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Dive into the research topics where Christopher M. Adams is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher M. Adams.


Cell Metabolism | 2011

mRNA Expression Signatures of Human Skeletal Muscle Atrophy Identify a Natural Compound that Increases Muscle Mass

Steven D. Kunkel; Manish Suneja; Scott M. Ebert; Kale S. Bongers; Daniel K. Fox; Sharon E. Malmberg; Fariborz Alipour; Richard K. Shields; Christopher M. Adams

Skeletal muscle atrophy is a common and debilitating condition that lacks a pharmacologic therapy. To develop a potential therapy, we identified 63 mRNAs that were regulated by fasting in both human and mouse muscle, and 29 mRNAs that were regulated by both fasting and spinal cord injury in human muscle. We used these two unbiased mRNA expression signatures of muscle atrophy to query the Connectivity Map, which singled out ursolic acid as a compound whose signature was opposite to those of atrophy-inducing stresses. A natural compound enriched in apples, ursolic acid reduced muscle atrophy and stimulated muscle hypertrophy in mice. It did so by enhancing skeletal muscle insulin/IGF-I signaling and inhibiting atrophy-associated skeletal muscle mRNA expression. Importantly, ursolic acids effects on muscle were accompanied by reductions in adiposity, fasting blood glucose, and plasma cholesterol and triglycerides. These findings identify a potential therapy for muscle atrophy and perhaps other metabolic diseases.


Current Biology | 2003

Enhanced Locomotion Caused by Loss of the Drosophila DEG/ENaC Protein Pickpocket1

Joshua A. Ainsley; Janette M. Pettus; Dmitry Bosenko; Clare E. Gerstein; Natalya Zinkevich; Michael G. Anderson; Christopher M. Adams; Michael J. Welsh; Wayne A. Johnson

Coordination of rhythmic locomotion depends upon a precisely balanced interplay between central and peripheral control mechanisms. Although poorly understood, peripheral proprioceptive mechanosensory input is thought to provide information about body position for moment-to-moment modifications of central mechanisms mediating rhythmic motor output. Pickpocket1 (PPK1) is a Drosophila subunit of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) family displaying limited expression in multiple dendritic (md) sensory neurons tiling the larval body wall and a small number of bipolar neurons in the upper brain. ppk1 null mutant larvae had normal external touch sensation and md neuron morphology but displayed striking alterations in crawling behavior. Loss of PPK1 function caused an increase in crawling speed and an unusual straight path with decreased stops and turns relative to wild-type. This enhanced locomotion resulted from sustained peristaltic contraction wave cycling at higher frequency with a significant decrease in pause period between contraction cycles. The mutant phenotype was rescued by a wild-type PPK1 transgene and duplicated by expressing a ppk1RNAi transgene or a dominant-negative PPK1 isoform. These results demonstrate that the PPK1 channel plays an essential role in controlling rhythmic locomotion and provide a powerful genetic model system for further analysis of central and peripheral control mechanisms and their role in movement disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Ursolic Acid Increases Skeletal Muscle and Brown Fat and Decreases Diet-Induced Obesity, Glucose Intolerance and Fatty Liver Disease

Steven D. Kunkel; Christopher J. Elmore; Kale S. Bongers; Scott M. Ebert; Daniel K. Fox; Michael C. Dyle; Steven A. Bullard; Christopher M. Adams

Skeletal muscle Akt activity stimulates muscle growth and imparts resistance to obesity, glucose intolerance and fatty liver disease. We recently found that ursolic acid increases skeletal muscle Akt activity and stimulates muscle growth in non-obese mice. Here, we tested the hypothesis that ursolic acid might increase skeletal muscle Akt activity in a mouse model of diet-induced obesity. We studied mice that consumed a high fat diet lacking or containing ursolic acid. In skeletal muscle, ursolic acid increased Akt activity, as well as downstream mRNAs that promote glucose utilization (hexokinase-II), blood vessel recruitment (Vegfa) and autocrine/paracrine IGF-I signaling (Igf1). As a result, ursolic acid increased skeletal muscle mass, fast and slow muscle fiber size, grip strength and exercise capacity. Interestingly, ursolic acid also increased brown fat, a tissue that shares developmental origins with skeletal muscle. Consistent with increased skeletal muscle and brown fat, ursolic acid increased energy expenditure, leading to reduced obesity, improved glucose tolerance and decreased hepatic steatosis. These data support a model in which ursolic acid reduces obesity, glucose intolerance and fatty liver disease by increasing skeletal muscle and brown fat, and suggest ursolic acid as a potential therapeutic approach for obesity and obesity-related illness.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Role of the Transcription Factor ATF4 in the Anabolic Actions of Insulin and the Anti-anabolic Actions of Glucocorticoids

Christopher M. Adams

In most mammalian cells, insulin and glucocorticoids promote anabolism and catabolism, respectively. Whereas the opposing effects of insulin and glucocorticoids on catabolic gene expression have been explained at the molecular level, comparatively little is known about how these hormones alter anabolic gene expression. These studies identify ATF4 as an anabolic transcription factor that is repressed by glucocorticoids and induced by insulin. Insulin-mediated induction of ATF4 required the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, was required for the activation of a genetic program for the cellular uptake of essential amino acids and the synthesis of nonessential amino acids and aminoacyl-tRNAs, and was coupled to the repression of Foxo-dependent genes needed for protein and lipid catabolism. These results suggest that ATF4 plays a central role in hormonal regulation of amino acid and protein anabolism by coupling amino acid uptake and synthesis, as well as the generation of charged tRNAs, to mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1-mediated mRNA translation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Stress-induced Skeletal Muscle Gadd45a Expression Reprograms Myonuclei and Causes Muscle Atrophy

Scott M. Ebert; Michael C. Dyle; Steven D. Kunkel; Steven A. Bullard; Kale S. Bongers; Daniel K. Fox; Jason M. Dierdorff; Eric D. Foster; Christopher M. Adams

Background: In skeletal muscle, diverse stresses induce the transcription factor ATF4, which promotes muscle atrophy by an unknown mechanism. Results: ATF4 causes muscle atrophy by inducing Gadd45a, which reprograms myonuclear gene expression to repress anti-atrophy mechanisms and induce pro-atrophy mechanisms. Conclusion: Gadd45a is a critical stress-induced mediator of muscle atrophy. Significance: The ATF4/Gadd45a pathway is a potential therapeutic target in atrophic muscle. Diverse stresses including starvation and muscle disuse cause skeletal muscle atrophy. However, the molecular mechanisms of muscle atrophy are complex and not well understood. Here, we demonstrate that growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible 45a protein (Gadd45a) is a critical mediator of muscle atrophy. We identified Gadd45a through an unbiased search for potential downstream mediators of the stress-inducible, pro-atrophy transcription factor ATF4. We show that Gadd45a is required for skeletal muscle atrophy induced by three distinct skeletal muscle stresses: fasting, muscle immobilization, and muscle denervation. Conversely, forced expression of Gadd45a in muscle or cultured myotubes induces atrophy in the absence of upstream stress. We show that muscle-specific ATF4 knock-out mice have a reduced capacity to induce Gadd45a mRNA in response to stress, and as a result, they undergo less atrophy in response to fasting or muscle immobilization. Interestingly, Gadd45a is a myonuclear protein that induces myonuclear remodeling and a comprehensive program for muscle atrophy. Gadd45a represses genes involved in anabolic signaling and energy production, and it induces pro-atrophy genes. As a result, Gadd45a reduces multiple barriers to muscle atrophy (including PGC-1α, Akt activity, and protein synthesis) and stimulates pro-atrophy mechanisms (including autophagy and caspase-mediated proteolysis). These results elucidate a critical stress-induced pathway that reprograms muscle gene expression to cause atrophy.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2010

The Transcription Factor ATF4 Promotes Skeletal Myofiber Atrophy during Fasting

Scott M. Ebert; Alex Mas Monteys; Daniel K. Fox; Kale S. Bongers; Bridget E. Shields; Sharon E. Malmberg; Beverly L. Davidson; Manish Suneja; Christopher M. Adams

Prolonged fasting alters skeletal muscle gene expression in a manner that promotes myofiber atrophy, but the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Here, we examined the potential role of activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4), a transcription factor with an evolutionarily ancient role in the cellular response to starvation. In mouse skeletal muscle, fasting increases the level of ATF4 mRNA. To determine whether increased ATF4 expression was required for myofiber atrophy, we reduced ATF4 expression with an inhibitory RNA targeting ATF4 and found that it reduced myofiber atrophy during fasting. Likewise, reducing the fasting level of ATF4 mRNA with a phosphorylation-resistant form of eukaryotic initiation factor 2alpha decreased myofiber atrophy. To determine whether ATF4 was sufficient to reduce myofiber size, we overexpressed ATF4 and found that it reduced myofiber size in the absence of fasting. In contrast, a transcriptionally inactive ATF4 construct did not reduce myofiber size, suggesting a requirement for ATF4-mediated transcriptional regulation. To begin to determine the mechanism of ATF4-mediated myofiber atrophy, we compared the effects of fasting and ATF4 overexpression on global skeletal muscle mRNA expression. Interestingly, expression of ATF4 increased a small subset of five fasting-responsive mRNAs, including four of the 15 mRNAs most highly induced by fasting. These five mRNAs encode proteins previously implicated in growth suppression (p21(Cip1/Waf1), GADD45alpha, and PW1/Peg3) or titin-based stress signaling [muscle LIM protein (MLP) and cardiac ankyrin repeat protein (CARP)]. Taken together, these data identify ATF4 as a novel mediator of skeletal myofiber atrophy during starvation.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

Skeletal muscle denervation causes skeletal muscle atrophy through a pathway that involves both Gadd45a and HDAC4

Kale S. Bongers; Daniel K. Fox; Scott M. Ebert; Steven D. Kunkel; Michael C. Dyle; Steven A. Bullard; Jason M. Dierdorff; Christopher M. Adams

Skeletal muscle denervation causes muscle atrophy via complex molecular mechanisms that are not well understood. To better understand these mechanisms, we investigated how muscle denervation increases growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible 45α (Gadd45a) mRNA in skeletal muscle. Previous studies established that muscle denervation strongly induces Gadd45a mRNA, which increases Gadd45a, a small myonuclear protein that is required for denervation-induced muscle fiber atrophy. However, the mechanism by which denervation increases Gadd45a mRNA remained unknown. Here, we demonstrate that histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4) mediates induction of Gadd45a mRNA in denervated muscle. Using mouse models, we show that HDAC4 is required for induction of Gadd45a mRNA during muscle denervation. Conversely, forced expression of HDAC4 is sufficient to increase skeletal muscle Gadd45a mRNA in the absence of muscle denervation. Moreover, Gadd45a mediates several downstream effects of HDAC4, including induction of myogenin mRNA, induction of mRNAs encoding the embryonic nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, and, most importantly, skeletal muscle fiber atrophy. Because Gadd45a induction is also a key event in fasting-induced muscle atrophy, we tested whether HDAC4 might also contribute to Gadd45a induction during fasting. Interestingly, however, HDAC4 is not required for fasting-induced Gadd45a expression or muscle atrophy. Furthermore, activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4), which contributes to fasting-induced Gadd45a expression, is not required for denervation-induced Gadd45a expression or muscle atrophy. Collectively, these results identify HDAC4 as an important regulator of Gadd45a in denervation-induced muscle atrophy and elucidate Gadd45a as a convergence point for distinct upstream regulators during muscle denervation and fasting.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Systems-based Discovery of Tomatidine as a Natural Small Molecule Inhibitor of Skeletal Muscle Atrophy

Michael C. Dyle; Scott M. Ebert; Daniel P. Cook; Steven D. Kunkel; Daniel K. Fox; Kale S. Bongers; Steven A. Bullard; Jason M. Dierdorff; Christopher M. Adams

Background: Skeletal muscle atrophy is a common and serious condition that lacks a pharmacologic therapy. Results: We used a systems-based strategy to identify tomatidine, a natural compound from tomato plants, as a novel small molecule inhibitor of muscle atrophy. Conclusion: Tomatidine may have utility as a therapeutic agent or lead compound for muscle atrophy. Significance: These results suggest new therapeutic strategies for muscle atrophy. Skeletal muscle atrophy is a common and debilitating condition that lacks an effective therapy. To address this problem, we used a systems-based discovery strategy to search for a small molecule whose mRNA expression signature negatively correlates to mRNA expression signatures of human skeletal muscle atrophy. This strategy identified a natural small molecule from tomato plants, tomatidine. Using cultured skeletal myotubes from both humans and mice, we found that tomatidine stimulated mTORC1 signaling and anabolism, leading to accumulation of protein and mitochondria, and ultimately, cell growth. Furthermore, in mice, tomatidine increased skeletal muscle mTORC1 signaling, reduced skeletal muscle atrophy, enhanced recovery from skeletal muscle atrophy, stimulated skeletal muscle hypertrophy, and increased strength and exercise capacity. Collectively, these results identify tomatidine as a novel small molecule inhibitor of muscle atrophy. Tomatidine may have utility as a therapeutic agent or lead compound for skeletal muscle atrophy.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2014

p53 and ATF4 mediate distinct and additive pathways to skeletal muscle atrophy during limb immobilization

Daniel K. Fox; Scott M. Ebert; Kale S. Bongers; Michael C. Dyle; Steven A. Bullard; Jason M. Dierdorff; Steven D. Kunkel; Christopher M. Adams

Immobilization causes skeletal muscle atrophy via complex signaling pathways that are not well understood. To better understand these pathways, we investigated the roles of p53 and ATF4, two transcription factors that mediate adaptations to a variety of cellular stresses. Using mouse models, we demonstrate that 3 days of muscle immobilization induces muscle atrophy and increases expression of p53 and ATF4. Furthermore, muscle fibers lacking p53 or ATF4 are partially resistant to immobilization-induced muscle atrophy, and forced expression of p53 or ATF4 induces muscle fiber atrophy in the absence of immobilization. Importantly, however, p53 and ATF4 do not require each other to promote atrophy, and coexpression of p53 and ATF4 induces more atrophy than either transcription factor alone. Moreover, muscle fibers lacking both p53 and ATF4 are more resistant to immobilization-induced atrophy than fibers lacking only p53 or ATF4. Interestingly, the independent and additive nature of the p53 and ATF4 pathways allows for combinatorial control of at least one downstream effector, p21. Using genome-wide mRNA expression arrays, we identified p21 mRNA as a skeletal muscle transcript that is highly induced in immobilized muscle via the combined actions of p53 and ATF4. Additionally, in mouse muscle, p21 induces atrophy in a manner that does not require immobilization, p53 or ATF4, and p21 is required for atrophy induced by immobilization, p53, and ATF4. Collectively, these results identify p53 and ATF4 as essential and complementary mediators of immobilization-induced muscle atrophy and discover p21 as a critical downstream effector of the p53 and ATF4 pathways.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

High Yield Heterologous Expression of Wild-type and Mutant Cu+-ATPase (ATP7B, Wilson Disease Protein) for Functional Characterization of Catalytic Activity and Serine Residues Undergoing Copper-dependent Phosphorylation

Rajendra Pilankatta; David A. Lewis; Christopher M. Adams; Giuseppe Inesi

ATP7B is a P-type ATPase required for copper homeostasis and related to Wilson disease of humans. In addition to various domains corresponding to other P-type ATPases, ATP7B includes an N terminus extension (NMBD) with six copper binding sites. We obtained high yield expression of WT and mutant ATP7B in COS1 cells infected with adenovirus vector. ATP7B, isolated with the microsomal fraction of cell homogenates, accounts for 10–20% of the total protein. Copper-dependent, steady-state ATPase yields 30 nmol of Pi/mg of protein/min at 37 °C, pH 6.0. ATP7B phosphorylation with ATP occurs with diphasic kinetics and is totally copper-dependent. Alkali labile phosphoenzyme (catalytic intermediate of P-ATPases) accounts for a small fraction of the total phosphoprotein and is prevented by D1027N (P domain) or C983A/C985A (CXC copper binding motif in TM6) mutations. Decay of [32P]phosphoenzyme following chase with non-radioactive ATP occurs with an initial burst involving alkali labile phosphoenzyme (absent in D1027N and C983A/C985A mutants) and continues at a slow rate involving alkali-resistant phosphoenzyme. If a copper chelator is added with the ATP chase, the initial burst is smaller, and further cleavage is totally inhibited. Analysis by proteolysis and mass spectrometry demonstrates that the alkali stable phosphoenzyme involves Ser478 and Ser481 (NMBD), Ser1121 (“N” domain) and Ser1453 (C terminus), and occurs with the same pattern ex vivo (COS-1) and in vitro (microsomes). The overall copper dependence of phosphorylation and hydrolytic cleavage suggests long range conformational effects, including interactions of NMBD and headpiece domains, with strong influence on catalytic turnover.

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Dive into the Christopher M. Adams's collaboration.

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Scott M. Ebert

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Michael C. Dyle

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Daniel K. Fox

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Kale S. Bongers

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Steven A. Bullard

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Steven D. Kunkel

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Jason M. Dierdorff

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Manish Suneja

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Daryl J. Murry

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Sharon E. Malmberg

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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