Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Connor R. Lamberson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Connor R. Lamberson.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2011

An oxysterol biomarker for 7-dehydrocholesterol oxidation in cell/mouse models for Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome.

Libin Xu; Zeljka Korade; Dale A. Rosado; Wei Liu; Connor R. Lamberson; Ned A. Porter

The level of 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) is elevated in tissues and fluids of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS) patients due to defective 7-DHC reductase. Although over a dozen oxysterols have been identified from 7-DHC free radical oxidation in solution, oxysterol profiles in SLOS cells and tissues have never been studied. We report here the identification and complete characterization of a novel oxysterol, 3β,5α-dihydroxycholest-7-en-6-one (DHCEO), as a biomarker for 7-DHC oxidation in fibroblasts from SLOS patients and brain tissue from a SLOS mouse model. Deuterated (d7)-standards of 7-DHC and DHCEO were synthesized from d7-cholesterol. The presence of DHCEO in SLOS samples was supported by chemical derivatization in the presence of d7-DHCEO standard followed by HPLC-MS or GC-MS analysis. Quantification of cholesterol, 7-DHC, and DHCEO was carried out by isotope dilution MS with the d7-standards. The level of DHCEO was high and correlated well with the level of 7-DHC in all samples examined (R = 0.9851). Based on our in vitro studies in two different cell lines, the mechanism of formation of DHCEO that involves 5α,6α-epoxycholest-7-en-3β-ol, a primary free radical oxidation product of 7-DHC, and 7-cholesten-3β,5α,6β-triol is proposed. In a preliminary test, a pyrimidinol antioxidant was found to effectively suppress the formation of DHCEO in SLOS fibroblasts.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2012

Small Amounts of Isotope-reinforced Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Suppress Lipid Autoxidation

Shauna Hill; Connor R. Lamberson; Libin Xu; Randy To; Hui S. Tsui; Vadim V. Shmanai; Andrei V. Bekish; Agape M. Awad; Beth N. Marbois; Charles R. Cantor; Ned A. Porter; Catherine F. Clarke; Mikhail S. Shchepinov

Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) undergo autoxidation and generate reactive carbonyl compounds that are toxic to cells and associated with apoptotic cell death, age-related neurodegenerative diseases, and atherosclerosis. PUFA autoxidation is initiated by the abstraction of bis-allylic hydrogen atoms. Replacement of the bis-allylic hydrogen atoms with deuterium atoms (termed site-specific isotope-reinforcement) arrests PUFA autoxidation due to the isotope effect. Kinetic competition experiments show that the kinetic isotope effect for the propagation rate constant of Lin autoxidation compared to that of 11,11-D(2)-Lin is 12.8 ± 0.6. We investigate the effects of different isotope-reinforced PUFAs and natural PUFAs on the viability of coenzyme Q-deficient Saccharomyces cerevisiae coq mutants and wild-type yeast subjected to copper stress. Cells treated with a C11-BODIPY fluorescent probe to monitor lipid oxidation products show that lipid peroxidation precedes the loss of viability due to H-PUFA toxicity. We show that replacement of just one bis-allylic hydrogen atom with deuterium is sufficient to arrest lipid autoxidation. In contrast, PUFAs reinforced with two deuterium atoms at mono-allylic sites remain susceptible to autoxidation. Surprisingly, yeast treated with a mixture of approximately 20%:80% isotope-reinforced D-PUFA:natural H-PUFA are protected from lipid autoxidation-mediated cell killing. The findings reported here show that inclusion of only a small fraction of PUFAs deuterated at the bis-allylic sites is sufficient to profoundly inhibit the chain reaction of nondeuterated PUFAs in yeast.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Unusual kinetic isotope effects of deuterium reinforced polyunsaturated fatty acids in tocopherol-mediated free radical chain oxidations.

Connor R. Lamberson; Libin Xu; Hubert Muchalski; J. Rafael Montenegro-Burke; Vadim V. Shmanai; Andrei V. Bekish; John A. McLean; Catherine F. Clarke; Mikhail S. Shchepinov; Ned A. Porter

Substitution of -CD2- at the reactive centers of linoleic and linolenic acids reduces the rate of abstraction of D by a tocopheryl radical by as much as 36-fold, compared to the abstraction of H from a corresponding -CH2- center. This H atom transfer reaction is the rate-determining step in the tocopherol-mediated peroxidation of lipids in human low-density lipoproteins, a process that has been linked to coronary artery disease. The unanticipated large kinetic isotope effects reported here for the tocopherol-mediated oxidation of linoleic and linolenic acids and esters suggests that tunneling makes this process favorable.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2013

Assays of plasma dehydrocholesteryl esters and oxysterols from Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome patients.

Wei Liu; Libin Xu; Connor R. Lamberson; Louise S. Merkens; Robert D. Steiner; Ellen Roy Elias; Dorothea Haas; Ned A. Porter

Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS) is caused by mutations in the gene encoding 3β-hydroxysterol-Δ7-reductase and as a result of this defect, 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) and 8-dehydrocholesterol (8-DHC) accumulate in the fluids and tissues of patients with this syndrome. Both 7- and 8-DHC are susceptible to peroxidation reactions, and several biologically active DHC oxysterols are found in cell and animal models of SLOS. Ex vivo oxidation of DHCs can be a confounding factor in the analysis of these sterols and their esters, and we developed HPLC/MS methods that permit the direct analysis of cholesterol, 7-DHC, 8-DHC, and their esters in human plasma, thus avoiding ex vivo oxidation. In addition, three oxysterols were classified as endogenously formed products by the use of an isotopically-labeled 7-DHC (d7-7-DHC) added to the sample before workup, followed by MS analysis of products formed. Analysis of 17 SLOS plasma samples shows that 8-DHC linoleate correlates better with the SLOS severity score of the patients than other sterols or metabolites, including cholesterol and 7-DHC. Levels of 7-ketocholesterol also correlate with the SLOS severity score. 8-DHC esters should have utility as surrogate markers of severity in SLOS for prognostication and as endpoints in clinical trials.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2014

A highly sensitive method for analysis of 7-dehydrocholesterol for the study of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome

Wei Liu; Libin Xu; Connor R. Lamberson; Dorothea Haas; Zeljka Korade; Ned A. Porter

We describe a highly sensitive method for the detection of 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC), the biosynthetic precursor of cholesterol, based on its reactivity with 4-phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione (PTAD) in a Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction. Samples of biological tissues and fluids with added deuterium-labeled internal standards were derivatized with PTAD and analyzed by LC-MS. This protocol permits fast processing of samples, short chromatography times, and high sensitivity. We applied this method to the analysis of cells, blood, and tissues from several sources, including human plasma. Another innovative aspect of this study is that it provides a reliable and highly reproducible measurement of 7-DHC in 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase (Dhcr7)-HET mouse (a model for Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome) samples, showing regional differences in the brain tissue. We found that the levels of 7-DHC are consistently higher in Dhcr7-HET mice than in controls, with the spinal cord and peripheral nerve showing the biggest differences. In addition to 7-DHC, sensitive analysis of desmosterol in tissues and blood was also accomplished with this PTAD method by assaying adducts formed from the PTAD “ene” reaction. The method reported here may provide a highly sensitive and high throughput way to identify at-risk populations having errors in cholesterol biosynthesis.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Protein Modification by Endogenously Generated Lipid Electrophiles: Mitochondria as the Source and Target

William N. Beavers; Kristie L. Rose; James J. Galligan; Michelle M. Mitchener; Carol A. Rouzer; Keri A. Tallman; Connor R. Lamberson; Xiaojing Wang; Salisha Hill; Pavlina T. Ivanova; H. Alex Brown; Bing Zhang; Ned A. Porter; Lawrence J. Marnett

Determining the impact of lipid electrophile-mediated protein damage that occurs during oxidative stress requires a comprehensive analysis of electrophile targets adducted under pathophysiological conditions. Incorporation of ω-alkynyl linoleic acid into the phospholipids of macrophages prior to activation by Kdo2-lipid A, followed by protein extraction, click chemistry, and streptavidin affinity capture, enabled a systems-level survey of proteins adducted by lipid electrophiles generated endogenously during the inflammatory response. Results revealed a dramatic enrichment for membrane and mitochondrial proteins as targets for adduction. A marked decrease in adduction in the presence of MitoTEMPO demonstrated a primary role for mitochondrial superoxide in electrophile generation and indicated an important role for mitochondria as both a source and target of lipid electrophiles, a finding that has not been revealed by prior studies using exogenously provided electrophiles.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2017

Propagation rate constants for the peroxidation of sterols on the biosynthetic pathway to cholesterol

Connor R. Lamberson; Hubert Muchalski; Kari B. McDuffee; Keri A. Tallman; Libin Xu; Ned A. Porter

The free radical chain autoxidation of cholesterol and the oxidation products formed, i.e. oxysterols, have been the focus of intensive study for decades. The peroxidation of sterol precursors to cholesterol such as 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) and desmosterol as well as their oxysterols has received less attention. The peroxidation of these sterol precursors can become important under circumstances in which genetic conditions or exposures to small molecules leads to an increase of these biosynthetic intermediates in tissues and fluids. 7-DHC, for example, has a propagation rate constant for peroxidation some 200 times that of cholesterol and this sterol is found at elevated levels in a devastating human genetic condition, Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS). The propagation rate constants for peroxidation of sterol intermediates on the biosynthetic pathway to cholesterol were determined by a competition kinetic method, i.e. a peroxyl radical clock. In this work, propagation rate constants for lathosterol, zymostenol, desmosterol, 7-dehydrodesmosterol and other sterols in the Bloch and Kandutsch-Russell pathways are assigned and these rate constants are related to sterol structural features. Furthermore, potential oxysterols products are proposed for sterols whose oxysterol products have not been determined.


ChemistrySelect | 2016

Full Library of (Bis–allyl)‐deuterated Arachidonic Acids: Synthesis and Analytical Verification

Maksim A. Fomich; Andrei V. Bekish; Dragoslav Vidovic; Connor R. Lamberson; Ivan L. Lysenko; Peter Lawrence; J. Thomas Brenna; Olga Sharko; Vadim V. Shmanai; Mikhail S. Shchepinov


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2013

PSS83 – A Highly Sensitive Method for Analysis of 7-Dehydrocholesterol for the Study of Smith-Lemli-Opitz Syndrome (SLOS)

Wei Liu; Libin Xu; Connor R. Lamberson; Dorothea Haas; Zeljka Korade; Ned A. Porter


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2013

PSS308 – Isotope-reinforced Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Suppress Lipid Autoxidation

Hui Su Tsui; Connor R. Lamberson; Libin Xu; Vadim V. Shmanai; Andrei V. Bekish; Agape M. Awad; Charles R. Cantor; Ned A. Porter; Mikhail S. Shchepinov; Catherine F. Clarke

Collaboration


Dive into the Connor R. Lamberson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Libin Xu

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wei Liu

Vanderbilt University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrei V. Bekish

Belarusian State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dorothea Haas

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vadim V. Shmanai

National Academy of Sciences of Belarus

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Agape M. Awad

University of California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge