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Featured researches published by Chu Feng.


Cell Metabolism | 2012

Autophagy Links Inflammasomes to Atherosclerotic Progression

Babak Razani; Chu Feng; Trey Coleman; Roy Emanuel; Haitao Wen; Seungmin Hwang; Jenny P.-Y. Ting; Herbert W. Virgin; Michael B. Kastan; Clay F. Semenkovich

We investigated the role of autophagy in atherosclerosis. During plaque formation in mice, autophagic markers colocalized predominantly with macrophages (mφ). Atherosclerotic aortas had elevated levels of p62, suggesting that dysfunctional autophagy is characteristic of plaques. To determine whether autophagy directly influences atherogenesis, we characterized Beclin-1 heterozygous-null and mφ-specific ATG5-null (ATG5-mφKO) mice, commonly used models of autophagy haploinsufficiency and deficiency, respectively. Haploinsufficent Beclin-1 mice had no atherosclerotic phenotype, but ATG5-mφKO mice had increased plaques, suggesting an essential role for basal levels of autophagy in atheroprotection. Defective autophagy is associated with proatherogenic inflammasome activation. Classic inflammasome markers were robustly induced in ATG5-null mφ, especially when coincubated with cholesterol crystals. Moreover, cholesterol crystals appear to be increased in ATG5-mφKO plaques, suggesting a potentially vicious cycle of crystal formation and inflammasome activation in autophagy-deficient plaques. These results show that autophagy becomes dysfunctional in atherosclerosis and its deficiency promotes atherosclerosis in part through inflammasome hyperactivation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

PPARα deficiency reduces insulin resistance and atherosclerosis in apoE-null mice

Karen Tordjman; Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi; Laura Zemany; Sherry Weng; Chu Feng; Fengjuan Zhang; Teresa C. Leone; Trey Coleman; Daniel P. Kelly; Clay F. Semenkovich

PPARalpha is a ligand-dependent transcription factor expressed at high levels in the liver. Its activation by the drug gemfibrozil reduces clinical events in humans with established atherosclerosis, but the underlying mechanisms are incompletely defined. To clarify the role of PPARalpha in vascular disease, we crossed PPARalpha-null mice with apoE-null mice to determine if the genetic absence of PPARalpha affects vascular disease in a robust atherosclerosis model. On a high-fat diet, concentrations of atherogenic lipoproteins were higher in PPARalpha(-/-)apoE(-/-) than in PPARalpha(+/+)apoE(-/-) mice, due to increased VLDL production. However, en face atherosclerotic lesion areas at the aortic arch, thoracic aorta, and abdominal aorta were less in PPARalpha-null animals of both sexes after 6 and 10 weeks of high-fat feeding. Despite gaining as much or more weight than their PPARalpha(+/+)apoE(-/-) littermates, PPARalpha(-/-)apoE(-/-) mice had lower fasting levels of glucose and insulin. PPARalpha-null animals had greater suppression of endogenous glucose production in hyperinsulinemic clamp experiments, reflecting less insulin resistance in the absence of PPARalpha. PPARalpha(-/-)apoE(-/-) mice also had lower blood pressures than their PPARalpha(+/+)apoE(-/-) littermates after high-fat feeding. These results suggest that PPARalpha may participate in the pathogenesis of diet-induced insulin resistance and atherosclerosis.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Dexamethasone induction of hypertension and diabetes is PPAR-α dependent in LDL receptor–null mice

Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi; Sherry Weng; Chu Feng; Brian N. Finck; Russell H. Knutsen; Teresa C. Leone; Trey Coleman; Robert P. Mecham; Daniel P. Kelly; Clay F. Semenkovich

Hypertension and diabetes are common side effects of glucocorticoid treatment. To determine whether peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor-α (PPAR-α) mediates these sequelae, mice deficient in low-density lipoprotein receptor (Ldlr−/−), with (Ppara+/+) or without (Ppara−/−) PPAR-α, were treated chronically with dexamethasone. Ppara+/+, but not Ppara−/−, mice developed hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia and hypertension. Similar effects on glucose metabolism were seen in a different model using C57BL/6 mice. Hepatic gluconeogenic gene expression was increased and insulin-mediated suppression of endogenous glucose production was less effective in dexamethasone-treated Ppara+/+ mice. Adenoviral reconstitution of PPAR-α in the livers of nondiabetic, normotensive, dexamethasone-treated Ppara−/− mice induced hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia and increased gluconeogenic gene expression. It also increased blood pressure, renin activity, sympathetic nervous activity and renal sodium retention. Human hepatocytes treated with dexamethasone and the PPAR-α agonist Wy14,643 induced PPARA and gluconeogenic gene expression. These results identify hepatic activation of PPAR-α as a mechanism underlying glucocorticoid-induced insulin resistance.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Niemann-Pick C1 protects against atherosclerosis in mice via regulation of macrophage intracellular cholesterol trafficking

Jessie Zhang; Trey Coleman; S. Joshua Langmade; David E. Scherrer; Lindsay Lane; M. Hunter Lanier; Chu Feng; Mark S. Sands; Jean E. Schaffer; Clay F. Semenkovich; Daniel S. Ory

Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) is a key participant in cellular cholesterol trafficking. Loss of NPC1 function leads to defective suppression of SREBP-dependent gene expression and failure to appropriately activate liver X receptor-mediated (LXR-mediated) pathways, ultimately resulting in intracellular cholesterol accumulation. To determine whether NPC1 contributes to regulation of macrophage sterol homeostasis in vivo, we examined the effect of NPC1 deletion in BM-derived cells on atherosclerotic lesion development in the Ldlr-/- mouse model of atherosclerosis. High-fat diet-fed chimeric Npc1-/- mice reconstituted with Ldlr-/-Npc1-/- macrophages exhibited accelerated atherosclerosis despite lower serum cholesterol compared with mice reconstituted with wild-type macrophages. The discordance between the low serum lipoprotein levels and the presence of aortic atherosclerosis suggested that intrinsic alterations in macrophage sterol metabolism in the chimeric Npc1-/- mice played a greater role in atherosclerotic lesion formation than did serum lipoprotein levels. Macrophages from chimeric Npc1-/- mice showed decreased synthesis of 27-hydroxycholesterol (27-HC), an endogenous LXR ligand; decreased expression of LXR-regulated cholesterol transporters; and impaired cholesterol efflux. Lower 27-HC levels were associated with elevated cholesterol oxidation products in macrophages and plasma of chimeric Npc1-/- mice and with increased oxidative stress. Our results demonstrate that NPC1 serves an atheroprotective role in mice through regulation of LXR-dependent cholesterol efflux and mitigation of cholesterol-induced oxidative stress in macrophages.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2002

Respiratory Uncoupling Lowers Blood Pressure Through a Leptin-Dependent Mechanism in Genetically Obese Mice

Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi; Sherry Weng; Bing Li; Lorraine A. Nolte; Chu Feng; Trey Coleman; John O. Holloszy; Clay F. Semenkovich

Insulin resistance is commonly associated with hypertension, a condition that causes vascular disease in people with obesity and type 2 diabetes. The mechanisms linking hypertension and insulin resistance are poorly understood. To determine whether respiratory uncoupling can prevent insulin resistance-related hypertension, we crossed transgenic mice expressing uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) in skeletal muscle with lethal yellow (Ay/a) mice, genetically obese animals known to have elevated blood pressure. Despite increased food intake, UCP-Ay/a mice weighed less than their Ay/a littermates. The metabolic rate was higher in UCP-Ay/a mice than in Ay/a mice and did not impair their ability to alter oxygen consumption in response to temperature changes, an adaptation involving sympathetic nervous system activity. Compared with their nontransgenic littermates, UCP-Ay/a mice had lower fasting insulin, glucose, triglyceride, and cholesterol levels and were more insulin sensitive. Blood pressure, serum leptin, and urinary catecholamine levels were also lower in uncoupled mice. Independent of sympathetic nervous system activity, low-dose peripheral leptin infusion increased blood pressure in UCP-Ay/a mice but not in their Ay/a littermates. These data indicate that skeletal muscle respiratory uncoupling reverses insulin resistance and lowers blood pressure in genetic obesity without affecting thermoregulation. The data also suggest that uncoupling could decrease the risk of atherosclerosis in type 2 diabetes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Fatty acid synthase modulates homeostatic responses to myocardial stress.

Babak Razani; Haixia Zhang; P. Christian Schulze; Joel D. Schilling; John W. Verbsky; Irfan J. Lodhi; V.K. Topkara; Chu Feng; Trey Coleman; Attila Kovacs; Daniel P. Kelly; Jeffrey E. Saffitz; Gerald W. Dorn; Colin G. Nichols; Clay F. Semenkovich

Fatty acid synthase (FAS) promotes energy storage through de novo lipogenesis and participates in signaling by the nuclear receptor PPARα in noncardiac tissues. To determine if de novo lipogenesis is relevant to cardiac physiology, we generated and characterized FAS knockout in the myocardium (FASKard) mice. FASKard mice develop normally, manifest normal resting heart function, and have normal cardiac PPARα signaling as well as fatty acid oxidation. However, they decompensate with stress. Most die within 1 h of transverse aortic constriction, probably due to arrhythmia. Voltage clamp measurements of FASKard cardiomyocytes show hyperactivation of L-type calcium channel current that could not be reversed with palmitate supplementation. Of the classic regulators of this current, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) but not protein kinase A signaling is activated in FASKard hearts, and knockdown of FAS in cultured cells activates CaMKII. In addition to being intolerant of the stress of acute pressure, FASKard hearts were also intolerant of the stress of aging, reflected as persistent CaMKII hyperactivation, progression to dilatation, and premature death by ∼1 year of age. CaMKII signaling appears to be pathogenic in FASKard hearts because inhibition of its signaling in vivo rescues mice from early mortality after transverse aortic constriction. FAS was also increased in two mechanistically distinct mouse models of heart failure and in the hearts of humans with end stage cardiomyopathy. These data implicate a novel relationship between FAS and calcium signaling in the heart and suggest that FAS induction in stressed myocardium represents a compensatory response to protect cardiomyocytes from pathological calcium flux.


Cell Metabolism | 2015

Peroxisomal Lipid Synthesis Regulates Inflammation by Sustaining Neutrophil Membrane Phospholipid Composition and Viability

Irfan J. Lodhi; Xiaochao Wei; Li Yin; Chu Feng; Sangeeta Adak; Grazia Abou-Ezzi; Fong-Fu Hsu; Daniel C. Link; Clay F. Semenkovich

Fatty acid synthase (FAS) is altered in metabolic disorders and cancer. Conventional FAS null mice die in utero, so effects of whole-body inhibition of lipogenesis following development are unknown. Inducible global knockout of FAS (iFASKO) in mice was lethal due to a disrupted intestinal barrier and leukopenia. Conditional loss of FAS was associated with the selective suppression of granulopoiesis without disrupting granulocytic differentiation. Transplantation of iFASKO bone marrow into wild-type mice followed by Cre induction resulted in selective neutrophil depletion, but not death. Impaired lipogenesis increased ER stress and apoptosis in neutrophils by preferentially decreasing peroxisome-derived membrane phospholipids containing ether bonds. Inducible global knockout of PexRAP, a peroxisomal enzyme required for ether lipid synthesis, also produced neutropenia. FAS knockdown in neutrophil-like HL-60 cells caused cell loss that was partially rescued by ether lipids. Inhibiting ether lipid synthesis selectively constrains neutrophil development, revealing an unrecognized pathway in immunometabolism.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2010

p53 is required for chloroquine-induced atheroprotection but not insulin sensitization

Babak Razani; Chu Feng; Clay F. Semenkovich

An intact genotoxic stress response appears to be atheroprotective and insulin sensitizing. ATM, mutated in ataxia telangiectasia, is critical for the genotoxic stress response, and its deficiency is associated with accelerated atherosclerosis and insulin resistance in humans and mice. The antimalarial drug chloroquine activates ATM signaling and improves metabolic phenotypes in mice. p53 is a major effector of ATM signaling, but it is unknown if p53 is required for the beneficial effects of chloroquine. We tested the hypothesis that the cardiometabolic effects of chloroquine are p53-dependent. ApoE-null mice with or without p53 were treated with low-dose chloroquine or saline in the setting of a Western diet. After 8 weeks, there was no p53-dependent or chloroquine-specific effect on serum lipids or body weight. Chloroquine reduced plaque burden in mice wild-type for p53, but it did not decrease lesion extent in p53-null mice. However, chloroquine improved glucose tolerance, enhanced insulin sensitivity, and increased hepatic Akt signaling regardless of the p53 genotype. These results indicate that atheroprotection induced by chloroquine is p53-dependent but the insulin-sensitizing effects of this agent are not. Discrete components of the genotoxic stress response might be targeted to treat lipid-driven disorders, such as diabetes and atherosclerosis.


Cell Metabolism | 2007

Respiratory uncoupling in skeletal muscle delays death and diminishes age-related disease.

Allison C. Gates; Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi; Sharon L. Chinault; Chu Feng; Jochen G. Schneider; Trey Coleman; James P. Malone; R. Reid Townsend; Manu V. Chakravarthy; Clay F. Semenkovich


Cell Reports | 2017

PexRAP Inhibits PRDM16-Mediated Thermogenic Gene Expression

Irfan J. Lodhi; John M. Dean; Anyuan He; Hongsuk Park; Min Tan; Chu Feng; Haowei Song; Fong-Fu Hsu; Clay F. Semenkovich

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Clay F. Semenkovich

Washington University in St. Louis

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Trey Coleman

Washington University in St. Louis

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Babak Razani

Washington University in St. Louis

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Carlos Bernal-Mizrachi

Washington University in St. Louis

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Irfan J. Lodhi

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sherry Weng

Washington University in St. Louis

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Fong-Fu Hsu

Washington University in St. Louis

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Haowei Song

Washington University in St. Louis

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Allison C. Gates

Washington University in St. Louis

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Anyuan He

Washington University in St. Louis

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