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Dive into the research topics where Caleb C. Lord is active.

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Featured researches published by Caleb C. Lord.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2010

CGI-58 knockdown in mice causes hepatic steatosis, but prevents diet-induced obesity and glucose intolerance

J. Mark Brown; Jenna L. Betters; Caleb C. Lord; Yinyan Ma; Xianlin Han; Kui Yang; Heather M. Alger; John T. Melchior; Janet K. Sawyer; Ramesh Shah; Martha D. Wilson; Xiuli Liu; Mark J. Graham; Richard G. Lee; Rosanne M. Crooke; Gerald I. Shulman; Bingzhong Xue; Hang Shi; Liqing Yu

Mutations of Comparative Gene Identification-58 (CGI-58) in humans cause triglyceride (TG) accumulation in multiple tissues. Mice genetically lacking CGI-58 die shortly after birth due to a skin barrier defect. To study the role of CGI-58 in integrated lipid and energy metabolism, we utilized antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to inhibit CGI-58 expression in adult mice. Treatment with two distinct CGI-58-targeting ASOs resulted in ∼80–95% knockdown of CGI-58 protein expression in both liver and white adipose tissue. In chow-fed mice, ASO-mediated depletion of CGI-58 did not alter weight gain, plasma TG, or plasma glucose, yet raised hepatic TG levels ∼4-fold. When challenged with a high-fat diet (HFD), CGI-58 ASO-treated mice were protected against diet-induced obesity, but their hepatic contents of TG, diacylglycerols, and ceramides were all elevated, and intriguingly, their hepatic phosphatidylglycerol content was increased by 10-fold. These hepatic lipid alterations were associated with significant decreases in hepatic TG hydrolase activity, hepatic lipoprotein-TG secretion, and plasma concentrations of ketones, nonesterified fatty acids, and insulin. Additionally, HFD-fed CGI-58 ASO-treated mice were more glucose tolerant and insulin sensitive. Collectively, this work demonstrates that CGI-58 plays a critical role in limiting hepatic steatosis and maintaining hepatic glycerophospholipid homeostasis and has unmasked an unexpected role for CGI-58 in promoting HFD-induced obesity and insulin resistance.


Cell Metabolism | 2010

Biliary Sterol Secretion Is Not Required for Macrophage Reverse Cholesterol Transport

Ryan E. Temel; Janet K. Sawyer; Liqing Yu; Caleb C. Lord; Chiara Degirolamo; Allison L. McDaniel; Stephanie M. Marshall; Nanping Wang; Ramesh Shah; Lawrence L. Rudel; J. Mark Brown

Recent evidence suggests that the intestine may play a direct facilitative role in reverse cholesterol transport (RCT), independent of hepatobiliary secretion. In order to understand the nonbiliary pathway for RCT, we created both genetic and surgical models of biliary cholesterol insufficiency. To genetically inhibit biliary cholesterol secretion, we generated mice in which Niemann-Pick C1-Like 1 (NPC1L1) was overexpressed in the liver. Compared to controls, NPC1L1(Liver-Tg) mice exhibit a >90% decrease in biliary cholesterol secretion, yet mass fecal sterol loss and macrophage RCT are normal. To surgically inhibit biliary emptying into the intestine, we have established an acute biliary diversion model. Strikingly, macrophage RCT persists in mice surgically lacking the ability to secrete bile into the intestine. Collectively, these studies demonstrate that mass fecal sterol loss and macrophage RCT can proceed in the absence of biliary sterol secretion, challenging the obligate role of bile in RCT.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2010

Combined Therapy of Dietary Fish Oil and Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase 1 Inhibition Prevents the Metabolic Syndrome and Atherosclerosis

J. Mark Brown; Soonkyu Chung; Janet K. Sawyer; Chiara Degirolamo; Heather M. Alger; Tam Nguyen; Xuewei Zhu; My Ngan Duong; Amanda L. Brown; Caleb C. Lord; Ramesh Shah; Matthew A. Davis; Kathryn Kelley; Martha D. Wilson; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Michael B. Fessler; John S. Parks; Lawrence L. Rudel

Background—Stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1) is a critical regulator of energy metabolism and inflammation. We have previously reported that inhibition of SCD1 in hyperlipidemic mice fed a saturated fatty acid (SFA)-enriched diet prevented development of the metabolic syndrome, yet surprisingly promoted severe atherosclerosis. In this study we tested whether dietary fish oil supplementation could prevent the accelerated atherosclerosis caused by SCD1 inhibition. Methods and Results—LDLr−/−, ApoB100/100 mice were fed diets enriched in saturated fat or fish oil in conjunction with antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) treatment to inhibit SCD1. As previously reported, in SFA-fed mice, SCD1 inhibition dramatically protected against development of the metabolic syndrome, yet promoted atherosclerosis. In contrast, in mice fed fish oil, SCD1 inhibition did not result in augmented macrophage inflammatory response or severe atherosclerosis. In fact, the combined therapy of dietary fish oil and SCD1 ASO treatment effectively prevented both the metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis. Conclusions—SCD1 ASO treatment in conjunction with dietary fish oil supplementation is an effective combination therapy to comprehensively combat the metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis in mice.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Mammalian alpha beta hydrolase domain (ABHD) proteins: Lipid metabolizing enzymes at the interface of cell signaling and energy metabolism

Caleb C. Lord; Gwynneth Thomas; J. Mark Brown

Dysregulation of lipid metabolism underlies many chronic diseases such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. Therefore, understanding enzymatic mechanisms controlling lipid synthesis and degradation is imperative for successful drug discovery for these human diseases. Genes encoding α/β hydrolase fold domain (ABHD) proteins are present in virtually all reported genomes, and conserved structural motifs shared by these proteins predict common roles in lipid synthesis and degradation. However, the physiological substrates and products for these lipid metabolizing enzymes and their broader role in metabolic pathways remain largely uncharacterized. Recently, mutations in several members of the ABHD protein family have been implicated in inherited inborn errors of lipid metabolism. Furthermore, studies in cell and animal models have revealed important roles for ABHD proteins in lipid metabolism, lipid signal transduction, and metabolic disease. The purpose of this review is to provide a comprehensive summary surrounding the current state of knowledge regarding mammalian ABHD protein family members. In particular, we will discuss how ABHD proteins are ideally suited to act at the interface of lipid metabolism and signal transduction. Although, the current state of knowledge regarding mammalian ABHD proteins is still in its infancy, this review highlights the potential for the ABHD enzymes as being attractive targets for novel therapies targeting metabolic disease.


Diabetes | 2012

CGI-58/ABHD5-Derived Signaling Lipids Regulate Systemic Inflammation and Insulin Action

Caleb C. Lord; Jenna L. Betters; Pavlina T. Ivanova; Stephen B. Milne; David S. Myers; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Gwynneth Thomas; Soonkyu Chung; Mingxia Liu; Matthew A. Davis; Richard G. Lee; Rosanne M. Crooke; Mark J. Graham; John S. Parks; Dawn L. Brasaemle; Michael B. Fessler; H. Alex Brown; J. Mark Brown

Mutations of comparative gene identification 58 (CGI-58) in humans cause Chanarin-Dorfman syndrome, a rare autosomal recessive disease in which excess triacylglycerol (TAG) accumulates in multiple tissues. CGI-58 recently has been ascribed two distinct biochemical activities, including coactivation of adipose triglyceride lipase and acylation of lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). It is noteworthy that both the substrate (LPA) and the product (phosphatidic acid) of the LPA acyltransferase reaction are well-known signaling lipids. Therefore, we hypothesized that CGI-58 is involved in generating lipid mediators that regulate TAG metabolism and insulin sensitivity. Here, we show that CGI-58 is required for the generation of signaling lipids in response to inflammatory stimuli and that lipid second messengers generated by CGI-58 play a critical role in maintaining the balance between inflammation and insulin action. Furthermore, we show that CGI-58 is necessary for maximal TH1 cytokine signaling in the liver. This novel role for CGI-58 in cytokine signaling may explain why diminished CGI-58 expression causes severe hepatic lipid accumulation yet paradoxically improves hepatic insulin action. Collectively, these findings establish that CGI-58 provides a novel source of signaling lipids. These findings contribute insight into the basic mechanisms linking TH1 cytokine signaling to nutrient metabolism.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Hypophagia and metabolic adaptations in mice with defective ATGL-mediated lipolysis cause resistance to HFD-induced obesity

Renate Schreiber; Peter Hofer; Ulrike Taschler; Peter J. Voshol; Gerald N. Rechberger; Petra Kotzbeck; Doris Jaeger; Karina Preiss-Landl; Caleb C. Lord; J. Mark Brown; Guenter Haemmerle; Robert Zimmermann; Antonio Vidal-Puig; Rudolf Zechner

Significance The mass of white adipose tissue (WAT) in an organism is tightly controlled by the balance of triglyceride (TG) synthesis and catabolism. Here, we show that these opposing pathways communicate. TG catabolism by adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) activates peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR-γ), a crucial transcription factor for TG synthesis and storage in WAT. Consequently, ATGL deficiency in WAT not only impairs TG breakdown, but also PPAR-γ–driven TG formation. This decrease in TG synthesis leads to a paradoxical resistance to high fat diet-induced obesity in mice lacking ATGL. Interdependence of lipid catabolism and synthesis provides a rational explanation for the lack of obesity in ATGL-deficient mice and humans and identifies ATGL inhibition as potential treatment target to prevent diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance. Adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) initiates intracellular triglyceride (TG) catabolism. In humans, ATGL deficiency causes neutral lipid storage disease with myopathy (NLSDM) characterized by a systemic TG accumulation. Mice with a genetic deletion of ATGL (AKO) also accumulate TG in many tissues. However, neither NLSDM patients nor AKO mice are exceedingly obese. This phenotype is unexpected considering the importance of the enzyme for TG catabolism in white adipose tissue (WAT). In this study, we identified the counteracting mechanisms that prevent excessive obesity in the absence of ATGL. We used “healthy” AKO mice expressing ATGL exclusively in cardiomyocytes (AKO/cTg) to circumvent the cardiomyopathy and premature lethality observed in AKO mice. AKO/cTg mice were protected from high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity despite complete ATGL deficiency in WAT and normal adipocyte differentiation. AKO/cTg mice were highly insulin sensitive under hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp conditions, eliminating insulin insensitivity as a possible protective mechanism. Instead, reduced food intake and altered signaling by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-γ) and sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c in WAT accounted for the phenotype. These adaptations led to reduced lipid synthesis and storage in WAT of HFD-fed AKO/cTg mice. Treatment with the PPAR-γ agonist rosiglitazone reversed the phenotype. These results argue for the existence of an adaptive interdependence between lipolysis and lipid synthesis. Pharmacological inhibition of ATGL may prove useful to prevent HFD-induced obesity and insulin resistance.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2011

Adipose-selective overexpression of ABHD5/CGI-58 does not increase lipolysis or protect against diet-induced obesity

Jorge Matias Caviglia; Jenna L. Betters; Dianne-Helerie Dapito; Caleb C. Lord; Sean Sullivan; Streamson C. Chua; Terry Yin; Anna Sekowski; Haiyan Mu; Lawrence Shapiro; J. Mark Brown; Dawn L. Brasaemle

Adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) catalyzes the first step of triacylglycerol hydrolysis in adipocytes. Abhydrolase domain 5 (ABHD5) increases ATGL activity by an unknown mechanism. Prior studies have suggested that the expression of ABHD5 is limiting for lipolysis in adipocytes, as addition of recombinant ABHD5 increases in vitro TAG hydrolase activity of adipocyte lysates. To test this hypothesis in vivo, we generated transgenic mice that express 6-fold higher ABHD5 in adipose tissue relative to wild-type (WT) mice. In vivo lipolysis increased to a similar extent in ABHD5 transgenic and WT mice following an overnight fast or injection of either a β-adrenergic receptor agonist or lipopolysaccharide. Similarly, basal and β-adrenergic-stimulated lipolysis was comparable in adipocytes isolated from ABHD5 transgenic and WT mice. Although ABHD5 expression was elevated in thioglycolate-elicited macrophages from ABHD5 transgenic mice, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) signaling was comparable in macrophages isolated from ABHD5 transgenic and WT mice. Overexpression of ABHD5 did not prevent the development of obesity in mice fed a high-fat diet, as shown by comparison of body weight, body fat percentage, and adipocyte hypertrophy of ABHD5 transgenic to WT mice. The expression of ABHD5 in mouse adipose tissue is not limiting for either basal or stimulated lipolysis.


Adipocyte | 2012

Distinct roles for α-β hydrolase domain 5 (ABHD5/CGI-58) and adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL/PNPLA2) in lipid metabolism and signaling

Caleb C. Lord; J. Mark Brown

Catabolism of stored triacylglycerol (TAG) from cytoplasmic lipid droplets is critical for providing energy substrates, membrane building blocks and signaling lipids in most cells of the body. However, the lipolytic machinery dictating TAG hydrolysis varies greatly among different cell types. Within the adipocyte, TAG hydrolysis is dynamically regulated by hormones to ensure appropriate metabolic adaptation to nutritional and physiologic cues. In other cell types such as hepatocytes, myocytes and macrophages, mobilization of stored TAG is regulated quite differently. Within the last decade, mutations in two key genes involved in TAG hydrolysis, α-β hydrolase domain 5 (ABHD5/CGI-58) and adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL/PNPLA2), were found to cause two distinct neutral lipid storage diseases (NLSD) in humans. These genetic links, along with supporting evidence in mouse models, have prompted a number of studies surrounding the biochemical function(s) of these proteins. Although both CGI-58 and ATGL have been clearly implicated in TAG hydrolysis in multiple tissues and have even been shown to physically interact with each other, recent evidence suggests that they may also have distinct roles. The purpose of this review is to summarize the most recent insights into how CGI-58 and ATGL regulate lipid metabolism and signaling.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2013

Intestinal SR-BI does not impact cholesterol absorption or transintestinal cholesterol efflux in mice

Kanwardeep S. Bura; Caleb C. Lord; Stephanie M. Marshall; Allison L. McDaniel; Gwyn Thomas; Manya Warrier; Jun Zhang; Matthew A. Davis; Janet K. Sawyer; Ramesh Shah; Martha D. Wilson; Arne Dikkers; Uwe J. F. Tietge; Xavier Collet; Lawrence L. Rudel; Ryan E. Temel; J. Mark Brown

Reverse cholesterol transport (RCT) can proceed through the classic hepatobiliary route or through the nonbiliary transintestinal cholesterol efflux (TICE) pathway. Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) plays a critical role in the classic hepatobiliary route of RCT. However, the role of SR-BI in TICE has not been studied. To examine the role of intestinal SR-BI in TICE, sterol balance was measured in control mice and mice transgenically overexpressing SR-BI in the proximal small intestine (SR-BIhApoCIII-ApoAIV-Tg). SR-BIhApoCIII-ApoAIV-Tg mice had significantly lower plasma cholesterol levels compared with wild-type controls, yet SR-BIhApoCIII-ApoAIV-Tg mice had normal fractional cholesterol absorption and fecal neutral sterol excretion. Both in the absence or presence of ezetimibe, intestinal SR-BI overexpression had no impact on the amount of cholesterol excreted in the feces. To specifically study effects of intestinal SR-BI on TICE we crossed SR-BIhApoCIII-ApoAIV-Tg mice into a mouse model that preferentially utilized the TICE pathway for RCT (Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 liver transgenic), and likewise found no alterations in cholesterol absorption or fecal sterol excretion. Finally, mice lacking SR-BI in all tissues also exhibited normal cholesterol absorption and fecal cholesterol disposal. Collectively, these results suggest that SR-BI is not rate limiting for intestinal cholesterol absorption or for fecal neutral sterol loss through the TICE pathway.


Cell Reports | 2013

The Serine Hydrolase ABHD6 Is a Critical Regulator of the Metabolic Syndrome

Gwynneth Thomas; Jenna L. Betters; Caleb C. Lord; Amanda L. Brown; Stephanie M. Marshall; Daniel Ferguson; Janet K. Sawyer; Matthew A. Davis; John T. Melchior; Lawrence C. Blume; Allyn C. Howlett; Pavlina T. Ivanova; Stephen B. Milne; David S. Myers; Irina Mrak; Vera Leber; Christoph Heier; Ulrike Taschler; Jacqueline L. Blankman; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Richard G. Lee; Rosanne M. Crooke; Mark J. Graham; Robert Zimmermann; H. Alex Brown; J. Mark Brown

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Ramesh Shah

Wake Forest University

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