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Dive into the research topics where Carla Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Carla Johnson.


Molecular Cell | 2002

A Mechanism of Cell Survival: Sequestration of Fas by the HGF Receptor Met

Xue Wang; Marie C. DeFrances; Yu Dai; Peter Pediaditakis; Carla Johnson; Aaron Bell; George K. Michalopoulos; Reza Zarnegar

Death receptors such as Fas are present in a variety of organs including liver and play an important role in homeostasis. What prevents these harmful receptors from forming homooligomers, clustering, and initiating the apoptotic pathway is not known. Here, we report the discovery of a cell survival mechanism by which Met, a growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase, directly binds to and sequesters the death receptor Fas in hepatocytes. This interaction prevents Fas self-aggregation and Fas ligand binding, thus inhibiting Fas activation and apoptosis. Our results describe a direct link between growth factor tyrosine kinase receptors and death receptors to establish a novel paradigm in growth regulation.


Nature Medicine | 2007

Lack of Fas antagonism by Met in human fatty liver disease

Chunbin Zou; Jihong Ma; Xue Wang; Lida Guo; Zhenqi Zhu; John Stoops; Amanda E. Eaker; Carla Johnson; Stephen C. Strom; George K. Michalopoulos; Marie C. DeFrances; Reza Zarnegar

Hepatocytes in fatty livers are hypersensitive to apoptosis and undergo escalated apoptotic activity via death receptor–mediated pathways, particularly that of Fas-FasL, causing hepatic injury that can eventually proceed to cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease. Here we report that the hepatocyte growth factor receptor, Met, plays an important part in preventing Fas-mediated apoptosis of hepatocytes by sequestering Fas. We also show that Fas antagonism by Met is abrogated in human fatty liver disease (FLD). Through structure-function studies, we found that a YLGA amino-acid motif located near the extracellular N terminus of the Met α-subunit is necessary and sufficient to specifically bind the extracellular portion of Fas and to act as a potent FasL antagonist and inhibitor of Fas trimerization. Using mouse models of FLD, we show that synthetic YLGA peptide tempers hepatocyte apoptosis and liver damage and therefore has therapeutic potential.


Cancer Research | 2008

PIK3IP1, a Negative Regulator of PI3K, Suppresses the Development of Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Xin He; Zhenqi Zhu; Carla Johnson; John Stoops; Amanda E. Eaker; William C. Bowen; Marie C. DeFrances

Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) is a well-known regulator of cell division, motility, and survival in most cell types. Recently, we characterized a novel protein that we call PI3K Interacting Protein 1 (PIK3IP1), which binds to the p110 catalytic subunit of PI3K and reduces its activity in vitro. Little is known about the role of PIK3IP1 in normal and neoplastic growth in vivo. Proper liver function and development depend on intact PI3K signal transduction; when dysregulated, the PI3K pathway is linked to the development of liver cancer. To begin to dissect the contribution of PIK3IP1 to hepatic PI3K signaling in vivo and to liver tumorigenesis in particular, we formulated the following hypothesis: because PIK3IP1 down-regulates PI3K signaling and uncontrolled PI3K signaling is associated with liver cancer, then PIK3IP1-mediated down-regulation of the PI3K pathway should inhibit hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development. To test this idea, we generated transgenic mice overexpressing PIK3IP1 in hepatocytes in a mouse strain prone to develop HCC. Isolated PIK3IP1 transgenic mouse hepatocytes showed blunted PI3K signaling, DNA synthetic activity, motility, and survival compared with controls. In vivo, spontaneous liver tumorigenesis was significantly dampened in the transgenic animals. This was accompanied by decreased hepatic PI3K activity and reduced hepatocyte proliferation in the transgenics compared with controls. We also observed that human HCC expressed less PIK3IP1 protein than adjacent matched liver tissue. Our data show that PIK3IP1 is an important regulator of PI3K in vivo, and its dysregulation can contribute to liver carcinogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Peroxisome Proliferator-activated Receptor γ-mediated Transcriptional Up-regulation of the Hepatocyte Growth Factor Gene Promoter via a Novel Composite cis-Acting Element

Jie-Gen Jiang; Carla Johnson; Reza Zarnegar

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a pleotropic polypeptide that can function as a morphogen, motogen, mitogen, angiogen, carcinogen, and tumor suppressor, depending on the target cell and tissue. Previous studies from our laboratory using transgenic mice have shown that HGF gene expression is tightly regulated at the transcriptional level and that the upstream regulatory elements are crucial for the control of HGF gene transcription. In the present study, we have identified and characterized one of these elements as a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ)-responsive element. This regulatory element was localized at −246 to −233 base pairs upstream from the transcription start site of the HGF gene promoter having the sequence GGGCCAGGTGACCT. Gel mobility shift and supershift assays demonstrated that this cis-acting element strongly binds to the PPARγ isoforms as well as to chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factor, a member of the orphan nuclear receptor subfamily. Mutational analysis and gel mobility band shift assays indicated that the binding site is an inverted repeat of the AGGTCA motif with two spacers (inverted repeat 2 configuration) and that the two spacers are important for PPARγ binding. This binding site overlaps with functional binding sites for activating protein-2, nuclear factor 1, and upstream stimulatory factor, and together, they constitute a multifunctional composite binding site through which these different transcription factors exert their regulatory effects on HGF promoter activity. Functional assays revealed that PPARγ, with its ligand, 15-deoxy-prostaglandin J2, strongly stimulates HGF promoter activity. On the other hand, nuclear factor 1, activating protein-2, and chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factor transcription factors repress the stimulatory action of PPARγ by competing with PPARγ for their overlapping binding sites. Furthermore, for the first time, our studies demonstrate that the PPARγ ligand, 15-deoxy-prostaglandin J2, induces endogenous HGF mRNA and protein expression in fibroblasts in culture.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2009

The Met protooncogene is a transcriptional target of NFkappaB: Implications for cell survival

James Y. Dai; Marie C. DeFrances; Chunbin Zou; Carla Johnson; Reza Zarnegar

NFkappaB transcription factor regulates gene expression in response to extracellular stimuli such as TNF alpha. The genes regulated by NFkappaB encode for proteins which control cell growth and survival. Met is the tyrosine kinase receptor for hepatocyte growth factor, and it too promotes cell mitogenesis and survival. Previously, we showed that Met gene expression is regulated by TNF alpha. In this report, we identify and characterize a TNF alpha response element in the Met promoter. This element contains tandem C/EBP sites adjacent to an NFkappaB site. Binding of the NFkappaB p65 subunit and C/EBP beta to this element is induced by TNF alpha. To examine the interplay of NFkappaB and Met in vivo, we determined that Met mRNA and protein levels are reduced in the livers of p65−/− mice as compared to controls. In p65−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), Met induction by TNF alpha is abrogated while Mets basal gene expression is reduced by half as compared to controls. When overexpressed in p65−/− MEFs, Met confers resistance to TNF‐alpha‐mediated cell death. Conversely, expression of dominant negative Met in wild‐type MEFs renders them sensitive to cell death induced by TNF alpha. A similar response following TNF alpha challenge was observed in hepatocytic cells treated with siRNA to knockdown endogenous Met. Together, these results indicate that the Met gene is a direct target of NFkappaB and that Met participates in NFkappaB‐mediated cell survival. J. Cell. Biochem. 107: 1222–1236, 2009.


iScience | 2018

Binding of drug-activated CAR/Nr1i3 alters metabolic regulation in the liver

Jianmin Tian; Rebecca Marino; Carla Johnson; Joseph Locker

Summary The constitutive androstane receptor (CAR/Nr1i3) regulates detoxification of drugs and other xenobiotics by the liver. Binding of these compounds, activating ligands, causes CAR to translocate to the nucleus and stimulate genes of detoxification. However, CAR activation also changes metabolism and induces rapid liver growth. To explain this gene regulation, we characterized the genome-wide early binding of CAR; its binding partner, RXRα; and the acetylation that they induced on H4K5. CAR-linked genes showed either stimulation or inhibition and regulated lipid, carbohydrate, and energy metabolism, as well as detoxification. Stimulation of expression increased, but inhibition did not decrease, H4K5Ac. Transcriptional inhibition occurred when CAR bound with HNF4α, PPARα, or FXR on the same enhancers. Functional competition among these bound nuclear receptors normally coordinates transcriptional resources as metabolism shifts. However, binding of drug-activated CAR to the same enhancers adds a new competitor that constitutively alters the normal balance of metabolic gene regulation.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2007

PI3K is negatively regulated by PIK3IP1, a novel p110 interacting protein

Zhenqi Zhu; Xin He; Carla Johnson; John Stoops; Amanda E. Eaker; David S. Stoffer; Aaron Bell; Reza Zarnegar; Marie C. DeFrances


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Somatic mutation and functional polymorphism of a novel regulatory element in the HGF gene promoter causes its aberrant expression in human breast cancer

Jihong Ma; Marie C. DeFrances; Chunbin Zou; Carla Johnson; Robert Ferrell; Reza Zarnegar


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2000

The repressive function of AP2 transcription factor on the hepatocyte growth factor gene promoter.

Jie-Gen Jiang; Marie C. DeFrances; Jennifer Machen; Carla Johnson; Reza Zarnegar


Molecular Cell | 2002

A Mechanism of Cell Survival

Xue Wang; Marie C. DeFrances; Yu Dai; Peter Pediaditakis; Carla Johnson; Aaron Bell; George K. Michalopoulos; Reza Zarnegar

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Reza Zarnegar

University of Pittsburgh

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John Stoops

University of Pittsburgh

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Zhenqi Zhu

University of Pittsburgh

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Xin He

University of Pittsburgh

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Aaron Bell

University of Pittsburgh

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Chunbin Zou

University of Pittsburgh

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Xue Wang

University of Pittsburgh

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