Benjamin T. Bikman
Brigham Young University
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Featured researches published by Benjamin T. Bikman.
Nature Medicine | 2011
William L. Holland; Russell A. Miller; Zhao V. Wang; Kai Sun; Brian M. Barth; Hai H. Bui; Kathryn E. Davis; Benjamin T. Bikman; Nils Halberg; Joseph M. Rutkowski; Mark R. Wade; Vincent M. Tenorio; Ming Shang Kuo; Joseph T. Brozinick; Bei B. Zhang; Morris J. Birnbaum; Scott A. Summers; Philipp E. Scherer
The adipocyte-derived secretory factor adiponectin promotes insulin sensitivity, decreases inflammation and promotes cell survival. No unifying mechanism has yet explained how adiponectin can exert such a variety of beneficial systemic effects. Here, we show that adiponectin potently stimulates a ceramidase activity associated with its two receptors, AdipoR1 and AdipoR2, and enhances ceramide catabolism and formation of its antiapoptotic metabolite—sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P)—independently of AMP-dependent kinase (AMPK). Using models of inducible apoptosis in pancreatic beta cells and cardiomyocytes, we show that transgenic overproduction of adiponectin decreases caspase-8-mediated death, whereas genetic ablation of adiponectin enhances apoptosis in vivo through a sphingolipid-mediated pathway. Ceramidase activity is impaired in cells lacking both adiponectin receptor isoforms, leading to elevated ceramide levels and enhanced susceptibility to palmitate-induced cell death. Combined, our observations suggest a unifying mechanism of action for the beneficial systemic effects exerted by adiponectin, with sphingolipid metabolism as its core upstream signaling component.The adipocyte-derived secretory factor adiponectin promotes insulin sensitivity, decreases inflammation and promotes cell survival. To date, no unifying mechanism explains how adiponectin can exert such a variety of beneficial systemic effects. Here, we show that adiponectin potently stimulates a ceramidase activity associated with its two receptors, adipoR1 and adipoR2, and enhances ceramide catabolism and formation of its anti-apoptotic metabolite – sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), independently of AMPK. Using models of inducible apoptosis in pancreatic β-cells and cardiomyocytes, we show that transgenic overproduction of adiponectin decreases caspase-8 mediated death, while genetic adiponectin ablation enhances apoptosis in vivo through a sphingolipid-mediated pathway. Ceramidase activity is impaired in cells lacking both adiponectin receptor isoforms, leading to elevated ceramide levels and enhanced susceptibility to palmitate-induced cell death. Combined, our observations suggest a novel unifying mechanism of action for the beneficial systemic effects exerted by adiponectin, with sphingolipid metabolism as its core upstream component.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011
William L. Holland; Benjamin T. Bikman; Liping Wang; Guan Yuguang; Katherine M. Sargent; Sarada Bulchand; Trina A. Knotts; Guanghou Shui; Deborah J. Clegg; Markus R. Wenk; Michael J. Pagliassotti; Philipp E. Scherer; Scott A. Summers
Obesity is associated with an enhanced inflammatory response that exacerbates insulin resistance and contributes to diabetes, atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular disease. One mechanism accounting for the increased inflammation associated with obesity is activation of the innate immune signaling pathway triggered by TLR4 recognition of saturated fatty acids, an event that is essential for lipid-induced insulin resistance. Using in vitro and in vivo systems to model lipid induction of TLR4-dependent inflammatory events in rodents, we show here that TLR4 is an upstream signaling component required for saturated fatty acid-induced ceramide biosynthesis. This increase in ceramide production was associated with the upregulation of genes driving ceramide biosynthesis, an event dependent of the activity of the proinflammatory kinase IKKβ. Importantly, increased ceramide production was not required for TLR4-dependent induction of inflammatory cytokines, but it was essential for TLR4-dependent insulin resistance. These findings suggest that sphingolipids such as ceramide might be key components of the signaling networks that link lipid-induced inflammatory pathways to the antagonism of insulin action that contributes to diabetes.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011
Benjamin T. Bikman; Scott A. Summers
Nearly all stress stimuli (e.g., inflammatory cytokines, glucocorticoids, chemotherapeutics, etc.) induce sphingolipid synthesis, leading to the accumulation of ceramides and ceramide metabolites. While the role of these lipids in the regulation of cell growth and death has been studied extensively, recent studies suggest that a primary consequence of ceramide accumulation is an alteration in metabolism. In both cell-autonomous systems and complex organisms, ceramides modify intracellular signaling pathways to slow anabolism, ensuring that catabolism ensues. These ceramide actions have important implications for diseases associated with obesity, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008
Benjamin T. Bikman; Donghai Zheng; Walter J. Pories; William H. Chapman; John R. Pender; Rita C. Bowden; Melissa A. Reed; Ronald N. Cortright; Edward B. Tapscott; Joseph A. Houmard; Charles J. Tanner; Jihyun Lee; G. Lynis Dohm
CONTEXT Surgical treatments of obesity have been shown to induce rapid and prolonged improvements in insulin sensitivity. OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to investigate the effects of gastric bypass surgery and the mechanisms that explain the improvement in insulin sensitivity. DESIGN We performed a cross-sectional, nonrandomized, controlled study. SETTING This study was conducted jointly between the Departments of Exercise Science and Physiology at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. SUBJECTS Subjects were recruited into four groups: 1) lean [body mass index (BMI) < 25 kg/m(2); n = 93]; 2) weight-matched (BMI = 25 to 35 kg/m(2); n = 310); 3) morbidly obese (BMI > 35 kg/m(2); n = 43); and 4) postsurgery patients (BMI approximately 30 kg/m(2); n = 40). Postsurgery patients were weight stable 1 yr after surgery. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Whole-body insulin sensitivity, muscle glucose transport, and muscle insulin signaling were assessed. RESULTS Postsurgery subjects had insulin sensitivity index values that were similar to the lean and higher than morbidly obese and weight-matched control subjects. Glucose transport was higher in the postsurgery vs. morbidly obese and weight-matched groups. IRS1-pSer(312) in the postsurgery group was lower than morbidly obese and weight-matched groups. Inhibitor kappaBalpha was higher in the postsurgery vs. the morbidly obese and weight-matched controls, indicating reduced inhibitor of kappaB kinase beta activity. CONCLUSIONS Insulin sensitivity and glucose transport are greater in the postsurgery patients than predicted from the weight-matched group, suggesting that improved insulin sensitivity after bypass is due to something other than, or in addition to, weight loss. Improved insulin sensitivity is related to reduced inhibitor of kappaB kinase beta activity and enhanced insulin signaling in muscle.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Benjamin T. Bikman; Yuguang Guan; Guanghou Shui; Monowarul M. Siddique; William L. Holland; Ji Yun Kim; Gemma Fabriàs; Markus R. Wenk; Scott A. Summers
Background: Fenretinide, an in-trial chemotherapeutic, improves insulin sensitivity in mice and humans. Results: Fenretinide reduces Des1 expression and prevents ceramide accumulation, while protecting against lipid-induced insulin resistance. Conclusion: Fenretinide decreases ceramide biosynthesis, and increases levels of dihydroceramides, thus preserving insulin responsiveness. Significance: These data suggest that Des1 may be a viable therapeutic target for normalizing glucose homeostasis. Fenretinide is a synthetic retinoid that is being tested in clinical trials for the treatment of breast cancer and insulin resistance, but its mechanism of action has been elusive. Recent in vitro data indicate that fenretinide inhibits dihydroceramide desaturase, an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of lipotoxic ceramides that antagonize insulin action. Because of this finding, we assessed whether fenretinide could improve insulin sensitivity and glucose homeostasis in vitro and in vivo by controlling ceramide production. The effect of fenretinide on insulin action and the cellular lipidome was assessed in a number of lipid-challenged models including cultured myotubes and isolated muscles strips incubated with exogenous fatty acids and mice fed a high-fat diet. Insulin action was evaluated in the various models by measuring glucose uptake or disposal and the activation of Akt/PKB, a serine/threonine kinase that is obligate for insulin-stimulated anabolism. The effects of fenretinide on cellular lipid levels were assessed by LC-MS/MS. Fenretinide negated lipid-induced insulin resistance in each of the model systems assayed. Simultaneously, the drug depleted cells of ceramide, while promoting the accumulation of the precursor dihydroceramide, a substrate for the reaction catalyzed by Des1. These data suggest that fenretinide improves insulin sensitivity, at least in part, by inhibiting Des1 and suggest that therapeutics targeting this enzyme may be a viable therapeutic means for normalizing glucose homeostasis in the overweight and diabetic.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010
Daniel A. Kane; Ethan J. Anderson; Jesse W. Price; Tracey L. Woodlief; Chien-Te Lin; Benjamin T. Bikman; Ronald N. Cortright; P. Darrell Neufer
Metformin is a widely prescribed drug for treatment of type 2 diabetes, although no cellular mechanism of action has been established. To determine whether in vivo metformin treatment alters mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle, respiratory O(2) flux and H(2)O(2) emission were measured in saponin-permeabilized myofibers from lean and obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats treated for 4 weeks with metformin. Succinate- and palmitoylcarnitine-supported respiration generated greater than twofold higher rates of H(2)O(2) emission in myofibers from untreated obese versus lean rats, indicative of an obesity-associated increased mitochondrial oxidant emitting potential. In conjunction with improved glycemic control, metformin treatment reduced H(2)O(2) emission in muscle from obese rats to rates near or below those observed in lean rats during both succinate- and palmitoylcarnitine-supported respiration. Surprisingly, metformin treatment did not affect basal or maximal rates of O(2) consumption in muscle from obese or lean rats. Ex vivo dose-response experiments revealed that metformin inhibits complex I-linked H(2)O(2) emission at a concentration approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower than that required to inhibit respiratory O(2) flux. These findings suggest that therapeutic concentrations of metformin normalize mitochondrial H(2)O(2) emission by blocking reverse electron flow without affecting forward electron flow or respiratory O(2) flux in skeletal muscle.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2012
Benjamin T. Bikman
Following the initial discovery that adipose tissue actively synthesizes and secretes cytokines, obesity-induced inflammation has been implicated in the etiology of a host of disease states related to obesity, including cardiovascular disease and type II diabetes. Interestingly, a growing body of evidence similarly implicates sphingolipids as prime instigators in these same diseases. From the recent discovery that obesity-related inflammatory pathways modulate sphingolipid metabolism comes a novel perspective—sphingolipids may act as the dominant mediators of deleterious events stemming from obesity-induced inflammation. This paradigm may identify sphingolipids as an effective target for future therapeutics aimed at ameliorating diseases associated with chronic inflammation.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2010
Benjamin T. Bikman; Donghai Zheng; Melissa A. Reed; Robert C. Hickner; Joseph A. Houmard; G. Lynis Dohm
The molecular mechanisms of obesity-associated insulin resistance are becoming increasingly clear, and the effects of various lipid molecules, such as diacylglycerol and ceramide, on the insulin signal are being actively explored. To better understand the divergent response to lipid exposure between lean and obese, we incubated primary human muscle cells from lean [body mass index (BMI) <25 kg/m(2)] and morbidly obese (BMI >40 kg/m(2)) subjects with the saturated fatty acid palmitate. Additionally, given that AMPK-activating drugs are widely prescribed for their insulin-sensitizing effects, we sought to determine whether 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide 1-beta-D-ribofuranoside (AICAR)-stimulated AMPK activation could prevent or reverse the deleterious effects of lipid on insulin signaling. We found that a 1-h palmitate incubation in lean myotubes reduced (P < 0.05) insulin-stimulated phosphoprotein kinase B (Akt), Akt substrate 160 (AS160), and inhibitory factor kappaBalpha (IkappaBalpha) mass, all of which were prevented with AICAR inclusion. With a longer incubation, we observed that myotubes from morbidly obese individuals appear to be largely resistant to the detrimental effects of 16 h lipid exposure as was evident, in contrast to the lean, by the absence of a reduction in insulin-stimulated insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1 Tyr phosphorylation, phospho-Akt, and phospho-AS160 (P < 0.05). Furthermore, 16 h lipid exposure significantly reduced IkappaBalpha levels and increased phosphorylation of c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) and IRS1-Ser(312) in lean myotubes only (P < 0.05). Despite a divergent response to lipid between lean and obese myotubes, AICAR inclusion improved insulin signaling in all myotubes. These findings suggest an important role for regular exercise in addition to offering a potential mechanism of action for oral AMPK-activating agents, such as thiazolidinediones and metformin.
Biochemical Journal | 2013
Melissa E. Smith; Trevor S. Tippetts; Eric S. Brassfield; Braden J. Tucker; Adelaide Ockey; Adam C. Swensen; Tamil S. Anthonymuthu; Trevor D. Washburn; Daniel A. Kane; John T. Prince; Benjamin T. Bikman
Ceramide is a sphingolipid that serves as an important second messenger in an increasing number of stress-induced pathways. Ceramide has long been known to affect the mitochondria, altering both morphology and physiology. We sought to assess the impact of ceramide on skeletal muscle mitochondrial structure and function. A primary observation was the rapid and dramatic division of mitochondria in ceramide-treated cells. This effect is likely to be a result of increased Drp1 (dynamin-related protein 1) action, as ceramide increased Drp1 expression and Drp1 inhibition prevented ceramide-induced mitochondrial fission. Further, we found that ceramide treatment reduced mitochondrial O2 consumption (i.e. respiration) in cultured myotubes and permeabilized red gastrocnemius muscle fibre bundles. Ceramide treatment also increased H2O2 levels and reduced Akt/PKB (protein kinase B) phosphorylation in myotubes. However, inhibition of mitochondrial fission via Drp1 knockdown completely protected the myotubes and fibre bundles from ceramide-induced metabolic disruption, including maintained mitochondrial respiration, reduced H2O2 levels and unaffected insulin signalling. These data suggest that the forced and sustained mitochondrial fission that results from ceramide accrual may alter metabolic function in skeletal muscle, which is a prominent site not only of energy demand (via the mitochondria), but also of ceramide accrual with weight gain.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2011
Benjamin T. Bikman; Scott A. Summers
The development of a fatty liver predisposes individuals to an array of health problems including diabetes, cardiovascular disease and certain forms of cancer. Inhibition or genetic ablation of genes controlling sphingolipid synthesis in rodents resolves hepatic steatosis and in many cases wards off the health complications associated with excessive hepatic triglyceride accumulation. Examples include the pharmacological inhibition of serine palmitoyltransferase or glucosylceramide synthase or the genetic depletion of acid sphingomyelinase, which dramatically reduce hepatic triglyceride levels in mice susceptible to the development of a fatty liver. The magnitude of the effects on triglyceride depletion in these models is impressive, but the relevance to humans and the mechanism of action is unclear. Herein we probe into the connections between sphingolipids and triglyceride synthesis in an attempt to identify causal relationships and opportunities for therapeutic intervention.