. BM transplantation experiments indicated that local p21Cip1 plays a pivotal role in restraining excessive proliferation during vascular wound repair. Increased local vascular stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) levels were observed after femoral artery injury in p21+/+ and p21-/- mice, although this was significantly greater in p21-/- animals. In addition, disruption of SDF-1/CXCR4 signaling inhibited the proliferative response during vascular remodeling in both p21+/+ and p21-/- mice. We provide evidence that the JAK/STAT signaling pathway is an important regulator of vascular SDF-1 levels and that p21Cip1 inhibits STAT3 binding to the STAT-binding site within the murine SDF-1 promoter. Collectively, these results suggest that p21Cip1 activity is essential for the regulation of cell proliferation and inflammation after arterial injury in local vascular cells and that the SDF-1/CXCR4 signaling system is a key mediator of vascular proliferation in response to injury.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2015

Assessment of cardiac function in mice lacking the mitochondrial calcium uniporter.

Kira M. Holmström; Xin Pan; Julia C. Liu; Sara Menazza; Jie Liu; Tiffany Nguyen; Haihui Pan; Randi J. Parks; Stasia A. Anderson; Audrey Noguchi; Danielle A. Springer; Elizabeth Murphy; Toren Finkel

Mitochondrial calcium is thought to play an important role in the regulation of cardiac bioenergetics and function. The entry of calcium into the mitochondrial matrix requires that the divalent cation pass through the inner mitochondrial membrane via a specialized pore known as the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU). Here, we use mice deficient of MCU expression to rigorously assess the role of mitochondrial calcium in cardiac function. Mitochondria isolated from MCU(-/-) mice have reduced matrix calcium levels, impaired calcium uptake and a defect in calcium-stimulated respiration. Nonetheless, we find that the absence of MCU expression does not affect basal cardiac function at either 12 or 20months of age. Moreover, the physiological response of MCU(-/-) mice to isoproterenol challenge or transverse aortic constriction appears similar to control mice. Thus, while mitochondria derived from MCU(-/-) mice have markedly impaired mitochondrial calcium handling, the hearts of these animals surprisingly appear to function relatively normally under basal conditions and during stress.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2012

Oxygen Regulates Tissue Nitrite Metabolism

Erin Curtis; Lewis L. Hsu; Audrey Noguchi; Lisa Geary; Sruti Shiva

AIMS Once dismissed as an inert byproduct of nitric oxide (NO) auto-oxidation, nitrite (NO(2)(-)) is now accepted as an endocrine reservoir of NO that elicits biological responses in major organs. While it is known that tissue nitrite is derived from NO oxidation and the diet, little is known about how nitrite is metabolized by tissue, particularly at intermediate oxygen tensions. We investigated the rates and mechanisms of tissue nitrite metabolism over a range of oxygen concentrations. RESULTS We show that the rate of nitrite consumption differs in each organ. Further, oxygen regulates the rate and products of nitrite metabolism. In anoxia, nitrite is reduced to NO, with significant formation of iron-nitrosyl proteins and S-nitrosothiols. This hypoxic nitrite metabolism is mediated by different nitrite reductases in each tissue. In contrast, low concentrations (∼3.5 μM) of oxygen increase the rate of nitrite consumption by shifting nitrite metabolism to oxidative pathways, yielding nitrate. While cytochrome P(450) and myoglobin contribute in the liver and heart, respectively, mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase plays a significant role in nitrite oxidation, which is inhibited by cyanide. Using cyanide to prevent artifactual nitrite decay, we measure metabolism of oral and intraperitoneally administered nitrite in mice. INNOVATION These data provide insight into the fate of nitrite in tissue, the enzymes involved in nitrite metabolism, and the role of oxygen in regulating these processes. CONCLUSION We demonstrate that even at low concentrations, oxygen is a potent regulator of the rate and products of tissue nitrite metabolism.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011

Perivascular T-Cell Infiltration Leads to Sustained Pulmonary Artery Remodeling after Endothelial Cell Damage

Michael J. Cuttica; Thomas Langenickel; Audrey Noguchi; Roberto F. Machado; Mark T. Gladwin; Manfred Boehm

Pulmonary hypertension is a vascular proliferative disease characterized by pulmonary artery remodeling because of dysregulated endothelial and smooth muscle cell proliferation. Although the role of inflammation in the development of the disease is not well-defined, plexogenic lesions in human disease are characterized by perivascular inflammation composed, in part, of T cells. We explored the role of T-cell infiltration on pulmonary vascular remodeling after endothelial cell damage. We induced endothelial cell damage using monocrotaline and isolated the role of T cells by using Rag1(tm1Mom) mice and performing adoptive T-cell transfer. We found that monocrotaline causes pulmonary vascular endothelial cell injury followed by a perivascular inflammatory response. The infiltration of inflammatory cells primarily involves CD4(+) T cells and leads to the progressive muscularization of small (<30 μm) arterioles. Pulmonary vascular proliferative changes were accompanied by progressive and persistent elevations in right ventricular pressure and right ventricular hypertrophy. Supporting the central role of CD4(+) T cells in the inflammatory response, Rag1(tm1Mom) (Rag1(-/-)) mice, which are devoid of T and B cells, were protected from the development of vascular injury when exposed to monocrotaline. The introduction of T cells from control mice into Rag1(-/-) mice reproduced the vascular injury phenotype. These data indicate that after endothelial cell damage, CD4(+) T-cell infiltration participates in pulmonary vascular remodeling. This finding suggests that a CD4(+) T-cell immune response may contribute to the pathogenesis of inflammatory vascular lesions seen in some forms of pulmonary hypertension.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2018

Hepatic PPARα mediates the major metabolic effects of Wy-14643

Guolin Li; Chad Brocker; Cen Xie; Tingting Yan; Audrey Noguchi; Kristopher W. Krausz; Rong Xiang; Frank J. Gonzalez

Peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor alpha (PPARα) is a molecular target of various fibrate drugs clinically used to lower serum lipids. However, the tissue‐specific functions of PPARα remain to be elucidated. This study aimed to explore the tissue‐specific functions of PPARα in response to Wy‐14643.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

Conditional ablation and conditional rescue models for Casq2 elucidate the role of development and of cell-type specific expression of Casq2 in the CPVT2 phenotype

Daniel J Flores; ThuyVy Duong; Luke O Brandenberger; Apratim Mitra; Aditya Shirali; John W.C. Johnson; Danielle A. Springer; Audrey Noguchi; Zu-Xi Yu; Steven N. Ebert; Andreas Ludwig; Björn C. Knollmann; Mark D. Levin; Karl Pfeifer

Cardiac calsequestrin (Casq2) associates with the ryanodine receptor 2 channel in the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum to regulate Ca2+ release into the cytoplasm. Patients carrying mutations in CASQ2 display low resting heart rates under basal conditions and stress-induced polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). In this study, we generate and characterize novel conditional deletion and conditional rescue mouse models to test the influence of developmental programs on the heart rate and CPVT phenotypes. We also compare the requirements for Casq2 function in the cardiac conduction system (CCS) and in working cardiomyocytes. Our study shows that the CPVT phenotype is dependent upon concurrent loss of Casq2 function in both the CCS and in working cardiomyocytes. Accordingly, restoration of Casq2 in only the CCS prevents CPVT. In addition, occurrence of CPVT is independent of the developmental history of Casq2-deficiency. In contrast, resting heart rate depends upon Casq2 gene activity only in the CCS and upon developmental history. Finally, our data support a model where low basal heart rate is a significant risk factor for CPVT.

Collaboration


Dive into the Audrey Noguchi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Danielle A. Springer

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sruti Shiva

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan T. Remaley

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manfred Boehm

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marcelo Amar

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nalini Raghavachari

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Virginia B. Liu

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erin Curtis

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hong San

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge