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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey S. Elmendorf is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey S. Elmendorf.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Munc18c phosphorylation by the insulin receptor links cell signaling directly to SNARE exocytosis

Jenna L. Jewell; Eunjin Oh; Latha Ramalingam; Michael A. Kalwat; Vincent S. Tagliabracci; Lixuan Tackett; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf; Debbie C. Thurmond

SNARE complex assembly and mobilization of GLUT4 vesicles is coordinated through direct targeting of Munc18c by the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Signaling, cytoskeletal and membrane mechanisms regulating GLUT4 exocytosis

Nolan J. Hoffman; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Solving how insulin regulates glucose transport into skeletal muscle and adipose tissue remains a fundamental challenge in biology and a significant issue in medicine. A central feature of this process is the coordinated accumulation of the glucose transporter GLUT4 into the plasma membrane. New signaling and cytoskeletal mechanisms of insulin-stimulated GLUT4 exocytosis are of emerging interest, particularly those at or just beneath the plasma membrane. This review examines signals that functionally engage GLUT4 exocytosis, considers cytoskeletal regulation of the stimulated GLUT4 itinerary, and appraises the involvement of plasma membrane parameters in GLUT4 control. We also explore how these newly-defined signaling, cytoskeletal and membrane mechanisms could be of therapeutic interest in the treatment and/or prevention of GLUT4 dysregulation in disease.


Endocrinology | 2012

AMPK Enhances Insulin-Stimulated GLUT4 Regulation via Lowering Membrane Cholesterol

Kirk M. Habegger; Nolan J. Hoffman; Colin M. Ridenour; Joseph T. Brozinick; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) enhances glucose transporter GLUT4 regulation. AMPK also suppresses energy-consuming pathways such as cholesterol synthesis. Interestingly, recent in vitro and in vivo data suggest that excess membrane cholesterol impairs GLUT4 regulation. Therefore, this study tested whether a beneficial, GLUT4-regulatory aspect of AMPK stimulation involved cholesterol lowering. Using L6 myotubes stably expressing an exofacial myc-epitope-tagged-GLUT4, AMPK stimulation by 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-d-ribonucleoside (AICAR; 45 min, 1 mm) or 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP; 30 min, 200 μm) increased cell surface GLUT4myc labeling by approximately ≈ 25% (P < 0.05). Insulin (20 min, 100 nm) also increased GLUT4myc labeling by about 50% (P < 0.05), which was further enhanced (≈ 25%, P < 0.05) by AICAR or DNP. Consistent with AMPK-mediated suppression of cholesterol synthesis, AICAR and DNP decreased membrane cholesterol by 20-25% (P < 0.05). Whereas AMPK knockdown prevented the enhanced basal and insulin-stimulated GLUT4myc labeling by AICAR and DNP, cholesterol replenishment only blocked the AMPK-associated enhancement in insulin action. Cells cultured in a hyperinsulinemic milieu, resembling conditions in vivo that promote the progression/worsening of insulin resistance, displayed an increase in membrane cholesterol. This occurred concomitantly with a loss of cortical filamentous actin (F-actin) and defects in GLUT4 regulation by insulin. These derangements were prevented by AMPK stimulation. Examination of skeletal muscle from insulin-resistant Zucker rats revealed a similar elevation in membrane cholesterol and loss of F-actin. Lowering cholesterol to control levels restored F-actin structure and insulin sensitivity. In conclusion, these data suggest a novel aspect of GLUT4 regulation by AMPK involves membrane cholesterol lowering. Moreover, this AMPK-mediated process protected against hyperinsulinemia-induced insulin resistance.


Current Diabetes Reviews | 2007

Acting on GLUT4: Membrane & cytoskeletal components of insulin action

Joseph T. Brozinick; Bradley A. Berkemeier; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

The dissection of mechanisms that regulate glucose transport by insulin has revealed an intricate network of signaling molecules scattered from the insulin receptor to the intracellular glucose transporter GLUT4. It is also appreciated that some insulin receptor signals jaunt in different directions to regulate events essential for the efficient redistribution of GLUT4 to the plasma membrane. Moreover key assists in the process appear to be arranged by membrane lipids and cytoskeletal proteins. Following current considerations of insulin signals regulating GLUT4, this review will focus on in vitro and in vivo evidence that supports an essential role for phosphoinositides and actin filaments in the control of glucose transport. The discussion will visit recent cell culture, whole animal, and human data highlighting membrane and cytoskeletal aspects of insulin resistance.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2008

Antidiabetogenic Effects of Chromium Mitigate Hyperinsulinemia-Induced Cellular Insulin Resistance via Correction of Plasma Membrane Cholesterol Imbalance

Emily M. Horvath; Lixuan Tackett; Alicia M. McCarthy; Priya Raman; Joseph T. Brozinick; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Previously, we found that a loss of plasma membrane (PM) phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2)-regulated filamentous actin (F-actin) structure contributes to insulin-induced insulin resistance. Interestingly, we also demonstrated that chromium picolinate (CrPic), a dietary supplement thought to improve glycemic status in insulin-resistant individuals, augments insulin-regulated glucose transport in insulin-sensitive 3T3-L1 adipocytes by lowering PM cholesterol. Here, to gain mechanistic understanding of these separate observations, we tested the prediction that CrPic would protect against insulin-induced insulin resistance by improving PM features important in cytoskeletal structure and insulin sensitivity. We found that insulin-induced insulin-resistant adipocytes display elevated PM cholesterol with a reciprocal decrease in PM PIP2. This lipid imbalance and insulin resistance was corrected by the cholesterol-lowering action of CrPic. The PM lipid imbalance did not impair insulin signaling, nor did CrPic amplify insulin signal transduction. In contrast, PM analyses corroborated cholesterol and PIP2 interactions influencing cytoskeletal structure. Because extensive in vitro study documents an essential role for cytoskeletal capacity in insulin-regulated glucose transport, we next evaluated intact skeletal muscle from obese, insulin-resistant Zucker (fa/fa) rats. Because insulin resistance in these animals likely involves multiple mechanisms, findings that cholesterol-lowering restored F-actin cytoskeletal structure and insulin sensitivity to that witnessed in lean control muscle were striking. Also, experiments using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin to shuttle cholesterol into or out of membranes respectively recapitulated the insulin-induced insulin-resistance and protective effects of CrPic on membrane/cytoskeletal interactions and insulin sensitivity. These data predict a PM cholesterol basis for hyperinsulinemia-associated insulin resistance and importantly highlight the reversible nature of this abnormality.


FEBS Letters | 2003

Glucosamine-induced insulin resistance is coupled to O-linked glycosylation of Munc18c.

Guoli Chen; Ping Liu; Debbie C. Thurmond; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Evidence suggests that glucosamine inhibits distal components regulating insulin‐stimulated GLUT4 translocation to the plasma membrane. Here we assessed whether key membrane docking and fusion events were targeted. Consistent with a plasma membrane‐localized effect, 3T3‐L1 adipocytes exposed to glucosamine displayed an increase in cell‐surface O‐linked glycosylation and a simultaneously impaired mobilization of GLUT4 by insulin. Analysis of syntaxin 4 and SNAP23, plasma membrane‐localized target receptor proteins (t‐SNAREs) for the GLUT4 vesicle, showed that they were not cell‐surface targets of O‐linked glycosylation. However, the syntaxin 4 binding protein, Munc18c, was targeted by O‐linked glycosylation. This occurred concomitantly with a block in insulin‐stimulated association of syntaxin 4 with its cognate GLUT4 vesicle receptor protein (v‐SNARE), VAMP2. In conclusion, our data suggest that the mechanism by which glucosamine inhibits insulin‐stimulated GLUT4 translocation involves modification of Munc18c.


Diabetologia | 2012

Fat-induced membrane cholesterol accrual provokes cortical filamentous actin destabilisation and glucose transport dysfunction in skeletal muscle

Kirk M. Habegger; B. A. Penque; W. Sealls; Lixuan Tackett; Lauren N. Bell; E. K. Blue; P. J. Gallagher; M. Sturek; M. A. Alloosh; Helmut O. Steinberg; Robert V. Considine; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Aims/hypothesisDiminished cortical filamentous actin (F-actin) has been implicated in skeletal muscle insulin resistance, yet the mechanism(s) is unknown. Here we tested the hypothesis that changes in membrane cholesterol could be a causative factor, as organised F-actin structure emanates from cholesterol-enriched raft microdomains at the plasma membrane.MethodsSkeletal muscle samples from high-fat-fed animals and insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant human participants were evaluated. The study also used L6 myotubes to directly determine the impact of fatty acids (FAs) on membrane/cytoskeletal variables and insulin action.ResultsHigh-fat-fed insulin-resistant animals displayed elevated levels of membrane cholesterol and reduced F-actin structure compared with normal chow-fed animals. Moreover, human muscle biopsies revealed an inverse correlation between membrane cholesterol and whole-body glucose disposal. Palmitate-induced insulin-resistant myotubes displayed membrane cholesterol accrual and F-actin loss. Cholesterol lowering protected against the palmitate-induced defects, whereas characteristically measured defects in insulin signalling were not corrected. Conversely, cholesterol loading of L6 myotube membranes provoked a palmitate-like cytoskeletal/GLUT4 derangement. Mechanistically, we observed a palmitate-induced increase in O-linked glycosylation, an end-product of the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway (HBP). Consistent with HBP activity affecting the transcription of various genes, we observed an increase in Hmgcr, a gene that encodes 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl coenzyme A reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme in cholesterol synthesis. In line with increased HBP activity transcriptionally provoking a membrane cholesterol-based insulin-resistant state, HBP inhibition attenuated Hmgcr expression and prevented membrane cholesterol accrual, F-actin loss and GLUT4/glucose transport dysfunction.Conclusions/interpretationOur results suggest a novel cholesterolgenic-based mechanism of FA-induced membrane/cytoskeletal disorder and insulin resistance.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2006

Endothelin-1 impairs glucose transporter trafficking via a membrane-based mechanism

Andrew B. Strawbridge; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Endothelin‐1 (ET‐1) disrupts insulin‐regulated glucose transporter GLUT4 trafficking. Since the negative consequence of chronic ET‐1 exposure appears to be independent of signal disturbance along the insulin receptor substrate‐1/phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3‐kinase (PI3K)/Akt‐2 pathway of insulin action, we tested if ET‐1 altered GLUT4 regulation engaged by osmotic shock, a PI3K‐independent stimulus that mimics insulin action. Regulation of GLUT4 by hyperosmotic stress was impaired by ET‐1. Because of the mutual disruption of both insulin‐ and hyperosmolarity‐stimulated GLUT4 translocation, we tested whether shared signaling and/or key phosphatidylinositol 4,5‐bisphosphate (PIP2)‐regulated cytoskeletal events of GLUT4 trafficking were targets of ET‐1. Both insulin and hyperosmotic stress signaling to Cbl were impaired by ET‐1. Also, plasma membrane PIP2 and cortical actin levels were reduced in cells exposed to ET‐1. Exogenous PIP2, but not PI 3,4,5‐bisphosphate, restored actin structure, Cbl activation, and GLUT4 translocation. These data show that ET‐1‐induced PIP2/actin disruption impairs GLUT4 trafficking elicited by insulin and hyperosmolarity. In addition to showing for the first time the important role of PIP2‐regulated cytoskeletal events in GLUT4 regulation by stimuli other than insulin, these studies reveal a novel function of PIP2/actin structure in signal transduction. J. Cell. Biochem. 97: 849–856, 2006.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2014

Signaling of the p21-activated kinase (PAK1) coordinates insulin-stimulated actin remodeling and glucose uptake in skeletal muscle cells

Ragadeepthi Tunduguru; Tim T. Chiu; Latha Ramalingam; Jeffrey S. Elmendorf; Amira Klip; Debbie C. Thurmond

Skeletal muscle accounts for ∼ 80% of postprandial glucose clearance, and skeletal muscle glucose clearance is crucial for maintaining insulin sensitivity and euglycemia. Insulin-stimulated glucose clearance/uptake entails recruitment of glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) to the plasma membrane (PM) in a process that requires cortical F-actin remodeling; this process is dysregulated in Type 2 Diabetes. Recent studies have implicated PAK1 as a required element in GLUT4 recruitment in mouse skeletal muscle in vivo, although its underlying mechanism of action and requirement in glucose uptake remains undetermined. Toward this, we have employed the PAK1 inhibitor, IPA3, in studies using L6-GLUT4-myc muscle cells. IPA3 fully ablated insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation to the PM, corroborating the observation of ablated insulin-stimulated GLUT4 accumulation in the PM of skeletal muscle from PAK1(-/-) knockout mice. IPA3-treatment also abolished insulin-stimulated glucose uptake into skeletal myotubes. Mechanistically, live-cell imaging of myoblasts expressing the F-actin biosensor LifeAct-GFP treated with IPA3 showed blunting of the normal insulin-induced cortical actin remodeling. This blunting was underpinned by a loss of normal insulin-stimulated cofilin dephosphorylation in IPA3-treated myoblasts. These findings expand upon the existing model of actin remodeling in glucose uptake, by placing insulin-stimulated PAK1 signaling as a required upstream step to facilitate actin remodeling and subsequent cofilin dephosphorylation. Active, dephosphorylated cofilin then provides the G-actin substrate for continued F-actin remodeling to facilitate GLUT4 vesicle translocation for glucose uptake into the skeletal muscle cell.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2004

Fluidity of insulin action

Jeffrey S. Elmendorf

Unlike the intensive research in pursuit of understanding the molecular mechanisms of insulin signaling and resistance to its biological action associated most significantly with obesity and type 2 diabetes, the influence of the plasma membrane on insulin sensitivity has been intermittently studied over the years—mainly because it was thought that mediators of insulin action, such as the insulin receptor and the insulin-responsive glucose transporter GLUT4, localize more or less uniformly in the lipids that form cell membranes. Recent insights into membrane physiology suggest that the plasma membrane impacts the function of membrane proteins mediating insulin action. Furthermore, membrane disturbances may be the basis of insulin resistance. Relevant insulin signal transduction data in terms of plasma membrane and insulin resistance are the focus of this review. The discussion visits the cell membrane hypothesis of insulin resistance that suggests insulin action could be related to changes in cell membrane properties.

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Joseph T. Brozinick

National Institutes of Health

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Kirk M. Habegger

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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