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Featured researches published by Jonathan P. Stoehr.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Loss of stearoyl–CoA desaturase-1 function protects mice against adiposity

James M. Ntambi; Makoto Miyazaki; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Hong Lan; Christina Kendziorski; Brian S. Yandell; Yang Song; Paul Cohen; Jeffrey M. Friedman; Alan D. Attie

Stearoyl–CoA desaturase (SCD) is a central lipogenic enzyme catalyzing the synthesis of monounsaturated fatty acids, mainly oleate (C18:1) and palmitoleate (C16:1), which are components of membrane phospholipids, triglycerides, wax esters, and cholesterol esters. Several SCD isoforms (SCD1-3) exist in the mouse. Here we show that mice with a targeted disruption of the SCD1 isoform have reduced body adiposity, increased insulin sensitivity, and are resistant to diet-induced weight gain. The protection from obesity involves increased energy expenditure and increased oxygen consumption. Compared with the wild-type mice the SCD1−/− mice have increased levels of plasma ketone bodies but reduced levels of plasma insulin and leptin. In the SCD1−/− mice, the expression of several genes of lipid oxidation are up-regulated, whereas lipid synthesis genes are down-regulated. These observations suggest that a consequence of SCD1 deficiency is an activation of lipid oxidation in addition to reduced triglyceride synthesis and storage.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Positional cloning of Sorcs1, a type 2 diabetes quantitative trait locus.

Susanne M. Clee; Brian S. Yandell; Kathryn M Schueler; Mary E. Rabaglia; Oliver C. Richards; Summer M. Raines; Edward A Kabara; Daniel M Klass; Eric T-K Mui; Donald S. Stapleton; Mark P. Gray-Keller; Matthew B Young; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Hong Lan; Igor V. Boronenkov; Philipp W. Raess; Matthew T. Flowers; Alan D. Attie

We previously mapped the type 2 diabetes mellitus-2 locus (T2dm2), which affects fasting insulin levels, to distal chromosome 19 in a leptin-deficient obese F2 intercross derived from C57BL/6 (B6) and BTBR T+ tf/J (BTBR) mice. Introgression of a 7-Mb segment of the B6 chromosome 19 into the BTBR background (strain 1339A) replicated the reduced insulin linked to T2dm2. The 1339A mice have markedly impaired insulin secretion in vivo and disrupted islet morphology. We used subcongenic strains derived from 1339A to localize the T2dm2 quantitative trait locus (QTL) to a 242-kb segment comprising the promoter, first exon and most of the first intron of the Sorcs1 gene. This was the only gene in the 1339A strain for which we detected amino acid substitutions and expression level differences between mice carrying B6 and BTBR alleles of this insert, thereby identifying variation within the Sorcs1 gene as underlying the phenotype associated with the T2dm2 locus. SorCS1 binds platelet-derived growth factor, a growth factor crucial for pericyte recruitment to the microvasculature, and may thus have a role in expanding or maintaining the islet vasculature. Our identification of the Sorcs1 gene provides insight into the pathway underlying the pathophysiology of obesity-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Positional Cloning of a Type 2 Diabetes Quantitative Trait Locus; Tomosyn-2, a Negative Regulator of Insulin Secretion

Sushant Bhatnagar; Angie T. Oler; Mary E. Rabaglia; Donald S. Stapleton; Kathryn L. Schueler; Nathan A. Truchan; Sara L. Worzella; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Susanne M. Clee; Brian S. Yandell; Mark P. Keller; Debbie C. Thurmond; Alan D. Attie

We previously mapped a type 2 diabetes (T2D) locus on chromosome 16 (Chr 16) in an F2 intercross from the BTBR T (+) tf (BTBR) Lepob/ob and C57BL/6 (B6) Lepob/ob mouse strains. Introgression of BTBR Chr 16 into B6 mice resulted in a consomic mouse with reduced fasting plasma insulin and elevated glucose levels. We derived a panel of sub-congenic mice and narrowed the diabetes susceptibility locus to a 1.6 Mb region. Introgression of this 1.6 Mb fragment of the BTBR Chr 16 into lean B6 mice (B6.16BT36–38) replicated the phenotypes of the consomic mice. Pancreatic islets from the B6.16BT36–38 mice were defective in the second phase of the insulin secretion, suggesting that the 1.6 Mb region encodes a regulator of insulin secretion. Within this region, syntaxin-binding protein 5-like (Stxbp5l) or tomosyn-2 was the only gene with an expression difference and a non-synonymous coding single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) between the B6 and BTBR alleles. Overexpression of the b-tomosyn-2 isoform in the pancreatic β-cell line, INS1 (832/13), resulted in an inhibition of insulin secretion in response to 3 mM 8-bromo cAMP at 7 mM glucose. In vitro binding experiments showed that tomosyn-2 binds recombinant syntaxin-1A and syntaxin-4, key proteins that are involved in insulin secretion via formation of the SNARE complex. The B6 form of tomosyn-2 is more susceptible to proteasomal degradation than the BTBR form, establishing a functional role for the coding SNP in tomosyn-2. We conclude that tomosyn-2 is the major gene responsible for the T2D Chr 16 quantitative trait locus (QTL) we mapped in our mouse cross. Our findings suggest that tomosyn-2 is a key negative regulator of insulin secretion.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000

THE EXPRESSION OF ADIPOGENIC GENES IS DECREASED IN OBESITY AND DIABETES MELLITUS

Samuel T. Nadler; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Kathryn L. Schueler; Gene Tanimoto; Brian S. Yandell; Alan D. Attie


Journal of Lipid Research | 2002

Relationship between stearoyl-CoA desaturase activity and plasma triglycerides in human and mouse hypertriglyceridemia.

Alan D. Attie; Ronald M. Krauss; Mark P. Gray-Keller; Alison J. Brownlie; Makoto Miyazaki; John J. P. Kastelein; Aldons J. Lusis; Anton F. H. Stalenhoef; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Michael R. Hayden; James M. Ntambi


Diabetes | 2000

Genetic obesity unmasks nonlinear interactions between murine type 2 diabetes susceptibility loci.

Jonathan P. Stoehr; Samuel T. Nadler; Kathryn L. Schueler; Mary E. Rabaglia; Brian S. Yandell; Stewart A. Metz; Alan D. Attie


Diabetes | 2003

Gene Expression Profiles of Nondiabetic and Diabetic Obese Mice Suggest a Role of Hepatic Lipogenic Capacity in Diabetes Susceptibility

Hong Lan; Mary E. Rabaglia; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Samuel T. Nadler; Kathryn L. Schueler; Fei Zou; Brian S. Yandell; Alan D. Attie


Genetics | 2003

Dimension reduction for mapping mRNA abundance as quantitative traits.

Hong Lan; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Samuel T. Nadler; Kathryn L. Schueler; Brian S. Yandell; Alan D. Attie


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2001

Normal Akt/PKB with reduced PI3K activation in insulin-resistant mice

Samuel T. Nadler; Jonathan P. Stoehr; Mary E. Rabaglia; Kathryn L. Schueler; Morris J. Birnbaum; Alan D. Attie


Diabetes | 2004

Identification of major quantitative trait loci controlling body weight variation in ob/ob mice.

Jonathan P. Stoehr; Jessica E. Byers; Susanne M. Clee; Hong Lan; Igor V. Boronenkov; Kathryn L. Schueler; Brian S. Yandell; Alan D. Attie

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Alan D. Attie

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

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Kathryn L. Schueler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Brian S. Yandell

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mary E. Rabaglia

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Samuel T. Nadler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Hong Lan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Susanne M. Clee

University of British Columbia

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Donald S. Stapleton

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Igor V. Boronenkov

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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James M. Ntambi

University of British Columbia

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