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Dive into the research topics where Irfan J. Lodhi is active.

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Featured researches published by Irfan J. Lodhi.


Cell | 2009

Identification of a Physiologically Relevant Endogenous Ligand for PPARα in Liver

Manu V. Chakravarthy; Irfan J. Lodhi; Li Yin; Raghu R. V. Malapaka; H. Eric Xu; John Turk; Clay F. Semenkovich

The nuclear receptor PPARalpha is activated by drugs to treat human disorders of lipid metabolism. Its endogenous ligand is unknown. PPARalpha-dependent gene expression is impaired with inactivation of fatty acid synthase (FAS), suggesting that FAS is involved in generation of a PPARalpha ligand. Here we demonstrate the FAS-dependent presence of a phospholipid bound to PPARalpha isolated from mouse liver. Binding was increased under conditions that induce FAS activity and displaced by systemic injection of a PPARalpha agonist. Mass spectrometry identified the species as 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine (16:0/18:1-GPC). Knockdown of Cept1, required for phosphatidylcholine synthesis, suppressed PPARalpha-dependent gene expression. Interaction of 16:0/18:1-GPC with the PPARalpha ligand-binding domain and coactivator peptide motifs was comparable to PPARalpha agonists, but interactions with PPARdelta were weak and none were detected with PPARgamma. Portal vein infusion of 16:0/18:1-GPC induced PPARalpha-dependent gene expression and decreased hepatic steatosis. These data suggest that 16:0/18:1-GPC is a physiologically relevant endogenous PPARalpha ligand.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Lipoexpediency: de novo lipogenesis as a metabolic signal transmitter.

Irfan J. Lodhi; Xiaochao Wei; Clay F. Semenkovich

De novo lipogenesis, the production of fats from simple precursors, is often dismissed as irrelevant to the pathobiology of obesity caused by positive energy balance due to typical high fat diets. However, emerging data implicate de novo lipogenesis in the generation of metabolic signals that alter disease risk. Exploiting this signaling pathway represents lipoexpediency. Lipoexpediency is the concept of directing fats toward benefit even in the setting of lipid overload, and represents a strategy to complement efforts aimed at improving energy balance. Optimizing lipid signals initiated by key lipogenic enzymes such as fatty acid synthase might limit morbidity in people who are unlikely to abandon the lifestyle of the sedentary gourmand.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Muscle lipogenesis balances insulin sensitivity and strength through calcium signaling

Katsuhiko Funai; Haowei Song; Li Yin; Irfan J. Lodhi; Xiaochao Wei; Jun Yoshino; Trey Coleman; Clay F. Semenkovich

Exogenous dietary fat can induce obesity and promote diabetes, but endogenous fat production is not thought to affect skeletal muscle insulin resistance, an antecedent of metabolic disease. Unexpectedly, the lipogenic enzyme fatty acid synthase (FAS) was increased in the skeletal muscle of mice with diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance. Skeletal muscle-specific inactivation of FAS protected mice from insulin resistance without altering adiposity, specific inflammatory mediators of insulin signaling, or skeletal muscle levels of diacylglycerol or ceramide. Increased insulin sensitivity despite high-fat feeding was driven by activation of AMPK without affecting AMP content or the AMP/ATP ratio in resting skeletal muscle. AMPK was induced by elevated cytosolic calcium caused by impaired sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) activity due to altered phospholipid composition of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), but came at the expense of decreased muscle strength. Thus, inhibition of skeletal muscle FAS prevents obesity-associated diabetes in mice, but also causes muscle weakness, which suggests that mammals have retained the capacity for lipogenesis in muscle to preserve physical performance in the setting of disrupted metabolic homeostasis.


Cell Metabolism | 2009

Why We Should Put Clothes on Mice

Irfan J. Lodhi; Clay F. Semenkovich

Mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) is a key regulator of adaptive thermogenesis and energy expenditure. Mice lacking UCP1 are cold sensitive, but surprisingly not obese at room temperature. In this issue of Cell Metabolism, Feldmann et al. (2009) unmask an obesogenic phenotype by simply maintaining these mice at thermoneutrality.


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.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Macrophage Fatty-acid Synthase Deficiency Decreases Diet-induced Atherosclerosis

Jochen G. Schneider; Zhen Yang; Manu V. Chakravarthy; Irfan J. Lodhi; Xiaochao Wei; John Turk; Clay F. Semenkovich

Fatty acid metabolism is perturbed in atherosclerotic lesions, but whether it affects lesion formation is unknown. To determine whether fatty acid synthesis affects atherosclerosis, we inactivated fatty-acid synthase (FAS) in macrophages of apoE-deficient mice. Serum lipids, body weight, and glucose metabolism were the same in FAS knock-out in macrophages (FASKOM) and control mice, but blood pressure was lower in FASKOM animals. Atherosclerotic extent was decreased 20–40% in different aortic regions of FASKOM as compared with control mice on Western diets. Foam cell formation was diminished in FASKOM as compared with wild type macrophages due to increased apoAI-specific cholesterol efflux and decreased uptake of oxidized low density lipoprotein. Expression of the anti-atherogenic nuclear receptor liver X receptor α (LXRα; Nr1h3) and its downstream targets, including Abca1, were increased in FASKOM macrophages, whereas expression of the potentially pro-atherogenic type B scavenger receptor CD36 was decreased. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα) target gene expression was decreased in FASKOM macrophages. PPARα agonist treatment of FASKOM and wild type macrophages normalized PPARα target gene expression as well as Nr1h3 (LXRα). Atherosclerotic lesions were more extensive when apoE null mice were transplanted with LXRα-deficient/FAS-deficient bone marrow as compared with LXRα-replete/FAS-deficient marrow, consistent with anti-atherogenic effects of LXRα in the context of FAS deficiency. These results show that macrophage FAS deficiency decreases atherosclerosis through induction of LXRα and suggest that FAS, which is induced by LXRα, may generate regulatory lipids that cause feedback inhibition of LXRα in macrophages.


Diabetes | 2016

Skeletal Muscle Phospholipid Metabolism Regulates Insulin Sensitivity and Contractile Function

Katsuhiko Funai; Irfan J. Lodhi; Larry D. Spears; Li Yin; Haowei Song; Samuel Klein; Clay F. Semenkovich

Skeletal muscle insulin resistance is an early defect in the development of type 2 diabetes. Lipid overload induces insulin resistance in muscle and alters the composition of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). To test the hypothesis that skeletal muscle phospholipid metabolism regulates systemic glucose metabolism, we perturbed choline/ethanolamine phosphotransferase 1 (CEPT1), the terminal enzyme in the Kennedy pathway of phospholipid synthesis. In C2C12 cells, CEPT1 knockdown altered SR phospholipid composition and calcium flux. In mice, diet-induced obesity, which decreases insulin sensitivity, increased muscle CEPT1 expression. In high-fat diet–fed mice with skeletal muscle–specific knockout of CEPT1, systemic and muscle-based approaches demonstrated increased muscle insulin sensitivity. In CEPT1-deficient muscles, an altered SR phospholipid milieu decreased sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase–dependent calcium uptake, activating calcium-signaling pathways known to improve insulin sensitivity. Altered muscle SR calcium handling also rendered these mice exercise intolerant. In obese humans, surgery-induced weight loss increased insulin sensitivity and decreased skeletal muscle CEPT1 protein. In obese humans spanning a spectrum of metabolic health, muscle CEPT1 mRNA was inversely correlated with insulin sensitivity. These results suggest that high-fat feeding and obesity induce CEPT1, which remodels the SR to preserve contractile function at the expense of insulin sensitivity.


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 | 2013

Nutrient-dependent phosphorylation channels lipid synthesis to regulate PPARα

Anne P.L. Jensen-Urstad; Haowei Song; Irfan J. Lodhi; Katsuhiko Funai; Li Yin; Trey Coleman; Clay F. Semenkovich

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)α is a nuclear receptor that coordinates liver metabolism during fasting. Fatty acid synthase (FAS) is an enzyme that stores excess calories as fat during feeding, but it also activates hepatic PPARα by promoting synthesis of an endogenous ligand. Here we show that the mechanism underlying this paradoxical relationship involves the differential regulation of FAS in at least two distinct subcellular pools: cytoplasmic and membrane-associated. In mouse liver and cultured hepatoma cells, the ratio of cytoplasmic to membrane FAS-specific activity was increased with fasting, indicating higher cytoplasmic FAS activity under conditions associated with PPARα activation. This effect was due to a nutrient-dependent and compartment-selective covalent modification of FAS. Cytoplasmic FAS was preferentially phosphorylated during feeding or insulin treatment at Thr-1029 and Thr-1033, which flank a dehydratase domain catalytic residue. Mutating these sites to alanines promoted PPARα target gene expression. Rapamycin-induced inhibition of mammalian/mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a mediator of the feeding/insulin signal to induce lipogenesis, reduced FAS phosphorylation, increased cytoplasmic FAS enzyme activity, and increased PPARα target gene expression. Rapamycin-mediated induction of the same gene was abrogated with FAS knockdown. These findings suggest that hepatic FAS channels lipid synthesis through specific subcellular compartments that allow differential gene expression based on nutritional status.


Protein & Cell | 2018

Structural and functional roles of ether lipids

John M. Dean; Irfan J. Lodhi

ABSTRACTEther lipids, such as plasmalogens, are peroxisome-derived glycerophospholipids in which the hydrocarbon chain at the sn-1 position of the glycerol backbone is attached by an ether bond, as opposed to an ester bond in the more common diacyl phospholipids. This seemingly simple biochemical change has profound structural and functional implications. Notably, the tendency of ether lipids to form non-lamellar inverted hexagonal structures in model membranes suggests that they have a role in facilitating membrane fusion processes. Ether lipids are also important for the organization and stability of lipid raft microdomains, cholesterol-rich membrane regions involved in cellular signaling. In addition to their structural roles, a subset of ether lipids are thought to function as endogenous antioxidants, and emerging studies suggest that they are involved in cell differentiation and signaling pathways. Here, we review the biology of ether lipids and their potential significance in human disorders, including neurological diseases, cancer, and metabolic disorders.

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Clay F. Semenkovich

Washington University in St. Louis

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Li Yin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Haowei Song

Washington University in St. Louis

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John Turk

Washington University in St. Louis

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Trey Coleman

Washington University in St. Louis

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Xiaochao Wei

Washington University in St. Louis

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Chu Feng

Washington University in St. Louis

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Fong-Fu Hsu

Washington University in St. Louis

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Anne P.L. Jensen-Urstad

Washington University in St. Louis

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