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Featured researches published by David A. Sanan.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Obesity resistance and multiple mechanisms of triglyceride synthesis in mice lacking Dgat

Steven J. Smith; Sylvaine Cases; Dalan R. Jensen; Hubert Chen; Eric Sande; Bryan Tow; David A. Sanan; Jacob Raber; Robert H. Eckel; Robert V. Farese

Triglycerides (or triacylglycerols) represent the major form of stored energy in eukaryotes. Triglyceride synthesis has been assumed to occur primarily through acyl CoA:diacylglycerol transferase (Dgat), a microsomal enzyme that catalyses the final and only committed step in the glycerol phosphate pathway. Therefore, Dgat has been considered necessary for adipose tissue formation and essential for survival. Here we show that Dgat-deficient (Dgat−/−) mice are viable and can still synthesize triglycerides. Moreover, these mice are lean and resistant to diet-induced obesity. The obesity resistance involves increased energy expenditure and increased activity. Dgat deficiency also alters triglyceride metabolism in other tissues, including the mammary gland, where lactation is defective in Dgat−/− females. Our findings indicate that multiple mechanisms exist for triglyceride synthesis and suggest that the selective inhibition of Dgat-mediated triglyceride synthesis may be useful for treating obesity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1994

Apolipoprotein E associates with beta amyloid peptide of Alzheimer's disease to form novel monofibrils. Isoform apoE4 associates more efficiently than apoE3.

David A. Sanan; Karl H. Weisgraber; S J Russell; Robert W. Mahley; D Huang; Ann M. Saunders; D Schmechel; T Wisniewski; B Frangione; Allen D. Roses

Late-onset and sporadic Alzheimers disease are associated with the apolipoprotein E (apoE) type 4 allele expressing the protein isoform apoE4. Apolipoprotein E binds avidly to beta amyloid (A beta) peptide, a major component of senile plaque of Alzheimers disease, in an isoform-specific manner. The apoE4 isoform binds to A beta peptide more rapidly than apoE3. We observed that soluble SDS-stable complexes of apoE3 or apoE4, formed by coincubation with A beta peptide, precipitated after several days of incubation at 37 degrees C with apoE4 complexes precipitating more rapidly than apoE3 complexes. A beta(1-28) and A beta(1-40) peptides were incubated in the presence or absence of apoE3, apoE4, or bovine serum albumin for 4 d at 37 degrees C (pH 7.3). Negative stain electron microscopy revealed that the A beta peptide alone self-assembled into twisted ribbons containing two or three strands but occasionally into multistranded sheets. The apoE/A beta coincubates yielded monofibrils 7 nm in diameter. ApoE4/A beta coincubates yielded a denser matrix of monofibrils than apoE3/A beta coincubates. Unlike purely monofibrillar apoE4/A beta coincubates, apoE3/A beta coincubates also contained double- and triple-stranded structures. Both apoE isoforms were shown by immunogold labeling to be uniformly distributed along the A beta peptide monofibrils. Monofibrils appeared earlier in apoE4/A beta than in apoE3/A beta in time-course experiments. Thus apoE3 and apoE4 each interact with beta amyloid peptide to form novel monofibrillar structures, apoE4 more avidly, a finding consistent with the biochemical and genetic association between apoE4 and Alzheimers disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Apolipoprotein E fragments present in Alzheimer's disease brains induce neurofibrillary tangle-like intracellular inclusions in neurons.

Yadong Huang; Xiao Qin Liu; Tony Wyss-Coray; Walter J. Brecht; David A. Sanan; Robert W. Mahley

Human apolipoprotein (apo) E4, a major risk factor for Alzheimers disease (AD), occurs in amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in AD brains; however, its role in the pathogenesis of these lesions is unclear. Here we demonstrate that carboxyl-terminal-truncated forms of apoE, which occur in AD brains and cultured neurons, induce intracellular NFT-like inclusions in neurons. These cytosolic inclusions were composed of phosphorylated tau, phosphorylated neurofilaments of high molecular weight, and truncated apoE. Truncated apoE4, especially apoE4(Δ272–299), induced inclusions in up to 75% of transfected neuronal cells, but not in transfected nonneuronal cells. ApoE4 was more susceptible to truncation than apoE3 and resulted in much greater intracellular inclusion formation. These results suggest that apoE4 preferentially undergoes intracellular processing, creating a bioactive fragment that interacts with cytoskeletal components and induces NFT-like inclusions containing phosphorylated tau and phosphorylated neurofilaments of high molecular weight in neurons.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995

Macrophage-specific expression of human apolipoprotein E reduces atherosclerosis in hypercholesterolemic apolipoprotein E-null mice.

Stefano Bellosta; Robert W. Mahley; David A. Sanan; J Murata; D L Newland; John M. Taylor; Robert E. Pitas

apoE deficiency causes hyperlipidemia and premature atherosclerosis. To determine if macrophage-specific expression of apoE would decrease the extent of atherosclerosis, we expressed human apoE in macrophages of apoE-null mice (apoE-/-) and assessed the effect on lipid accumulation in cells of the arterial wall. Macrophage-specific expression of human apoE in normal mice was obtained by use of the visna virus LTR. These animals were bred with apoE-/- mice to produce animals hemizygous for expression of human apoE in macrophages in the absence of murine apoE (apoE-/-,hTgE+/0). Low levels of human apoE mRNA were present in liver and spleen and high levels in lung and peritoneal macrophages. Human apoE was secreted by peritoneal macrophages and was detected in Kupffer cells of the liver. Human apoE in the plasma of apoE-/-,hTgE+/0 mice (n = 30) was inversely correlated (P < 0.005) with the plasma cholesterol concentration. After 15 wk on a normal chow diet, atherosclerosis was assessed in apoE-/-,hTgE+/0 animals and in apoE-/-,hTgE0/0 littermates matched for plasma cholesterol level (approximately 450 mg/dl) and lipoprotein profile. There was significantly less atherosclerosis in both the aortic sinus and in the proximal aorta (P < 0.0001) in the animals expressing the human apoE transgene. In apo-E-/-,hTgE+/0 animals, which had detectable atherosclerotic lesions, human apoE was detected in the secretory apparatus of macrophage-derived foam cells in the arterial wall. The data demonstrate that expression of apoE by macrophages is antiatherogenic even in the presence of high levels of atherogenic lipoproteins. The data suggest that apoE prevents atherosclerosis by promoting cholesterol efflux from cells of the arterial wall.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000

Massive xanthomatosis and altered composition of atherosclerotic lesions in hyperlipidemic mice lacking acyl CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase 1

Michel Accad; Steven J. Smith; Dale Newland; David A. Sanan; Lloyd E. King; MacRae F. Linton; Sergio Fazio; Robert V. Farese

Inhibitors of acyl CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) have attracted considerable interest as a potential treatment for atherosclerosis. Currently available inhibitors probably act nonselectively against the two known ACATs. One of these enzymes, ACAT1, is highly expressed in macrophages in atherosclerotic lesions, where it contributes to foam-cell formation. In this study, we examined the effects of selective ACAT1 deficiency in two mouse models of atherosclerosis. In the setting of severe hypercholesterolemia caused by deficiency in apoE or the LDL receptor (LDLR), total ACAT1 deficiency led to marked alterations in cholesterol homeostasis and extensive deposition of unesterified cholesterol in the skin and brain. Bone marrow transplantation experiments demonstrated that ACAT1 deficiency in macrophages was sufficient to cause dermal xanthomas in hyperlipidemic LDLR-deficient mice. ACAT1 deficiency did not prevent the development of atherosclerotic lesions in either apoE-deficient or LDLR-deficient mice, despite causing relatively lower serum cholesterol levels. However, the lesions in ACAT1-deficient mice were atypical in composition, with reduced amounts of neutral lipids and a paucity of macrophages in advanced lesions. Although the latter findings may be associated with increased lesion stability, the marked alterations in cholesterol homeostasis indicate that selectively inhibiting ACAT1 in the setting of severe hyperlipidemia may have detrimental consequences.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

Chronic Overproduction of Transforming Growth Factor-β1 by Astrocytes Promotes Alzheimer's Disease-Like Microvascular Degeneration in Transgenic Mice

Tony Wyss-Coray; Carol Lin; David A. Sanan; Lennart Mucke; Eliezer Masliah

Cerebrovascular amyloid deposition and microvascular degeneration are frequently associated with Alzheimers disease (AD), but the etiology and pathogenetic role of these abnormalities are unknown. Recently, transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) was implicated in cerebrovascular amyloid formation in transgenic mice with astroglial overproduction of TGF-beta1 and in AD. We tested whether TGF-beta1 overproduction induces AD-like cerebrovascular degeneration and analyzed how cerebrovascular abnormalities develop over time in TGF-beta1-transgenic mice. In cerebral microvessels from 3- to 4-month-old TGF-beta1-transgenic mice, which display a prominent perivascular astrocytosis, levels of the basement membrane proteins perlecan and fibronectin were severalfold higher than in vessels from nontransgenic mice. Consistent with this increase, cortical capillary basement membranes of TGF-beta1 mice were significantly thickened. These changes preceded amyloid deposition, which began at around 6 months of age. In 9- and 18-month-old TGF-beta1 mice, various degenerative changes in microvascular cells of the brain were observed. Endothelial cells were thinner and displayed abnormal, microvilli-like protrusions as well as occasional condensation of chromatin, and pericytes occupied smaller areas in capillary profiles than in nontransgenic controls. Similar cerebrovascular abnormalities have been reported in AD. We conclude that chronic overproduction of TGF-beta1 triggers an accumulation of basement membrane proteins and results in AD-like cerebrovascular amyloidosis and microvascular degeneration. Closely related processes may induce cerebrovascular pathology in AD.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995

Transgenic mice expressing high levels of human apolipoprotein B develop severe atherosclerotic lesions in response to a high-fat diet.

Deborah A. Purcell-Huynh; Robert V. Farese; David F. Johnson; Laura M. Flynn; Vincenzo Pierotti; Dale Newland; MacRae F. Linton; David A. Sanan; Stephen G. Young

We previously generated transgenic mice expressing human apolipoprotein (apo-) B and demonstrated that the plasma of chow-fed transgenic animals contained markedly increased amounts of LDL (Linton, M. F., R. V. Farese, Jr., G. Chiesa, D. S. Grass, P. Chin, R. E. Hammer, H. H. Hobbs, and S. G. Young 1992. J. Clin. Invest. 92:3029-3037). In this study, we fed groups of transgenic and nontransgenic mice either a chow diet or a diet high in fat (16%) and cholesterol (1.25%). Lipid and lipoprotein levels were assessed, and after 18 wk of diet, the extent of aortic atherosclerotic lesions in each group of animals was quantified. Compared with the female transgenic mice on the chow diet, female transgenic mice on the high-fat diet had higher plasma levels of cholesterol (312 +/- 17 vs 144 +/- 7 mg/dl; P < 0.0001) and human apo-B (120 +/- 8 vs 84 +/- 3 mg/dl; P < 0.0001). The higher human apo-B levels were due to increased plasma levels of human apo-B48; the human apo-B100 levels did not differ in animals on the two diets. In mice on the high-fat diet, most of the human apo-B48 and apo-B100 was found in LDL-sized particles. Compared with nontransgenic mice on the high-fat diet, the transgenic animals on the high-fat diet had significantly increased levels of total cholesterol (312 +/- 17 vs 230 +/- 19 mg/dl; P < 0.0001) and non-HDL cholesterol (283 +/- 17 vs 193 +/- 19 mg/dl; P < 0.0001). The extent of atherosclerotic lesion development within the ascending aorta was quantified by measuring total lesion area in 60 progressive sections, using computer-assisted image analysis. Neither the chow-fed transgenic mice nor the chow-fed nontransgenic mice had significant atherosclerotic lesions. Nontransgenic animals on the high-fat diet had relatively small atherosclerotic lesions (< 15,000 microns 2/section), almost all of which were confined to the proximal 400 microns of the aorta near the aortic valve. In contrast, transgenic animals on the high-fat diet had extensive atherosclerotic lesions (> 160,000 microns 2/section) that were widely distributed throughout the proximal 1,200 microns of the aorta. Thus, human apo-B expression, in the setting of a diet rich in fats, causes severe atherosclerosis in mice.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Deficiency of acyl CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase 2 prevents atherosclerosis in apolipoprotein E-deficient mice

Emily L. Willner; Bryan Tow; Kimberly K. Buhman; Martha D. Wilson; David A. Sanan; Lawrence L. Rudel; Robert V. Farese

Deficiency of acyl CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase 2 (ACAT2) in mice results in a reduction in cholesterol ester synthesis in the small intestine and liver, which in turn limits intestinal cholesterol absorption, hepatic cholesterol gallstone formation, and the accumulation of cholesterol esters in the plasma lipoproteins. Here we examined the contribution of ACAT2-derived cholesterol esters to atherosclerosis by crossing ACAT2-deficient (ACAT2–/–) mice with apolipoprotein (apo) E-deficient (ApoE–/–) mice, an atherosclerosis-susceptible strain that has impaired apoE-mediated clearance of apoB-containing lipoproteins. ACAT2–/– ApoE–/– mice and ACAT2+/+ ApoE–/– (control) mice had similar elevations of plasma apoB and total plasma lipids; however, the lipid cores of the apoB-containing lipoproteins in ACAT2–/– ApoE–/– mice contained primarily triglycerides rather than cholesterol esters. At 30 wk of age, only the control mice had significant atherosclerosis, which was nearly absent in ACAT2–/– ApoE–/– mice. ACAT2 deficiency in the apoE-deficient background also led to a compensatory increase in the activity of lecithin/cholesterol acyltransferase, the major plasma cholesterol esterification enzyme, which increased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol esters. Our results demonstrate the crucial role of ACAT2-derived cholesterol esters in the development of atherosclerosis in mice and suggest that triglyceride-rich apoB-containing lipoproteins are not as atherogenic as those containing cholesterol esters. Our results also support the rationale of pharmacological inhibition of ACAT2 as a therapy for atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Overexpression of Hepatic Lipase in Transgenic Mice Decreases Apolipoprotein B-containing and High Density Lipoproteins EVIDENCE THAT HEPATIC LIPASE ACTS AS A LIGAND FOR LIPOPROTEIN UPTAKE

Helén L. Dichek; Walter J. Brecht; Jianglin Fan; Zhong Sheng Ji; Sally P. A. McCormick; Hassibullah Akeefe; LoriAnna Conzo; David A. Sanan; Karl H. Weisgraber; Stephen G. Young; John M. Taylor; Robert W. Mahley

To determine the mechanisms by which human hepatic lipase (HL) contributes to the metabolism of apolipoprotein (apo) B-containing lipoproteins and high density lipoproteins (HDL)in vivo, we developed and characterized HL transgenic mice. HL was localized by immunohistochemistry to the liver and to the adrenal cortex. In hemizygous (hHLTg +/0) and homozygous (hHLTg +/+) mice, postheparin plasma HL activity increased by 25- and 50-fold and plasma cholesterol levels decreased by 80% and 85%, respectively. In mice fed a high fat, high cholesterol diet to increase endogenous apoB-containing lipoproteins, plasma cholesterol decreased 33% (hHLTg +/0) and 75% (hHLTg +/+). Both apoB-containing remnant lipoproteins and HDL were reduced. To extend this observation, the HL transgene was expressed in human apoB transgenic (huBTg) and apoE-deficient (apoE −/−) mice, both of which have high plasma levels of apoB-containing lipoproteins. (Note that thehuBTg mice that were used in these studies were all hemizygous for the human apoB gene.) In both thehuBTg,hHLTg +/0 mice and theapoE −/−,hHLTg +/0mice, plasma cholesterol decreased by 50%. This decrease was reflected in both the apoB-containing and the HDL fractions. To determine if HL catalytic activity is required for these decreases, we expressed catalytically inactive HL (HL-CAT) in apoE −/−mice. The postheparin plasma HL activities were similar in theapoE −/− and theapoE −/−,HL-CAT +/0mice, reflecting the activity of the endogenous mouse HL and confirming that the HL-CAT was catalytically inactive. However, the postheparin plasma HL activity was 20-fold higher in theapoE −/−,hHLTg +/0mice, indicating expression of the active human HL. Immunoblotting demonstrated high levels of human HL in postheparin plasma of bothapoE −/−,hHLTg +/0and apoE −/−,HL-CAT +/0mice. Plasma cholesterol and apoB-containing lipoprotein levels were ∼60% lower inapoE −/−,HL-CAT +/0mice than in apoE −/− mice. However, the HDL were only minimally reduced. Thus, the catalytic activity of HL is critical for its effects on HDL but not for its effects on apoB-containing lipoproteins. These results provide evidence that HL can act as a ligand to remove apoB-containing lipoproteins from plasma.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997

Susceptibility to atherosclerosis in mice expressing exclusively apolipoprotein B48 or apolipoprotein B100.

Murielle M. Véniant; Vincenzo Pierotti; Dale Newland; Candace M. Cham; David A. Sanan; Rosemary L. Walzem; Stephen G. Young

All classes of lipoproteins considered to be atherogenic contain apo-B100 or apo-B48. However, there is a distinct paucity of data regarding whether lipoproteins containing apo-B48 or apo-B100 differ in their intrinsic ability to promote the development of atherosclerosis. To address this issue, we compared the extent of atherosclerosis in three groups of animals: apo-E-deficient mice (apo-B+/+apo-E-/-) and apo-E-deficient mice that synthesize exclusively either apo-B48 (apo-B48/48apo-E-/-) or apo-B100 (apo-B100/100apo-E-/-). Mice (n = 25 in each group) were fed a chow diet for 200 days, and plasma lipid levels were assessed throughout the study. Compared with the levels in apo-B+/+apo-E-/- mice, the total plasma cholesterol levels were higher in the apo-B48/48apo-E-/- mice and were lower in the apo-B100/100apo-E-/- mice. However, the ranges of cholesterol levels in the three groups overlapped. Compared with those in the apo-B+/+apo-E-/- mice, atherosclerotic lesions were more extensive in the apo-B48/48apo-E-/- mice and less extensive in the apo-B100/100apo-E-/- mice. Once again, however, there was overlap among the three groups. The extent of atherosclerosis in each group of mice correlated significantly with plasma cholesterol levels. In mice from different groups that had similar cholesterol levels, the extent of atherosclerosis was quite similar. Thus, susceptibility to atherosclerosis was dependent on total cholesterol levels. Whether mice synthesized apo-B48 or apo-B100 did not appear to have an independent effect on susceptibility to atherosclerosis.

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MacRae F. Linton

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Yadong Huang

University of California

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Zhong-Sheng Ji

University of California

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Jianglin Fan

University of Yamanashi

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