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Dive into the research topics where Bella Kalderon is active.

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Featured researches published by Bella Kalderon.


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Gating of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore by thyroid hormone

Einav Yehuda-Shnaidman; Bella Kalderon; Narmen Azazmeh; Jacob Bar-Tana

The calorigenic‐thermogenic activity of thyroid hormone (T3) has long been ascribed to uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. However, the mode of action of T3 in promoting mitochondrial proton leak is still unresolved. Mitochon‐drial uncoupling by T3 is reported here to be transduced in vivo in rats and in cultured Jurkat cells by gating of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP). T3‐induced PTP gating is shown here to be abrogated in inositol 1,4,5‐trisphosphate (IP3) receptor 1 (D?3R1)_/_ cells, indicating that the endoplasmic reticulum IP3R1 may serve as upstream target for the mitochondrial activity of T3. IP3R1 gating by T3 is due to its increased expression and truncation into channel‐only peptides, resulting in IP3‐independent Ca2+ efflux. Increased cytosolic Ca2+ results in activation of protein phosphatase 2B, dephosphorylation and depletion of mitochondrial Bcl2 (S70), and increase in mitochondrial free Bax leading to low‐conductance PTP gating. The T3 transduction pathway integrates genomic and nongenomic activities of T3 in regulating mitochondrial energetics and may offer novel targets for thyromimetics designed to modulate energy expenditure.—Yehuda‐Shnaidman, E., Kalderon, B., Azazmeh, N., Bar‐Tana, J. Gating of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore by thyroid hormone. FASEB J. 24, 93–104 (2010). www.fasebj.org


Diabetes | 1997

Sensitization to Insulin Induced by β,β′-Methyl-Substituted Hexadecanedioic Acid (MEDICA 16) in Obese Zucker Rats In Vivo

Nina Mayorek; Bella Kalderon; Etty Itach; Jacob Bar-Tana

β,β′-methyl-substituted hexadecanedioic acid (MEDICA 16) consists of a nonmetabolizable long-chain fatty acid designed to probe the effect exerted by fatty acids on insulin sensitivity. The effect of MEDICA 16 was evaluated in insulin-resistant Zucker (fa/fa) rats in terms of liver, muscle, and adipose tissue response to clamped euglycemic hyperinsulinemia in vivo. Nontreated Zucker rats were insulin resistant, maintaining basal rates of total-body glucose disposal, glucose production in liver, free fatty acid (FFA) flux into plasma, and FFA reesterification in adipose tissue, irrespective of the insulin levels induced. MEDICA 16 treatment resulted in an insulin-induced decrease in hepatic glucose production, together with an insulin-induced increase in total-body glucose disposal. Intracellular reesterification of lipolysed FFA in adipose tissue was specifically activated by MEDICA 16, resulting in a pronounced decrease in FFA release, with a concomitant decrease in plasma FFA. In conclusion, MEDICA 16 treatment results in the sensitization of liver, muscle, and adipose tissue to insulin in an animal model for obesity-induced insulin resistance.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2008

AMPK activation by long chain fatty acyl analogs

Ghadeer Za’tara; Jacob Bar-Tana; Bella Kalderon; Marianne Suter; Etedal Morad; Dmitry Samovski; Dietbert Neumann; Rachel Hertz

The antidiabetic efficacy of first-line insulin sensitizers (e.g., metformin, glitazones) is accounted for by activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Long chain fatty acids (LCFA) activate AMPK, but their putative antidiabetic efficacy is masked by their beta-oxidized or esterified lipid products. Substituted alpha,omega-dicarboxylic acids of 14-18 carbon atoms in length (MEDICA analogs) are not metabolized beyond their acyl-CoA thioesters, and may therefore simulate AMPK activation by LCFA while avoiding LCFA turnover into beta-oxidized or esterified lipid products. MEDICA analogs are shown here to activate AMPK and some of its downstream targets in vivo, in cultured cells and in a cell-free system consisting of the (alpha(1)beta(1)gamma(1))AMPK recombinant and LKB1-MO25-STRAD (AMPK-kinase) recombinant proteins. AMPK activation by MEDICA is accompanied by normalizing the hyperglycemia-hyperinsulinemia of diabetic db/db mice in vivo with suppression of hepatic glucose production in cultured liver cells. Activation of AMPK by MEDICA or LCFA is accounted for by (a) decreased intracellular ATP/AMP ratio and energy charge by the free acid, (b) activation of LKB1 phosphorylation of AMPK(Thr172) by the acyl-CoA thioester. The two activation modes are complementary since LKB1/AMPK activation by the CoA-thioester is fully evident under conditions of excess AMP. MEDICA analogs may expand the arsenal of AMPK activators used for treating diabetes type 2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Gating of the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore by Long Chain Fatty Acyl Analogs in Vivo

Dmitri Samovski; Bella Kalderon; Einav Yehuda-Shnaidman; Jacob Bar-Tana

The role played by long chain fatty acids (LCFA) in promoting energy expenditure is confounded by their dual function as substrates for oxidation and as putative classic uncouplers of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. LCFA analogs of the MEDICA (MEthyl-substituted DICarboxylic Acids) series are neither esterified into lipids nor β-oxidized and may thus simulate the uncoupling activity of natural LCFA in vivo, independently of their substrate role. Treatment of rats or cell lines with MEDICA analogs results in low conductance gating of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP), with 10–40% decrease in the inner mitochondrial membrane potential. PTP gating by MEDICA analogs is accounted for by inhibition of Raf1 expression and kinase activity, resulting in suppression of the MAPK/RSK1 and the adenylate cyclase/PKA transduction pathways. Suppression of RSK1 and PKA results in a decrease in phosphorylation of their respective downstream targets, Bad(Ser-112) and Bad(Ser-155). Decrease in Bad(Ser-112, Ser-155) phosphorylation results in increased binding of Bad to mitochondrial Bcl2 with concomitant displacement of Bax, followed by PTP gating induced by free mitochondrial Bax. Low conductance PTP gating by LCFA/MEDICA may account for their thyromimetic calorigenic activity in vivo.


Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences | 2014

Protein folding as a driving force for dual protein targeting in eukaryotes

Bella Kalderon; Ophry Pines

It is well documented that in eukaryotic cells molecules of one protein can be located in several subcellular locations, a phenomenon termed dual targeting, dual localization, or dual distribution. The differently localized identical or nearly identical proteins are termed “echoforms.” Our conventional definition of dual targeted proteins refers to situations in which one of the echoforms is translocated through/into a membrane. Thus, dual targeted proteins are recognized by at least one organelles receptors and translocation machineries within the lipid bilayer. In this review we attempt to evaluate mechanisms and situations in which protein folding is the major determinant of dual targeting and of the relative distribution levels of echoforms in the subcellular compartments of the eukaryotic cell. We show that the decisive folding step can occur prior, during or after translocation through the bilayer of a biological membrane. This phenomenon involves folding catalysts in the cell such as chaperones, proteases and modification enzymes, and targeting processes such as signal recognition, translocation through membranes, trapping, retrotranslocation and reverse translocation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Cytosolic Hsp60 Can Modulate Proteasome Activity in Yeast

Bella Kalderon; Gleb Kogan; Ettel Bubis; Ophry Pines

Background: Hsp60 is a mitochondrial molecular chaperone conserved from yeast to human. Results: Hsp60 in the yeast cytosol binds the proteasome and inhibits proteasome activity. Conclusion: Localization of Hsp60 to the cytosol may modulate proteasome activity according to the cell needs. Significance: Proteasome inhibition by Hsp60 reveals a novel aspect of cell regulation and may present a target for therapeutics. Hsp60, an essential oligomeric molecular mitochondrial chaperone, has been subject to rigorous basic and clinical research. With yeast as a model system, we provide evidence for the ability of cytosolic yHsp60 to inhibit the yeast proteasome. (i) Following biological turnover of murine Bax (a proteasome substrate), we show that co-expression of cytosolic yHsp60 stabilizes Bax, enhances its association with mitochondria, and enhances its killing capacity. (ii) Expression of yHsp60 in the yeast cytosol (yHsp60c) inhibits degradation of a cytosolic protein ΔMTS-Aco1 tagged with the degron SL17 (a ubiquitin-proteasome substrate). (iii) Conditions under which Hsp60 accumulates in the cytosol (elevated Hsp60c or growth at 37 °C) correlate with reduced 20 S peptidase activity in proteasomes purified from cell extracts. (iv) Elevated yHsp60 in the cytosol correlate with accumulation of polyubiquitinated proteins. (v) According to 20 S proteasome pulldown experiments, Hsp60 is physically associated with proteasomes in extracts of cells expressing Hsp60c or grown at 37 °C. Even mutant Hsp60 proteins, lacking chaperone activity, were still capable of proteasome inhibition. The results support the hypothesis that localization of Hsp60 to the cytosol may modulate proteasome activity according to cell need.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2012

Suppression of adipose lipolysis by long-chain fatty acid analogs

Bella Kalderon; Narmen Azazmeh; Nili Azulay; Noam Vissler; Michael Valitsky; Jacob Bar-Tana

Agonist-induced lipolysis of adipose fat is robustly inhibited by insulin or by feedback inhibition by the long-chain fatty acids (LCFA) produced during lipolysis. However, the mode of action of LCFA in suppressing adipose lipolysis is not clear. β,β’-Tetramethyl hexadecanedioic acid (Mββ/ EDICA16) is a synthetic LCFA that is neither esterified into lipids nor β-oxidized, and therefore, it was exploited for suppressing agonist-induced lipolysis in analogy to natural LCFA. Mββ is shown here to suppress isoproterenol-induced lipolysis in the rat in vivo as well as in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Inhibition of isoproterenol-induced lipolysis is due to decrease in isoproterenol-induced cAMP with concomitant inhibition of the phosphorylation of hormone-sensitive lipase and perilipin by protein kinase A. Suppression of cellular cAMP levels is accounted for by inhibition of the adenylate cyclase due to suppression of Raf1 expression by Mββ-activated AMPK. Suppression of Raf1 is further complemented by induction of components of the unfolded-protein-response by Mββ. Our findings imply genuine inhibition of agonist-induced adipose lipolysis by LCFA, independent of their β-oxidation or reesterification. Mββ suppression of agonist-induced lipolysis and cellular cAMP levels independent of the insulin transduction pathway may indicate that synthetic LCFA could serve as insulin mimetics in the lipolysis context under conditions of insulin resistance.


Archive | 2012

Thyroid Hormone and Energy Expenditure

Einav Yehuda-Shnaidman; Bella Kalderon; Jacob Bar-Tana

One of the most pronounced effects of Thyroid Hormone (TH, Triiodothyronine (T3), Tetraiodothyronine (T4)) is modulation of metabolic efficiency, energy expenditure and calorigenesis. Thus, hypothyroidism results in decreased energy expenditure and basal metabolic rate accompanied by weight gain and cold intolerance, while hyperthyroidism results in hypermetabolism, weight loss despite increased energy intake, intolerance to heat, loss of lean mass, bone resorption and tachycardia. TH role in modulating metabolic efficiency has been realized for over a century but its cellular mode-of-action remained to be resolved.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2001

Suppression of hepatocyte nuclear factor-4α by acyl-CoA thioesters of hypolipidemic peroxisome proliferators

Rachel Hertz; Vered Sheena; Bella Kalderon; Ina Berman; Jacob Bar-Tana


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Mitochondria Uncoupling by a Long Chain Fatty Acyl Analogue

Orit Hermesh; Bella Kalderon; Jacob Bar-Tana

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Jacob Bar-Tana

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Rachel Hertz

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Einav Yehuda-Shnaidman

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Nina Mayorek

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Orit Hermesh

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Ina Berman

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Narmen Azazmeh

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Vered Sheena

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Dmitri Samovski

Washington University in St. Louis

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