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Featured researches published by Jianqi Yang.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Acetylation-Deacetylation of the Transcription Factor Nrf2 (Nuclear Factor Erythroid 2-related Factor 2) Regulates Its Transcriptional Activity and Nucleocytoplasmic Localization

Yumiko Kawai; LaKisha Garduño; Melanie Theodore; Jianqi Yang; Ifeanyi J. Arinze

Activation of Nrf2 by covalent modifications that release it from its inhibitor protein Keap1 has been extensively documented. In contrast, covalent modifications that may regulate its action after its release from Keap1 have received little attention. Here we show that CREB-binding protein induced acetylation of Nrf2, increased binding of Nrf2 to its cognate response element in a target gene promoter, and increased Nrf2-dependent transcription from target gene promoters. Heterologous sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) decreased acetylation of Nrf2 as well as Nrf2-dependent gene transcription, and its effects were overridden by dominant negative SIRT1 (SIRT1-H355A). The SIRT1-selective inhibitors EX-527 and nicotinamide stimulated Nrf2-dependent gene transcription, whereas resveratrol, a putative activator of SIRT1, was inhibitory, mimicking the effect of SIRT1. Mutating lysine to alanine or to arginine at Lys588 and Lys591 of Nrf2 resulted in decreased Nrf2-dependent gene transcription and abrogated the transcription-activating effect of CREB-binding protein. Furthermore, SIRT1 had no effect on transcription induced by these mutants, indicating that these sites are acetylation sites. Microscope imaging of GFP-Nrf2 in HepG2 cells as well as immunoblotting for Nrf2 showed that acetylation conditions resulted in increased nuclear localization of Nrf2, whereas deacetylation conditions enhanced its cytoplasmic rather than its nuclear localization. We posit that Nrf2 in the nucleus undergoes acetylation, resulting in binding, with basic-region leucine zipper protein(s), to the antioxidant response element and consequently in gene transcription, whereas deacetylation disengages it from the antioxidant response element, thereby resulting in transcriptional termination and subsequently in its nuclear export.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Overexpression of the cytosolic form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) in skeletal muscle repatterns energy metabolism in the mouse

Parvin Hakimi; Jianqi Yang; Gemma Casadesus; Duna Massillon; Fatima Tolentino-Silva; Colleen Klocek Nye; Marco E. Cabrera; David R. Hagen; Christopher B. Utter; Yacoub Baghdy; David H. Johnson; David L. Wilson; John P. Kirwan; Satish C. Kalhan; Richard W. Hanson

Transgenic mice, containing a chimeric gene in which the cDNA for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) (PEPCK-C) (EC 4.1.1.32) was linked to the α-skeletal actin gene promoter, express PEPCK-C in skeletal muscle (1-3 units/g). Breeding two founder lines together produced mice with an activity of PEPCK-C of 9 units/g of muscle (PEPCK-Cmus mice). These mice were seven times more active in their cages than controls. On a mouse treadmill, PEPCK-Cmus mice ran up to 6 km at a speed of 20 m/min, whereas controls stopped at 0.2 km. PEPCK-Cmus mice had an enhanced exercise capacity, with a VO2max of 156 ± 8.0 ml/kg/min, a maximal respiratory exchange ratio of 0.91 ± 0.03, and a blood lactate concentration of 3.7 ± 1.0 mm after running for 32 min at a 25° grade; the values for control animals were 112 ± 21 ml/kg/min, 0.99 ± 0.08, and 8.1 ± 5.0 mm respectively. The PEPCK-Cmus mice ate 60% more than controls but had half the body weight and 10% the body fat as determined by magnetic resonance imaging. In addition, the number of mitochondria and the content of triglyceride in the skeletal muscle of PEPCK-Cmus mice were greatly increased as compared with controls. PEPCK-Cmus mice had an extended life span relative to control animals; mice up to an age of 2.5 years ran twice as fast as 6-12-month-old control animals. We conclude that overexpression of PEPCK-C repatterns energy metabolism and leads to greater longevity.


Cell Metabolism | 2010

Regulation of Hepatic Gluconeogenesis by an ER-Bound Transcription Factor, CREBH

Dipanjan Chanda; Jianqi Yang; Hyunhee Oh; Su Sung Kim; Young Sil Yoon; Sungpyo Hong; Keun Gyu Park; In-Kyu Lee; Cheol Soo Choi; Richard W. Hanson; Hueng Sik Choi; Seung Hoi Koo

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-bound transcription factor families are shown to be involved in the control of various metabolic pathways. Here, we report a critical function of ER-bound transcription factor, CREBH, in the regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis. Expression of CREBH is markedly induced by fasting or in the insulin-resistant state in rodents in a dexamethasone- and PGC-1alpha-dependent manner, which results in the accumulation of active nuclear form of CREBH (CREBH-N). Overexpression of constitutively active CREBH activates transcription of PEPCK-C or G6Pase by binding to its enhancer site that is distinct from the well-characterized CREB/CRTC2 regulatory sequences in vivo. Of interest, knockdown of CREBH in liver significantly reduces blood glucose levels without altering expression of genes involved in the ER stress signaling cascades in mice. These data suggest a crucial role for CREBH in the regulation of hepatic glucose metabolism in mammals.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

What Is the Metabolic Role of Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase

Jianqi Yang; Satish C. Kalhan; Richard W. Hanson

The enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP; EC 4.1.1.32) (PEPCK)2 has the unusual distinction of being very well studied but metabolically misunderstood. As we will document in this minireview, the enzyme has been almost exclusively linked to gluconeogenesis to the point that changes in the levels of PEPCK mRNA or its activity are associated with the control of hepatic glucose output and, more recently, with alterations in life span. That a tissue such as brown adipose tissue, which does not make glucose, has more PEPCK activity on a protein basis than is present in the liver is largely ignored. In addition, all eukaryotes have a gene for both a mitochondrial (PEPCK-M) and cytosolic (PEPCK-C) form of the enzyme. In the livers of most mammals studied to date (including humans), 50% of the total PEPCK activity is PEPCK-M. However, for reasons to be discussed, only PEPCK-C has been studied in any detail in mammals. Thus, the “strange case of PEPCK-M” deserves our attention. This minireview is an attempt to broaden our prospective on the metabolic role of this enzyme by reviewing the body of literature that has accumulated demonstrating that PEPCK plays a key role in a several metabolic processes associated with cataplerosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Multiple Nuclear Localization Signals Function in the Nuclear Import of the Transcription Factor Nrf2

Melanie Theodore; Yumiko Kawai; Jianqi Yang; Yuliya Y. Kleshchenko; Sekhar P. Reddy; Fernando Villalta; Ifeanyi J. Arinze

Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) mediates the transcriptional response of cells to oxidative stress and is translocated into the nucleus following, or concomitant with, its activation by electrophiles or reactive oxygen species. The mechanism of its translocation into the nucleus is not entirely elucidated. Here we have identified two novel nuclear localization signal (NLS) motifs in murine Nrf2, one located near the N-terminal region (amino acid residues 42–53) and the other (residues 587–593) located near the C-terminal region. Imaging of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Nrf2 revealed that mutation(s) in any of these sequences resulted in decreased nuclear fluorescence intensity compared with the wild-type Nrf2 when Nrf2 activation was induced with the electrophile tert-butylhydroquinone. The mutations also impaired Nrf2-induced transactivation of antioxidant response element-driven reporter gene expression to the same extent as the Nrf2 construct bearing mutation in a previously identified bipartite NLS that maps at residues 494–511. When linked to GFP or to GFP-PEPCK-C each of the novel NLS motifs was sufficient to drive nuclear translocation of the fusion proteins. Co-immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated that importins α5 and β1 associate with Nrf2, an interaction that was blocked by the nuclear import inhibitor SN50. SN50 also blocked tert-butylhydroquinone-induced nuclear fluorescence of GFP-Nrf2 in cells transfected with wild-type GFP-Nrf2. Overall these results reveal that multiple NLS motifs in Nrf2 function in its nuclear translocation in response to pro-oxidant stimuli and that the importin α-β heterodimer nuclear import receptor system plays a critical role in the import process.


Nutrition & Metabolism | 2005

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and the critical role of cataplerosis in the control of hepatic metabolism

Parvin Hakimi; Mark T. Johnson; Jianqi Yang; David F. LePage; Ronald A. Conlon; Satish C. Kalhan; Lea Reshef; Shirley M. Tilghman; Richard W. Hanson

BackgroundThe metabolic function of PEPCK-C is not fully understood; deletion of the gene for the enzyme in mice provides an opportunity to fully assess its function.MethodsThe gene for the cytosolic form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) (EC 4.1.1.32) (PEPCK-C) was deleted in mice by homologous recombination (PEPCK-C-/- mice) and the metabolic consequences assessed.ResultsPEPCK-C-/- mice became severely hypoglycemic by day two after birth and then died with profound hypoglycemia (12 mg/dl). The mice had milk in their stomachs at day two after birth and the administration of glucose raised the concentration of blood glucose in the mice but did not result in an increased survival. PEPCK-C-/- mice have two to three times the hepatic triglyceride content as control littermates on the second day after birth. These mice also had an elevation of lactate (2.5 times), β-hydroxybutyrate (3 times) and triglyceride (50%) in their blood, as compared to control animals. On day two after birth, alanine, glycine, glutamine, glutamate, aspartate and asparagine were elevated in the blood of the PEPCK-C-/- mice and the blood urea nitrogen concentration was increased by 2-fold. The rate of oxidation of [2-14C]-acetate, and [5-14C]-glutamate to 14CO2 by liver slices from PEPCK-C-/- mice at two days of age was greatly reduced, as was the rate of fatty acid synthesis from acetate and glucose. As predicted by the lack of PEPCK-C, the concentration of malate in the livers of the PEPCK-C-/- mice was 10 times that of controls.ConclusionWe conclude that PEPCK-C is required not only for gluconeogenesis and glyceroneogenesis but also for cataplerosis (i.e. the removal of citric acid cycle anions) and that the failure of this process in the livers of PEPCK-C-/- mice results in a marked reduction in citric acid cycle flux and the shunting of hepatic lipid into triglyceride, resulting in a fatty liver.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Mice with a Deletion in the Gene for CCAAT/Enhancer-binding Protein β Have an Attenuated Response to cAMP and Impaired Carbohydrate Metabolism

Colleen M. Croniger; Carrie Millward; Jianqi Yang; Yumiko Kawai; Ifeanyi J. Arinze; Sha Liu; Mariko Harada-Shiba; Kaushik Chakravarty; Jacob E. Friedman; Valeria Poli; Richard W. Hanson

Fifty percent of the mice homozygous for a deletion in the gene for CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β (C/EBPβ−/− mice; B phenotype) die within 1 to 2 h after birth of hypoglycemia. They do not mobilize their hepatic glycogen or induce the cytosolic form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK). Administration of cAMP resulted in mobilization of glycogen, induction of PEPCK mRNA, and a normal blood glucose; these mice survived beyond 2 h postpartum. Adult C/EBPβ−/− mice (A phenotype) also had difficulty in maintaining blood glucose levels during starvation. Fasting these mice for 16 or 30 h resulted in lower levels of hepatic PEPCK mRNA, blood glucose, β-hydroxybutyrate, blood urea nitrogen, and gluconeogenesis when compared with control mice. The concentration of hepatic cAMP in these mice was 50% of controls, but injection of theophylline, together with glucagon, resulted in a normal cAMP levels. Agonists (glucagon, epinephrine, and isoproterenol) and other effectors of activation of adenylyl cyclase were the same in liver membranes isolated from C/EBPβ−/− mice and littermates. The hepatic activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase was 80% of wild type mice. There was a 79% increase in the concentration of RIα and 27% increase in RIIα in the particulate fraction of the livers of C/EBPβ−/− mice relative to wild type mice, with no change in the catalytic subunit (Cα). Thus, a 45% increase in hepatic cAMP (relative to the wild type) would be required in C/EBPβ−/− mice to activate protein kinase A by 50%. In addition, the total activity of phosphodiesterase in the livers of C/EBPβ−/− mice, as well as the concentration of mRNA for phosphodiesterase 3A (PDE3A) and PDE3B was approximately 25% higher than in control animals, suggesting accelerated degradation of cAMP. C/EBPβ influences the regulation of carbohydrate metabolism by altering the level of hepatic cAMP and the activity of protein kinase A.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Activation of SIRT1 by Resveratrol Represses Transcription of the Gene for the Cytosolic Form of Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP) by Deacetylating Hepatic Nuclear Factor 4α

Jianqi Yang; Xiaoying Kong; Maria Emilia S Martins-Santos; Gabriela Aleman; Ernestine Chaco; George E. Liu; Shwu Yuan Wu; David Samols; Parvin Hakimi; Cheng Ming Chiang; Richard W. Hanson

The SIRT1 activators isonicotinamide (IsoNAM), resveratrol, fisetin, and butein repressed transcription of the gene for the cytosolic form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) (PEPCK-C). An evolutionarily conserved binding site for hepatic nuclear factor (HNF) 4α (−272/−252) was identified, which was required for transcriptional repression of the PEPCK-C gene promoter caused by these compounds. This site contains an overlapping AP-1 binding site and is adjacent to the C/EBP binding element (−248/−234); the latter is necessary for hepatic transcription of PEPCK-C. AP-1 competed with HNF4α for binding to this site and also decreased HNF4α stimulation of transcription from the PEPCK-C gene promoter. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that HNF4α and AP-1, but not C/EBPβ, reciprocally bound to this site prior to and after treating HepG2 cells with IsoNAM. IsoNAM treatment resulted in deacetylation of HNF4α, which decreased its binding affinity to the PEPCK-C gene promoter. In HNF4α-null Chinese hamster ovary cells, IsoNAM and resveratrol failed to repress transcription from the PEPCK-C gene promoter; overexpression of HNF4α in Chinese hamster ovary cells re-established transcriptional inhibition. Exogenous SIRT1 expression repressed transcription, whereas knockdown of SIRT1 by RNA interference reversed this effect. IsoNAM decreased the level of mRNA for PEPCK-C but had no effect on mRNA for glucose-6-phosphatase in AML12 mouse hepatocytes. We conclude that SIRT1 activation inhibited transcription of the gene for PEPCK-C in part by deacetylation of HNF4α. However, SIRT1 deacetylation of other key regulatory proteins that control PEPCK-C gene transcription also likely contributed to the inhibitory effect.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Metabolic Response of Mice to a Postnatal Ablation of CCAAT/Enhancer-binding Protein α

Jianqi Yang; Colleen M. Croniger; Julie Lekstrom-Himes; Pu Zhang; Maris Fenyus; Daniel G. Tenen; Gretchen J. Darlington; Richard W. Hanson

Although CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein α (C/EBPα) is essential for initiating or sustaining several metabolic processes during the perinatal period, the consequences of total ablation of C/EBPα during postnatal development have not been investigated. We have created a conditional knock-out model in which the administration of poly(I:C) caused a virtually total deletion of c/ebpα (C/EBPαΔ/- mice) in the liver, spleen, white and brown adipose tissues, pancreas, lung, and kidney of the mice. C/EBPα itself was completely ablated in the liver by day 4 after the injection of poly(I:C). There was no noticeable change in phenotype during the first 15 days after the injection. The mice maintained a normal level of fasting blood glucose and responded to the diabetogenic action of streptozotocin. From day 16 onward, the mice developed hypophagia, exhibited severe weight loss, lost triglyceride in white but not brown adipose tissue, became hypoglycemic and hypoinsulinemic, depleted their hepatic glycogen, and developed fatty liver. They also exhibited lowered plasma levels of free fatty acid, triglyceride, and cholesterol, as well as marked changes in hepatic mRNA for C/EBPδ, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α, sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1, hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase, and apolipoproteins. Although basal levels of hepatic mRNA for the cytosolic isoform of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and glucose-6-phosphatase were reduced, transcription of the genes for these enzymes was inducible by dibutyryl cyclic AMP in C/EBPαΔ/- mice. The animals died about 1 month after the injection of poly(I:C). These findings demonstrate that C/EBPα is essential for the survival of animals during postnatal life and that its ablation leads to distinct biphasic change in metabolic processes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Aspects of the control of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene transcription.

Jianqi Yang; Lea Reshef; Hanoch Cassuto; Gabriela Aleman; Richard W. Hanson

Abstract This article reviews our current understanding of factors that regulate transcription of the gene for PEPCK-C, focusing on the effect of methylation on gene expression. It also provides insight into the evolutionary status of the PEPCK-C gene.

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Richard W. Hanson

Case Western Reserve University

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Parvin Hakimi

Case Western Reserve University

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Satish C. Kalhan

Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

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Xiaoying Kong

Case Western Reserve University

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Colleen M. Croniger

Case Western Reserve University

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Duna Massillon

Case Western Reserve University

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