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Dive into the research topics where Jorge Moscat is active.

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Featured researches published by Jorge Moscat.


Cancer Cell | 2016

p62, Upregulated during Preneoplasia, Induces Hepatocellular Carcinogenesis by Maintaining Survival of Stressed HCC-Initiating Cells

Atsushi Umemura; Feng He; Koji Taniguchi; Hayato Nakagawa; Shinichiro Yamachika; Joan Font-Burgada; Zhenyu Zhong; Shankar Subramaniam; Sindhu Raghunandan; Angeles Duran; Juan F. Linares; Miguel Reina-Campos; Shiori Umemura; Mark A. Valasek; Ekihiro Seki; Kanji Yamaguchi; Kazuhiko Koike; Yoshito Itoh; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Jorge Moscat; Michael Karin

p62 is a ubiquitin-binding autophagy receptor and signaling protein that accumulates in premalignant liver diseases and most hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs). Although p62 was proposed to participate in the formation of benign adenomas in autophagy-deficient livers, its role in HCC initiation was not explored. Here we show that p62 is necessary and sufficient for HCC induction in mice and that its high expression in non-tumor human liver predicts rapid HCC recurrence after curative ablation. High p62 expression is needed for activation of NRF2 and mTORC1, induction of c-Myc, and protection of HCC-initiating cells from oxidative stress-induced death.


Cell | 2016

p62 in Cancer: Signaling Adaptor Beyond Autophagy

Jorge Moscat; Michael Karin; Maria T. Diaz-Meco

Adaptor proteins participate in selective autophagy, which is critical for cellular detoxification and stress relief. However, new evidence supports an autophagy-independent key role of the adaptor p62 (encoded by the gene Sqstm1) in signaling functions central to tumor initiation in the epithelium and suppression of tumor progression in the stroma.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Loss of acinar cell IKKα triggers spontaneous pancreatitis in mice

Ning Li; Xuefeng Wu; Ryan G. Holzer; Jun Hee Lee; Jelena Todoric; Eek Joong Park; Hisanobu Ogata; Anna S. Gukovskaya; Ilya Gukovsky; Donald P. Pizzo; Scott R. VandenBerg; David Tarin; Çiǧdem Atay; Melek C. Arkan; Thomas J. Deerinck; Jorge Moscat; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; David W. Dawson; Mert Erkan; Jörg Kleeff; Michael Karin

Chronic pancreatitis is an inflammatory disease that causes progressive destruction of pancreatic acinar cells and, ultimately, loss of pancreatic function. We investigated the role of IκB kinase α (IKKα) in pancreatic homeostasis. Pancreas-specific ablation of IKKα (Ikkα(Δpan)) caused spontaneous and progressive acinar cell vacuolization and death, interstitial fibrosis, inflammation, and circulatory release of pancreatic enzymes, clinical signs resembling those of human chronic pancreatitis. Loss of pancreatic IKKα causes defective autophagic protein degradation, leading to accumulation of p62-mediated protein aggregates and enhanced oxidative and ER stress in acinar cells, but none of these effects is related to NF-κB. Pancreas-specific p62 ablation prevented ER and oxidative stresses and attenuated pancreatitis in Ikkα(Δpan) mice, suggesting that cellular stress induced by p62 aggregates promotes development of pancreatitis. Importantly, downregulation of IKKα and accumulation of p62 aggregates were also observed in chronic human pancreatitis. Our studies demonstrate that IKKα, which may control autophagic protein degradation through its interaction with ATG16L2, plays a critical role in maintaining pancreatic acinar cell homeostasis, whose dysregulation promotes pancreatitis through p62 aggregate accumulation.


Molecular Cell | 2016

TRIM21 Ubiquitylates SQSTM1/p62 and Suppresses Protein Sequestration to Regulate Redox Homeostasis

Ji-An Pan; Yu Sun; Ya-Ping Jiang; Alex J. Bott; Nadia Jaber; Zhixun Dou; Bin Yang; Juei-Suei Chen; Joseph M. Catanzaro; Chunying Du; Wen-Xing Ding; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Jorge Moscat; Keiko Ozato; Richard Z. Lin; Wei-Xing Zong

TRIM21 is a RING finger domain-containing ubiquitin E3 ligase whose expression is elevated in autoimmune disease. While TRIM21 plays an important role in immune activation during pathogen infection, little is known about its inherent cellular function. Here we show that TRIM21 plays an essential role in redox regulation by directly interacting with SQSTM1/p62 and ubiquitylating p62 at lysine 7 (K7) via K63-linkage. As p62 oligomerizes and sequesters client proteins in inclusions, the TRIM21-mediated p62 ubiquitylation abrogates p62 oligomerization and sequestration of proteins including Keap1, a negative regulator of antioxidant response. TRIM21-deficient cells display an enhanced antioxidant response and reduced cell death in response to oxidative stress. Genetic ablation of TRIM21 in mice confers protection from oxidative damages caused by arsenic-induced liver insult and pressure overload heart injury. Therefore, TRIM21 plays an essential role in p62-regulated redox homeostasis and may be a viable target for treating pathological conditions resulting from oxidative damage.


Cancer Cell | 2016

p62/SQSTM1 by Binding to Vitamin D Receptor Inhibits Hepatic Stellate Cell Activity, Fibrosis, and Liver Cancer.

Angeles Duran; Eloy D. Hernandez; Miguel Reina-Campos; Elias A. Castilla; Shankar Subramaniam; Sindhu Raghunandan; Lewis R. Roberts; Tatiana Kisseleva; Michael Karin; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Jorge Moscat

Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) play critical roles in liver fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Vitamin D receptor (VDR) activation in HSCs inhibits liver inflammation and fibrosis. We found that p62/SQSTM1, a protein upregulated in liver parenchymal cells but downregulated in HCC-associated HSCs, negatively controls HSC activation. Total body or HSC-specific p62 ablation potentiates HSCs and enhances inflammation, fibrosis, and HCC progression. p62 directly interacts with VDR and RXR promoting their heterodimerization, which is critical for VDR:RXR target gene recruitment. Loss of p62 in HSCs impairs the repression of fibrosis and inflammation by VDR agonists. This demonstrates that p62 is a negative regulator of liver inflammation and fibrosis through its ability to promote VDR signaling in HSCs, whose activation supports HCC.


Molecular Cell | 2017

Celastrol-Induced Nur77 Interaction with TRAF2 Alleviates Inflammation by Promoting Mitochondrial Ubiquitination and Autophagy

Mengjie Hu; Qiang Luo; Gulimiran Alitongbieke; Shuyi Chong; Chenting Xu; Lei Xie; Xiaohui Chen; Duo Zhang; Yuqi Zhou; Zhaokai Wang; Xiaohong Ye; Lijun Cai; Fang Zhang; Huibin Chen; Fuquan Jiang; Hui Fang; Shanjun Yang; Jie Liu; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Ying Su; Hu Zhou; Jorge Moscat; Xiangzhi Lin; Xiao-kun Zhang

Mitochondria play an integral role in cell death, autophagy, immunity, and inflammation. We previously showed that Nur77, an orphan nuclear receptor, induces apoptosis by targeting mitochondria. Here, we report that celastrol, a potent anti-inflammatory pentacyclic triterpene, binds Nur77 to inhibit inflammation and induce autophagy in a Nur77-dependent manner. Celastrol promotes Nur77 translocation from the nucleus to mitochondria, where it interacts with tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 2 (TRAF2), a scaffold protein and E3 ubiquitin ligase important for inflammatory signaling. The interaction is mediated by an LxxLL motif in TRAF2 and results not only in the inhibition of TRAF2 ubiquitination but also in Lys63-linked Nur77 ubiquitination. Under inflammatory conditions, ubiquitinated Nur77 resides at mitochondria, rendering them sensitive to autophagy, an event involving Nur77 interaction with p62/SQSTM1. Together, our results identify Nur77 as a critical intracellular target for celastrol and unravel a mechanism of Nur77-dependent clearance of inflamed mitochondria to alleviate inflammation.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2017

Metabolism shapes the tumor microenvironment

Miguel Reina-Campos; Jorge Moscat; Maria T. Diaz-Meco

Tumors are strongly influenced by the surrounding normal tissue, which forms a specialized niche termed the tumor microenvironment (TME). The TME is modeled by cancer cells for their own benefit through a complex array of interactions. The identification of new forms of communication within the TME, which are dependent on the tumors metabolic activity, has expanded our understanding of this heterocellular regulation and has revealed potential therapeutic targets. This review will summarize recent findings on the metabolic regulation of tumor cells by the TME. The concepts to be discussed include the existence of metabolic intratumoral heterogeneity, the contribution of cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) to tumor progression, and the regulation of tumor immunology by tumor-secreted metabolites.


Cancer Research | 2016

miR-1298 Inhibits Mutant KRAS-Driven Tumor Growth by Repressing FAK and LAMB3

Ying Zhou; Jason Dang; Kung-Yen Chang; Edwin H. Yau; Pedro Aza-Blanc; Jorge Moscat; Tariq M. Rana

Global miRNA functional screens can offer a strategy to identify synthetic lethal interactions in cancer cells that might be exploited therapeutically. In this study, we applied this strategy to identify novel gene interactions in KRAS-mutant cancer cells. In this manner, we discovered miR-1298, a novel miRNA that inhibited the growth of KRAS-driven cells both in vitro and in vivo Using miR-TRAP affinity purification technology, we identified the tyrosine kinase FAK and the laminin subunit LAMB3 as functional targets of miR-1298. Silencing of FAK or LAMB3 recapitulated the synthetic lethal effects of miR-1298 expression in KRAS-driven cancer cells, whereas coexpression of both proteins was critical to rescue miR-1298-induced cell death. Expression of LAMB3 but not FAK was upregulated by mutant KRAS. In clinical specimens, elevated LAMB3 expression correlated with poorer survival in lung cancer patients with an oncogenic KRAS gene signature, suggesting a novel candidate biomarker in this disease setting. Our results define a novel regulatory pathway in KRAS-driven cancers, which offers a potential therapeutic target for their eradication. Cancer Res; 76(19); 5777-87. ©2016 AACR.


Cancer Research | 2017

p62/SQSTM1 cooperates with hyperactive mTORC1 to regulate glutathione production, maintain mitochondrial integrity and promote tumorigenesis

Hilaire C. Lam; Christian V. Baglini; Alicia Llorente Lope; Andrey Parkhitko; Heng-Jia Liu; Nicola Alesi; Izabela A. Malinowska; Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari; Afshin Saffari; Jane Yu; Ana Pereira; Damir Khabibullin; Barbara Ogorek; Julie Nijmeh; Taylor R. Kavanagh; Adam Handen; Stephen Y. Chan; John M. Asara; William M. Oldham; Maria T. Diaz-Meco; Jorge Moscat; Mustafa Sahin; Carmen Priolo; Elizabeth P. Henske

p62/sequestosome-1 (SQSTM1) is a multifunctional adaptor protein and autophagic substrate that accumulates in cells with hyperactive mTORC1, such as kidney cells with mutations in the tumor suppressor genes tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC)1 or TSC2. Here we report that p62 is a critical mediator of TSC2-driven tumorigenesis, as Tsc2+/- and Tsc2f/f Ksp-CreERT2+ mice crossed to p62-/- mice were protected from renal tumor development. Metabolic profiling revealed that depletion of p62 in Tsc2-null cells decreased intracellular glutamine, glutamate, and glutathione (GSH). p62 positively regulated the glutamine transporter Slc1a5 and increased glutamine uptake in Tsc2-null cells. We also observed p62-dependent changes in Gcl, Gsr, Nqo1, and Srxn1, which were decreased by p62 attenuation and implicated in GSH production and utilization. p62 attenuation altered mitochondrial morphology, reduced mitochondrial membrane polarization and maximal respiration, and increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and mitophagy marker PINK1. These mitochondrial phenotypes were rescued by addition of exogenous GSH and overexpression of Sod2, which suppressed indices of mitochondrial damage and promoted growth of Tsc2-null cells. Finally, p62 depletion sensitized Tsc2-null cells to both oxidative stress and direct inhibition of GSH biosynthesis by buthionine sulfoximine. Our findings show how p62 helps maintain intracellular pools of GSH needed to limit mitochondrial dysfunction in tumor cells with elevated mTORC1, highlighting p62 and redox homeostasis as nodal vulnerabilities for therapeutic targeting in these tumors. Cancer Res; 77(12); 3255-67. ©2017 AACR.


Cell Metabolism | 2017

ATF4-Induced Metabolic Reprograming Is a Synthetic Vulnerability of the p62-Deficient Tumor Stroma

Juan F. Linares; Thekla Cordes; Angeles Duran; Miguel Reina-Campos; Tania Valencia; Christopher S. Ahn; Elias A. Castilla; Jorge Moscat; Christian M. Metallo; Maria T. Diaz-Meco

Tumors undergo nutrient stress and need to reprogram their metabolism to survive. The stroma may play a critical role in this process by providing nutrients to support the epithelial compartment of the tumor. Here we show that p62 deficiency in stromal fibroblasts promotes resistance to glutamine deprivation by the direct control of ATF4 stability through its p62-mediated polyubiquitination. ATF4 upregulation by p62 deficiency in the stroma activates glucose carbon flux through a pyruvate carboxylase-asparagine synthase cascade that results in asparagine generation as a source of nitrogen for stroma and tumor epithelial proliferation. Thus, p62 directly targets nuclear transcription factors to control metabolic reprogramming in the microenvironment and repress tumorigenesis, and identifies ATF4 as a synthetic vulnerability in p62-deficient tumor stroma.

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Michael Karin

University of California

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David Tarin

University of California

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Ekihiro Seki

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Feng He

University of California

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Jelena Todoric

University of California

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Ning Li

University of California

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