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Featured researches published by Di Shao.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

A Redox-resistant Sirtuin-1 Mutant Protects against Hepatic Metabolic and Oxidant Stress

Di Shao; Jessica L. Fry; Jingyan Han; Xiuyun Hou; David R. Pimentel; Reiko Matsui; Richard A. Cohen; Markus Bachschmid

Background: Sirtuin-1 improves metabolic disease, but oxidants may inhibit it. Results: Metabolic stress increased glutathione adducts, inactivated endogenous Sirtuin-1, and promoted apoptosis. A novel Sirtuin-1 oxidation-insensitive mutant or glutaredoxin-1 prevented metabolic dysregulation and apoptosis. Conclusion: A novel Sirtuin-1 mutant circumvents oxidation and more effectively inhibits metabolic dysregulation and apoptosis. Significance: Oxidative inactivation of Sirtuin-1 contributes to metabolic disease. Sirtuin-1 (SirT1), a member of the NAD+-dependent class III histone deacetylase family, is inactivated in vitro by oxidation of critical cysteine thiols. In a model of metabolic syndrome, SirT1 activation attenuated apoptosis of hepatocytes and improved liver function including lipid metabolism. We show in SirT1-overexpressing HepG2 cells that oxidants (nitrosocysteine and hydrogen peroxide) or metabolic stress (high palmitate and high glucose) inactivated SirT1 by reversible oxidative post-translational modifications (OPTMs) on three cysteines. Mutating these oxidation-sensitive cysteines to serine preserved SirT1 activity and abolished reversible OPTMs. Overexpressed mutant SirT1 maintained deacetylase activity and attenuated proapoptotic signaling, whereas overexpressed wild type SirT1 was less protective in metabolically or oxidant-stressed cells. To prove that OPTMs of SirT1 are glutathione (GSH) adducts, glutaredoxin-1 was overexpressed to remove this modification. Glutaredoxin-1 overexpression maintained endogenous SirT1 activity and prevented proapoptotic signaling in metabolically stressed HepG2 cells. The in vivo significance of oxidative inactivation of SirT1 was investigated in livers of high fat diet-fed C57/B6J mice. SirT1 deacetylase activity was decreased in the absence of changes in SirT1 expression and associated with a marked increase in OPTMs. These results indicate that glutathione adducts on specific SirT1 thiols may be responsible for dysfunctional SirT1 associated with liver disease in metabolic syndrome.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Overexpression of Catalase Diminishes Oxidative Cysteine Modifications of Cardiac Proteins.

Chunxiang Yao; Jessica B. Behring; Di Shao; Aaron L. Sverdlov; Stephen A. Whelan; Aly Elezaby; Xiaoyan Yin; Francesca Seta; Catherine E. Costello; Richard A. Cohen; Reiko Matsui; Wilson S. Colucci; Mark E. McComb; Markus Bachschmid

Reactive protein cysteine thiolates are instrumental in redox regulation. Oxidants, such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), react with thiolates to form oxidative post-translational modifications, enabling physiological redox signaling. Cardiac disease and aging are associated with oxidative stress which can impair redox signaling by altering essential cysteine thiolates. We previously found that cardiac-specific overexpression of catalase (Cat), an enzyme that detoxifies excess H2O2, protected from oxidative stress and delayed cardiac aging in mice. Using redox proteomics and systems biology, we sought to identify the cysteines that could play a key role in cardiac disease and aging. With a ‘Tandem Mass Tag’ (TMT) labeling strategy and mass spectrometry, we investigated differential reversible cysteine oxidation in the cardiac proteome of wild type and Cat transgenic (Tg) mice. Reversible cysteine oxidation was measured as thiol occupancy, the ratio of total available versus reversibly oxidized cysteine thiols. Catalase overexpression globally decreased thiol occupancy by ≥1.3 fold in 82 proteins, including numerous mitochondrial and contractile proteins. Systems biology analysis assigned the majority of proteins with differentially modified thiols in Cat Tg mice to pathways of aging and cardiac disease, including cellular stress response, proteostasis, and apoptosis. In addition, Cat Tg mice exhibited diminished protein glutathione adducts and decreased H2O2 production from mitochondrial complex I and II, suggesting improved function of cardiac mitochondria. In conclusion, our data suggest that catalase may alleviate cardiac disease and aging by moderating global protein cysteine thiol oxidation.


Redox biology | 2016

The redox mechanism for vascular barrier dysfunction associated with metabolic disorders: Glutathionylation of Rac1 in endothelial cells

Jingyan Han; Robert M. Weisbrod; Di Shao; Yosuke Watanabe; Xiaoyan Yin; Markus Bachschmid; Francesca Seta; Yvonne M. W. Janssen-Heininger; Reiko Matsui; Mengwei Zang; Naomi M. Hamburg; Richard A. Cohen

Background Oxidative stress is implicated in increased vascular permeability associated with metabolic disorders, but the underlying redox mechanism is poorly defined. S-glutathionylation, a stable adduct of glutathione with protein sulfhydryl, is a reversible oxidative modification of protein and is emerging as an important redox signaling paradigm in cardiovascular physiopathology. The present study determines the role of protein S-glutathionylation in metabolic stress-induced endothelial cell permeability. Methods and results In endothelial cells isolated from patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus, protein S-glutathionylation level was increased. This change was also observed in aortic endothelium in ApoE deficient (ApoE-/-) mice fed on Western diet. Metabolic stress-induced protein S-glutathionylation in human aortic endothelial cells (HAEC) was positively correlated with elevated endothelial cell permeability, as reflected by disassembly of cell-cell adherens junctions and cortical actin structures. These impairments were reversed by adenoviral overexpression of a specific de-glutathionylation enzyme, glutaredoxin-1 in cultured HAECs. Consistently, transgenic overexpression of human Glrx-1 in ApoE-/- mice fed the Western diet attenuated endothelial protein S-glutathionylation, actin cytoskeletal disorganization, and vascular permeability in the aorta. Mechanistically, glutathionylation and inactivation of Rac1, a small RhoGPase, were associated with endothelial hyperpermeability caused by metabolic stress. Glutathionylation of Rac1 on cysteine 81 and 157 located adjacent to guanine nucleotide binding site was required for the metabolic stress to inhibit Rac1 activity and promote endothelial hyperpermeability. Conclusions Glutathionylation and inactivation of Rac1 in endothelial cells represent a novel redox mechanism of vascular barrier dysfunction associated with metabolic disorders.


Journal of neuromuscular diseases | 2017

Aberrant Caspase Activation in Laminin-α2-Deficient Human Myogenic Cells is Mediated by p53 and Sirtuin Activity

Soonsang Yoon; Mary Lou Beermann; Bryant Yu; Di Shao; Markus Bachschmid; J. Miller

Background: Mutations in the LAMA2 gene encoding laminin-α2 cause congenital muscular dystrophy Type 1A (MDC1A), a severe recessive disease with no effective treatment. Previous studies have shown that aberrant activation of caspases and cell death through a pathway regulated by BAX and KU70 is a significant contributor to pathogenesis in laminin-α2-deficiency. Objectives: To identify mechanisms of pathogenesis in MDC1A. Methods: We used immunocytochemical and molecular studies of human myogenic cells and mouse muscles—comparing laminin-α2-deficient vs. healthy controls—to identify mechanisms that regulate pathological activation of caspase in laminin-α2-deficiency. Results: In cultures of myogenic cells from MDC1A donors, p53 accumulated in a subset of nuclei and aberrant caspase activation was inhibited by the p53 inhibitor pifithrin-alpha. Also, the p53 target BBC3 (PUMA) was upregulated in both MDC1A myogenic cells and Lama2–/– mouse muscles. In addition, studies with sirtuin inhibitors and SIRT1 overexpression showed that caspase activation in MDC1A myotubes was inversely related to sirtuin deacetylase activity. Caspase activation in laminin-α2-deficiency was, however, not associated with increased phosphorylation of p38 MAPK. Conclusions: Aberrant caspase activation in MDC1A cells was mediated both by sirtuin deacetylase activity and by p53. Interventions that inhibit aberrant caspase activation by targeting sirtuin or p53 function could potentially be useful in ameliorating MDC1A.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2017

To investigate the Physiological/ Pathophysio-logical Function of Glutaredoxin-1 on the Metabolic Cardiovascular Disease

Lija Swain; Mark Kiley; Di Shao; Fuzhong Qin; Wilson S. Colucci; Markus Bachschmid


Circulation | 2016

Abstract 17951: S-glutathionylation of Rac1 is a Novel Mechanism of Vascular Barrier Dysfunction in Diabetes Mellitus

Robert M. Weisbrod; Di Shao; Kevin L Kot; Hannah Edenbaum; Reiko Matsui; Markus Bachschmid; Naomi M. Hamburg; Richard A. Cohen; Jingyan Han


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2015

38 – Glutaredoxin-1 Deficiency Causes Fatty Liver and Dyslipidemia

Di Shao; Jingyan Han; Xiuyun Hou; Jessica L. Fry; Francesca Seta; Richard A. Cohen; Reiko Matsui; Markus Bachschmid


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2015

93 - A Causative Role of Protein S-Glutathionylation in High Fat Diet-Induced Vascular Barrier Dysfunction and Atherosclerosis

Jingyan Han; Yosuke Watanabe; Di Shao; Markus Bachschmid; Reiko Matsui; Richard A. Cohen


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2014

84 – A Protective Role of Glutaredoxin-1 in High Fat-Induced Endothelial Barrier Dysfunction and Atherosclerosis

Jingyan Han; Di Shao; Colin Murdoch; Yosuke Watanabe; Reiko Matsui; Richard A. Cohen


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2014

272 – Glutaredoxin-1 Regulates Hepatic Lipid Metabolism

Di Shao; Jingyan Han; Jessica Bering; Chunxiang Yao; Xiuyun Hou; Richard A. Cohen; Reiko Matsui; Markus Bachschmid

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