Henry Juguilon
Salk Institute for Biological Studies
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Featured researches published by Henry Juguilon.
Cell | 2008
Vihang A. Narkar; Michael Downes; Ruth T. Yu; Emi Embler; Yong-Xu Wang; Ester Banayo; Maria M. Mihaylova; Michael C. Nelson; Yuhua Zou; Henry Juguilon; Heonjoong Kang; Reuben J. Shaw; Ronald M. Evans
The benefits of endurance exercise on general health make it desirable to identify orally active agents that would mimic or potentiate the effects of exercise to treat metabolic diseases. Although certain natural compounds, such as reseveratrol, have endurance-enhancing activities, their exact metabolic targets remain elusive. We therefore tested the effect of pathway-specific drugs on endurance capacities of mice in a treadmill running test. We found that PPARbeta/delta agonist and exercise training synergistically increase oxidative myofibers and running endurance in adult mice. Because training activates AMPK and PGC1alpha, we then tested whether the orally active AMPK agonist AICAR might be sufficient to overcome the exercise requirement. Unexpectedly, even in sedentary mice, 4 weeks of AICAR treatment alone induced metabolic genes and enhanced running endurance by 44%. These results demonstrate that AMPK-PPARdelta pathway can be targeted by orally active drugs to enhance training adaptation or even to increase endurance without exercise.
Science | 2009
Katja A. Lamia; Uma M. Sachdeva; Luciano DiTacchio; Elliot C. Williams; Jacqueline G.A. Alvarez; Daniel F. Egan; Debbie S. Vasquez; Henry Juguilon; Satchidananda Panda; Reuben J. Shaw; Craig B. Thompson; Ronald M. Evans
Coupling Clocks and Metabolism Circadian clocks in mammals coordinate behavior and physiology with daily light-dark cycles by driving rhythmic transcription of thousands of genes. The master clock in the brain is set by light, but clocks in peripheral tissues, such as the liver, are set by daily feeding. Such coupling should allow tissues to “anticipate” food consumption and optimize the timing of metabolic processes, but how nutritional status is communicated to peripheral clocks is unclear. Studying cell culture models and mice, Lamia et al. (p. 437; see the Perspective by Suter and Schibler) show that the nutrient-responsive signaling molecule AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) provides metabolic information to circadian clocks by triggering phosphorylation and subsequent degradation of the clock component cryptochrome-1. Thus—cryptochromes, which originally evolved as blue-light photoreceptors in plants, act as chemical energy sensors in mammals. The protein kinase AMPK couples circadian clocks and metabolism in mammals through effects on a cryptochrome protein. Circadian clocks coordinate behavioral and physiological processes with daily light-dark cycles by driving rhythmic transcription of thousands of genes. Whereas the master clock in the brain is set by light, pacemakers in peripheral organs, such as the liver, are reset by food availability, although the setting, or “entrainment,” mechanisms remain mysterious. Studying mouse fibroblasts, we demonstrated that the nutrient-responsive adenosine monophosphate–activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylates and destabilizes the clock component cryptochrome 1 (CRY1). In mouse livers, AMPK activity and nuclear localization were rhythmic and inversely correlated with CRY1 nuclear protein abundance. Stimulation of AMPK destabilized cryptochromes and altered circadian rhythms, and mice in which the AMPK pathway was genetically disrupted showed alterations in peripheral clocks. Thus, phosphorylation by AMPK enables cryptochrome to transduce nutrient signals to circadian clocks in mammalian peripheral organs.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996
Ira G. Schulman; Henry Juguilon; Ronald M. Evans
Transactivation-defective retinoid X and thyroid hormone receptors have been used to examine mechanisms of hormonal activation. Activation and repression of transcription by retinoid X and thyroid hormone receptors are shown to be mediated by physically distinct and functionally independent regions of the hormone binding domain. Nevertheless, the ability of receptors to respond to hormone requires communication between both functional domains. Deletion of the hormone-dependent transactivation function of the retinoid X receptor, the common subunit of heterodimeric nuclear receptors, significantly impairs hormone-dependent transcription by retinoic acid, thyroid hormone, and vitamin D receptors. The results indicate that receptors do not exist in static off and on conformations but that hormone alters an equilibrium between inactive and active states.
Nature | 2012
Johan W. Jonker; Jae Myoung Suh; Annette R. Atkins; Maryam Ahmadian; Pingping Li; Jamie Whyte; Mingxiao He; Henry Juguilon; Yun-Qiang Yin; Colin T. Phillips; Ruth T. Yu; Jerrold M. Olefsky; Robert R. Henry; Michael Downes; Ronald M. Evans
Although feast and famine cycles illustrate that remodelling of adipose tissue in response to fluctuations in nutrient availability is essential for maintaining metabolic homeostasis, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here we identify fibroblast growth factor 1 (FGF1) as a critical transducer in this process in mice, and link its regulation to the nuclear receptor PPARγ (peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ), which is the adipocyte master regulator and the target of the thiazolidinedione class of insulin sensitizing drugs. FGF1 is the prototype of the 22-member FGF family of proteins and has been implicated in a range of physiological processes, including development, wound healing and cardiovascular changes. Surprisingly, FGF1 knockout mice display no significant phenotype under standard laboratory conditions. We show that FGF1 is highly induced in adipose tissue in response to a high-fat diet and that mice lacking FGF1 develop an aggressive diabetic phenotype coupled to aberrant adipose expansion when challenged with a high-fat diet. Further analysis of adipose depots in FGF1-deficient mice revealed multiple histopathologies in the vasculature network, an accentuated inflammatory response, aberrant adipocyte size distribution and ectopic expression of pancreatic lipases. On withdrawal of the high-fat diet, this inflamed adipose tissue fails to properly resolve, resulting in extensive fat necrosis. In terms of mechanisms, we show that adipose induction of FGF1 in the fed state is regulated by PPARγ acting through an evolutionarily conserved promoter proximal PPAR response element within the FGF1 gene. The discovery of a phenotype for the FGF1 knockout mouse establishes the PPARγ–FGF1 axis as critical for maintaining metabolic homeostasis and insulin sensitization.
Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Diabetologie | 2012
Johan W. Jonker; Jay-Myoung Suh; Annette R. Atkins; Maryam Ahmadian; Pingping Li; Jamie Whyte; Mingxiao He; Henry Juguilon; Yun-Qiang Yin; Colin T. Phillips; Ruth T. Yu; Jerrold M. Olefsky; Robert R. Henry; Michael Downes; Ronald M. Evans
Although feast and famine cycles illustrate that remodelling of adipose tissue in response to fluctuations in nutrient availability is essential for maintaining metabolic homeostasis, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood.
Nature | 1996
Debabrata Chakravarti; Vickie J. LaMorte; Michael C. Nelson; Toshihiro Nakajima; Ira G. Schulman; Henry Juguilon; Marc Montminy; Ronald M. Evans
Genes & Development | 1998
Bruce Blumberg; Walid Sabbagh; Henry Juguilon; Jack Bolado; Casey M. van Meter; Estelita S. Ong; Ronald M. Evans
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Hung Ying Kao; André Verdel; Chih Cheng Tsai; Cynthia M. Simon; Henry Juguilon; Saadi Khochbin
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1995
Ira G. Schulman; Debabrata Chakravarti; Henry Juguilon; Anthony Romo; Ronald M. Evans
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2008
Vihang A. Narkar; Michael A. Downes; Ruth T. Yu; Emi Embler; Yong-Xu Wang; Ester Banayo; Maria M. Mihaylova; Michael C. Nelson; Yuhua Zou; Henry Juguilon; Heonjoong Kang; Reuben J. Shaw; Ronald M. Evans