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Dive into the research topics where Chianping Ye is active.

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Featured researches published by Chianping Ye.


Neuron | 2011

Leptin action on GABAergic neurons prevents obesity and reduces inhibitory tone to POMC neurons.

Linh Vong; Chianping Ye; Zongfang Yang; Brian Choi; Streamson C. Chua; Bradford B. Lowell

Leptin acts in the brain to prevent obesity. The underlying neurocircuitry responsible for this is poorly understood, in part because of incomplete knowledge regarding first-order, leptin-responsive neurons. To address this, we and others have been removing leptin receptors from candidate first-order neurons. While functionally relevant neurons have been identified, the observed effects have been small, suggesting that most first-order neurons remain unidentified. Here we take an alternative approach and test whether first-order neurons are inhibitory (GABAergic, VGAT⁺) or excitatory (glutamatergic, VGLUT2⁺). Remarkably, the vast majority of leptins antiobesity effects are mediated by GABAergic neurons; glutamatergic neurons play only a minor role. Leptin, working directly on presynaptic GABAergic neurons, many of which appear not to express AgRP, reduces inhibitory tone to postsynaptic POMC neurons. As POMC neurons prevent obesity, their disinhibition by leptin action on presynaptic GABAergic neurons probably mediates, at least in part, leptins antiobesity effects.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Acute effects of leptin require PI3K signaling in hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin neurons in mice

Jennifer W. Hill; Kevin W. Williams; Chianping Ye; Ji Luo; Nina Balthasar; Roberto Coppari; Michael Cowley; Lewis C. Cantley; Bradford B. Lowell; Joel K. Elmquist

Normal food intake and body weight homeostasis require the direct action of leptin on hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons. It has been proposed that leptin action requires PI3K activity. We therefore assessed the contribution of PI3K signaling to leptins effects on POMC neurons and organismal energy balance. Leptin caused a rapid depolarization of POMC neurons and an increase in action potential frequency in patch-clamp recordings of hypothalamic slices. Pharmacologic inhibition of PI3K prevented this depolarization and increased POMC firing rate, indicating a PI3K-dependent mechanism of leptin action. Mice with genetically disrupted PI3K signaling in POMC cells failed to undergo POMC depolarization or increased firing frequency in response to leptin. Insulins ability to hyperpolarize POMC neurons was also abolished in these mice. Moreover, targeted disruption of PI3K blunted the suppression of feeding elicited by central leptin administration. Despite these differences, mice with impaired PI3K signaling in POMC neurons exhibited normal long-term body weight regulation. Collectively, these results suggest that PI3K signaling in POMC neurons is essential for leptin-induced activation and insulin-induced inhibition of POMC cells and for the acute suppression of food intake elicited by leptin, but is not a major contributor to the regulation of long-term organismal energy homeostasis.


Cell | 2012

GABAergic RIP-Cre Neurons in the Arcuate Nucleus Selectively Regulate Energy Expenditure

Dong Geon Kong; Qingchun Tong; Chianping Ye; Shuichi Koda; Patrick M. Fuller; Michael J. Krashes; Linh Vong; Russell S. Ray; David P. Olson; Bradford B. Lowell

Neural regulation of energy expenditure is incompletely understood. By genetically disrupting GABAergic transmission in a cell-specific fashion, and by combining this with selective pharmacogenetic activation and optogenetic mapping techniques, we have uncovered an arcuate-based circuit that selectively drives energy expenditure. Specifically, mice lacking synaptic GABA release from RIP-Cre neurons have reduced energy expenditure, become obese and are extremely sensitive to high-fat diet-induced obesity, the latter due to defective diet-induced thermogenesis. Leptins ability to stimulate thermogenesis, but not to reduce feeding, is markedly attenuated. Acute, selective activation of arcuate GABAergic RIP-Cre neurons, which monosynaptically innervate PVH neurons projecting to the NTS, rapidly stimulates brown fat and increases energy expenditure but does not affect feeding. Importantly, this response is dependent upon GABA release from RIP-Cre neurons. Thus, GABAergic RIP-Cre neurons in the arcuate selectively drive energy expenditure, contribute to leptins stimulatory effect on thermogenesis, and protect against diet-induced obesity.


Cell Metabolism | 2010

Glucose Stimulation of Hypothalamic MCH Neurons Involves KATP Channels, Is Modulated by UCP2, and Regulates Peripheral Glucose Homeostasis

Dong Kong; Linh Vong; Laura E. Parton; Chianping Ye; Qingchun Tong; Xiaoxia Hu; Brian Choi; Jens C. Brüning; Bradford B. Lowell

Blood glucose levels are tightly controlled, a process thought to be orchestrated primarily by peripheral mechanisms (insulin secretion by β cells, and insulin action on muscle, fat, and liver). The brain also plays an important, albeit less well-defined role. Subsets of neurons in the brain are excited by glucose; in many cases this involves ATP-mediated closure of K(ATP) channels. To understand the relevance of this, we are manipulating glucose sensing within glucose-excited neurons. In the present study, we demonstrate that glucose excitation of MCH-expressing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus is mediated by K(ATP) channels and is negatively regulated by UCP2 (a mitochondrial protein that reduces ATP production), and that glucose sensing by MCH neurons plays an important role in regulating glucose homeostasis. Combined, the glucose-excited neurons are likely to play key, previously unexpected roles in regulating blood glucose.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

MC4R-expressing glutamatergic neurons in the paraventricular hypothalamus regulate feeding and are synaptically connected to the parabrachial nucleus

Bhavik P. Shah; Linh Vong; David P. Olson; Shuichi Koda; Michael J. Krashes; Chianping Ye; Zongfang Yang; Patrick M. Fuller; Joel K. Elmquist; Bradford B. Lowell

Significance Both in rodents and humans, melanocortin-4 receptors (MC4Rs) suppress appetite and prevent obesity. Unfortunately, the underlying neural mechanisms by which MC4Rs regulate food intake are poorly understood. Unraveling these mechanisms may open up avenues for treating obesity. In the present study we have established that MC4Rs on neurons in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus are both necessary and sufficient for MC4R control of feeding and that these neurons are glutamatergic and not GABAergic and do not express the neuropeptides oxytocin, corticotropin-releasing hormone, prodynorphin, or vasopressin. In addition, we identify downstream projections from these glutamatergic neurons to the lateral parabrachial nucleus, which could mediate the appetite suppressing effects. Activation of melanocortin-4 receptors (MC4Rs) restrains feeding and prevents obesity; however, the identity, location, and axonal projections of the neurons bearing MC4Rs that control feeding remain unknown. Reexpression of MC4Rs on single-minded 1 (SIM1)+ neurons in mice otherwise lacking MC4Rs is sufficient to abolish hyperphagia. Thus, MC4Rs on SIM1+ neurons, possibly in the paraventricular hypothalamus (PVH) and/or amygdala, regulate food intake. It is unknown, however, whether they are also necessary, a distinction required for excluding redundant sites of action. Hence, the location and nature of obesity-preventing MC4R-expressing neurons are unknown. Here, by deleting and reexpressing MC4Rs from cre-expressing neurons, establishing both necessity and sufficiency, we demonstrate that the MC4R-expressing neurons regulating feeding are SIM1+, located in the PVH, glutamatergic and not GABAergic, and do not express oxytocin, corticotropin-releasing hormone, vasopressin, or prodynorphin. Importantly, these excitatory MC4R-expressing PVH neurons are synaptically connected to neurons in the parabrachial nucleus, which relays visceral information to the forebrain. This suggests a basis for the feeding-regulating effects of MC4Rs.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

Rho-kinase regulates energy balance by targeting hypothalamic leptin receptor signaling

Hu Huang; Dong Kong; Kyung Hee Byun; Chianping Ye; Shuichi Koda; Dae Ho Lee; Byung-Chul Oh; Sam W. Lee; Bonghee Lee; Janice M. Zabolotny; Min Seon Kim; Christian Bjørbæk; Bradford B. Lowell; Young-Bum Kim

Leptin regulates energy balance. However, knowledge of the critical intracellular transducers of leptin signaling remains incomplete. We found that Rho-kinase 1 (ROCK1) regulates leptin action on body weight homeostasis by activating JAK2, an initial trigger of leptin receptor signaling. Leptin promoted the physical interaction of JAK2 and ROCK1, thereby increasing phosphorylation of JAK2 and downstream activation of Stat3 and FOXO1. Mice lacking ROCK1 in either pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) or agouti-related protein neurons, mediators of leptin action, displayed obesity and impaired leptin sensitivity. In addition, deletion of ROCK1 in the arcuate nucleus markedly enhanced food intake, resulting in severe obesity. Notably, ROCK1 was a specific mediator of leptin, but not insulin, regulation of POMC neuronal activity. Our data identify ROCK1 as a key regulator of leptin action on energy homeostasis.


Endocrinology | 2013

ROCK1 in AgRP neurons regulates energy expenditure and locomotor activity in male mice.

Hu Huang; Seung Hwan Lee; Chianping Ye; Inês S. Lima; Byung-Chul Oh; Bradford B. Lowell; Janice M. Zabolotny; Young-Bum Kim

Normal leptin signaling is essential for the maintenance of body weight homeostasis. Proopiomelanocortin- and agouti-related peptide (AgRP)-producing neurons play critical roles in regulating energy metabolism. Our recent work demonstrates that deletion of Rho-kinase 1 (ROCK1) in the AgRP neurons of mice increased body weight and adiposity. Here, we report that selective loss of ROCK1 in AgRP neurons caused a significant decrease in energy expenditure and locomotor activity of mice. These effects were independent of any change in food intake. Furthermore, AgRP neuron-specific ROCK1-deficient mice displayed central leptin resistance, as evidenced by impaired Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3 activation in response to leptin administration. Leptins ability to hyperpolarize and decrease firing rate of AgRP neurons was also abolished in the absence of ROCK1. Moreover, diet-induced and genetic forms of obesity resulted in reduced ROCK1 activity in murine arcuate nucleus. Of note, high-fat diet also impaired leptin-stimulated ROCK1 activity in arcuate nucleus, suggesting that a defect in hypothalamic ROCK1 activity may contribute to the pathogenesis of central leptin resistance in obesity. Together, these data demonstrate that ROCK1 activation in hypothalamic AgRP neurons is required for the homeostatic regulation of energy expenditure and adiposity. These results further support previous work identifying ROCK1 as a key regulator of energy balance and suggest that targeting ROCK1 in the hypothalamus may lead to development of antiobesity therapeutics.


Neuron | 2006

Leptin Directly Activates SF1 Neurons in the VMH, and This Action by Leptin Is Required for Normal Body-Weight Homeostasis

Harveen Dhillon; Jeffrey M. Zigman; Chianping Ye; Charlotte E. Lee; Robert A. McGovern; Vinsee Tang; Christopher D. Kenny; Lauryn M. Christiansen; Ryan D. White; Elisabeth A. Edelstein; Roberto Coppari; Nina Balthasar; Michael Cowley; Streamson C. Chua; Joel K. Elmquist; Bradford B. Lowell


Cell Metabolism | 2007

Synaptic Glutamate Release by Ventromedial Hypothalamic Neurons Is Part of the Neurocircuitry that Prevents Hypoglycemia

Qingchun Tong; Chianping Ye; Rory J. McCrimmon; Harveen Dhillon; Brian Choi; Melissa D. Kramer; Jia Yu; Zongfang Yang; Lauryn M. Christiansen; Charlotte E. Lee; Cheol Soo Choi; Jeffrey M. Zigman; Gerald I. Shulman; Robert S. Sherwin; Joel K. Elmquist; Bradford B. Lowell


Neuron | 2012

Fasting Activation of AgRP Neurons Requires NMDA Receptors and Involves Spinogenesis and Increased Excitatory Tone

Tiemin Liu; Dong Kong; Bhavik P. Shah; Chianping Ye; Shuichi Koda; Arpiar Saunders; Jun B. Ding; Zongfang Yang; Bernardo L. Sabatini; Bradford B. Lowell

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Bradford B. Lowell

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Shuichi Koda

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Dong Kong

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Joel K. Elmquist

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Linh Vong

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Zongfang Yang

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Brian Choi

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Qingchun Tong

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Charlotte E. Lee

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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