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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Y. Cheung is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Y. Cheung.


Cell Reports | 2015

The Mitochondrial Calcium Uniporter Matches Energetic Supply with Cardiac Workload during Stress and Modulates Permeability Transition

Timothy S. Luongo; Jonathan P Lambert; Ancai Yuan; Xue-Qian Zhang; Polina Gross; Jianliang Song; Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Erhe Gao; Mohit Jain; Steven R. Houser; Walter J. Koch; Joseph Y. Cheung; Muniswamy Madesh; John W. Elrod

Cardiac contractility is mediated by a variable flux in intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)), thought to be integrated into mitochondria via the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) channel to match energetic demand. Here, we examine a conditional, cardiomyocyte-specific, mutant mouse lacking Mcu, the pore-forming subunit of the MCU channel, in adulthood. Mcu(-/-) mice display no overt baseline phenotype and are protected against mCa(2+) overload in an in vivo myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury model by preventing the activation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, decreasing infarct size, and preserving cardiac function. In addition, we find that Mcu(-/-) mice lack contractile responsiveness to acute β-adrenergic receptor stimulation and in parallel are unable to activate mitochondrial dehydrogenases and display reduced bioenergetic reserve capacity. These results support the hypothesis that MCU may be dispensable for homeostatic cardiac function but required to modulate Ca(2+)-dependent metabolism during acute stress.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Paroxetine is a direct inhibitor of g protein-coupled receptor kinase 2 and increases myocardial contractility.

David M. Thal; Kristoff T. Homan; Jun Chen; Emily Wu; Patricia M. Hinkle; Z. Maggie Huang; J. Kurt Chuprun; Jianliang Song; Erhe Gao; Joseph Y. Cheung; Larry A. Sklar; Walter J. Koch; John J. G. Tesmer

G protein-coupled receptor kinase 2 (GRK2) is a well-established therapeutic target for the treatment of heart failure. Herein we identify the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) paroxetine as a selective inhibitor of GRK2 activity both in vitro and in living cells. In the crystal structure of the GRK2·paroxetine-Gβγ complex, paroxetine binds in the active site of GRK2 and stabilizes the kinase domain in a novel conformation in which a unique regulatory loop forms part of the ligand binding site. Isolated cardiomyocytes show increased isoproterenol-induced shortening and contraction amplitude in the presence of paroxetine, and pretreatment of mice with paroxetine before isoproterenol significantly increases left ventricular inotropic reserve in vivo with no significant effect on heart rate. Neither is observed in the presence of the SSRI fluoxetine. Our structural and functional results validate a widely available drug as a selective chemical probe for GRK2 and represent a starting point for the rational design of more potent and specific GRK2 inhibitors.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2014

SLC25A23 augments mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake, interacts with MCU, and induces oxidative stress–mediated cell death

Nicholas E. Hoffman; Harish C. Chandramoorthy; Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Xueqian Q. Zhang; Sandhya Vallem; Patrick J. Doonan; Karthik Malliankaraman; Shuchi Guo; Sudarsan Rajan; John W. Elrod; Walter J. Koch; Joseph Y. Cheung; Muniswamy Madesh

Knockdown of SLC25A23 decreases mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake, and SLC25A23 interacts with MCU and MICU1, components of mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter. Expression of SLC25A23 EF-hand-domain mutants has a dominant-negative phenotype of reduced mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. It also attenuates basal ROS and oxidant-induced ATP decline and cell death.


Cell Reports | 2013

MICU1 motifs define mitochondrial calcium uniporter binding and activity.

Nicholas E. Hoffman; Harish C. Chandramoorthy; Santhanam Shamugapriya; Xue-Qian Zhang; Sudarsan Rajan; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Rajesh Kumar Gandhirajan; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Lucas Ferrer; Krishnalatha Sreekrishnanilayam; Kalimuthusamy Natarajaseenivasan; Sandhya Vallem; Thomas Force; Eric T. Choi; Joseph Y. Cheung; Muniswamy Madesh

Resting mitochondrial matrix Ca(2+) is maintained through a mitochondrial calcium uptake 1 (MICU1)-established threshold inhibition of mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) activity. It is not known how MICU1 interacts with MCU to establish this Ca(2+) threshold for mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake and MCU activity. Here, we show that MICU1 localizes to the mitochondrial matrix side of the inner mitochondrial membrane and MICU1/MCU binding is determined by a MICU1 N-terminal polybasic domain and two interacting coiled-coil domains of MCU. Further investigation reveals that MICU1 forms homo-oligomers, and this oligomerization is independent of the polybasic region. However, the polybasic region confers MICU1 oligomeric binding to MCU and controls mitochondrial Ca(2+) current (IMCU). Moreover, MICU1 EF hands regulate MCU channel activity, but do not determine MCU binding. Loss of MICU1 promotes MCU activation leading to oxidative burden and a halt to cell migration. These studies establish a molecular mechanism for MICU1 control of MCU-mediated mitochondrial Ca(2+) accumulation, and dysregulation of this mechanism probably enhances vascular dysfunction.


Cell Reports | 2016

MCUR1 Is a Scaffold Factor for the MCU Complex Function and Promotes Mitochondrial Bioenergetics

Dhanendra Tomar; Zhiwei Dong; Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Diana A. Koch; Toby Thomas; Nicholas E. Hoffman; Shrishiv A. Timbalia; Samuel J. Goldman; Sarah L. Breves; Daniel P. Corbally; Neeharika Nemani; Joseph P. Fairweather; Allison R. Cutri; Xue-Qian Zhang; Jianliang Song; Fabián Jaña; Jianhe Huang; Carlos A. Barrero; Joseph E. Rabinowitz; Timothy S. Luongo; Sarah M. Schumacher; Michael E. Rockman; Alexander Dietrich; Salim Merali; Jeffrey L. Caplan; Peter B. Stathopulos; Rexford S. Ahima; Joseph Y. Cheung; Steven R. Houser; Walter J. Koch

Mitochondrial Ca(2+) Uniporter (MCU)-dependent mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake is the primary mechanism for increasing matrix Ca(2+) in most cell types. However, a limited understanding of the MCU complex assembly impedes the comprehension of the precise mechanisms underlying MCU activity. Here, we report that mouse cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells lacking MCU regulator 1 (MCUR1) have severely impaired [Ca(2+)]m uptake and IMCU current. MCUR1 binds to MCU and EMRE and function as a scaffold factor. Our protein binding analyses identified the minimal, highly conserved regions of coiled-coil domain of both MCU and MCUR1 that are necessary for heterooligomeric complex formation. Loss of MCUR1 perturbed MCU heterooligomeric complex and functions as a scaffold factor for the assembly of MCU complex. Vascular endothelial deletion of MCU and MCUR1 impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics, cell proliferation, and migration but elicited autophagy. These studies establish the existence of a MCU complex that assembles at the mitochondrial integral membrane and regulates Ca(2+)-dependent mitochondrial metabolism.


Science Signaling | 2015

Ca2+ signals regulate mitochondrial metabolism by stimulating CREB-mediated expression of the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter gene MCU

Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Sudarsan Rajan; Nicholas E. Hoffman; Xue-Qian Zhang; Shuchi Guo; Jill E. Kolesar; Kevin J. Hines; Jonathan Ragheb; Neelakshi R. Jog; Roberto Caricchio; Yoshihiro Baba; Brett A. Kaufman; Joseph Y. Cheung; Tomohiro Kurosaki; Donald L. Gill; Muniswamy Madesh

Calcium signaling stimulates the accumulation of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter to regulate mitochondrial metabolism. Maintaining mitochondrial calcium uptake The calcium uniporter complex, which includes the protein MCU, mediates mitochondrial calcium uptake, a process that buffers excess cytosolic calcium and regulates mitochondrial metabolism. Shanmughapriya et al. examined mitochondrial calcium uptake and function in a B lymphocyte cell line deficient in one or more proteins necessary for mediating two types of calcium signals—IICR, calcium released from the endoplasmic reticulum through the calcium-permeable IP3 receptors, and SOCE, calcium influx through store-operated calcium channels. Without IICR or SOCE, the activity of the transcription factor CREB, which bound to the MCU promoter, and the expression and abundance of MCU were reduced, mitochondrial calcium uptake was compromised, and mitochondrial metabolism was altered. Cells deficient in IICR or SOCE lacked an oscillating basal calcium signal. Thus, IICR and SOCE control the capacity of mitochondria to uptake calcium and therefore regulate mitochondrial metabolism. Cytosolic Ca2+ signals, generated through the coordinated translocation of Ca2+ across the plasma membrane (PM) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane, mediate diverse cellular responses. Mitochondrial Ca2+ is important for mitochondrial function, and when cytosolic Ca2+ concentration becomes too high, mitochondria function as cellular Ca2+ sinks. By measuring mitochondrial Ca2+ currents, we found that mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake was reduced in chicken DT40 B lymphocytes lacking either the ER-localized inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP3R), which releases Ca2+ from the ER, or Orai1 or STIM1, components of the PM-localized Ca2+-permeable channel complex that mediates store-operated calcium entry (SOCE) in response to depletion of ER Ca2+ stores. The abundance of MCU, the pore-forming subunit of the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter, was reduced in cells deficient in IP3R, STIM1, or Orai1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and promoter reporter analyses revealed that the Ca2+-regulated transcription factor CREB (cyclic adenosine monophosphate response element–binding protein) directly bound the MCU promoter and stimulated expression. Lymphocytes deficient in IP3R, STIM1, or Orai1 exhibited altered mitochondrial metabolism, indicating that Ca2+ released from the ER and SOCE-mediated signals modulates mitochondrial function. Thus, our results showed that a transcriptional regulatory circuit involving Ca2+-dependent activation of CREB controls the Ca2+ uptake capability of mitochondria and hence regulates mitochondrial metabolism.


Molecular Cell | 2017

Mitochondrial Ca2+ Uniporter Is a Mitochondrial Luminal Redox Sensor that Augments MCU Channel Activity

Zhiwei Dong; Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Dhanendra Tomar; Naveed Siddiqui; Solomon Lynch; Neeharika Nemani; Sarah L. Breves; Xue-Qian Zhang; Aparna Tripathi; Palaniappan Palaniappan; Massimo F. Riitano; Alison M. Worth; Ajay Seelam; Edmund Carvalho; Ramasamy Subbiah; Fabián Jaña; Jonathan Soboloff; Yizhi Peng; Joseph Y. Cheung; Suresh K. Joseph; Jeffrey L. Caplan; Sudarsan Rajan; Peter B. Stathopulos; Muniswamy Madesh

Ca2+ dynamics and oxidative signaling are fundamental mechanisms for mitochondrial bioenergetics and cell function. The MCU complex is the major pathway by which these signals are integrated inxa0mitochondria. Whether and how these coactive elements interact with MCU have not been established. As an approach toward understanding the regulation of MCU channel by oxidative milieu, wexa0adapted inflammatory and hypoxia models. Wexa0identified the conserved cysteine 97 (Cys-97) to be the only reactive thiol in human MCU that undergoes S-glutathionylation. Furthermore, biochemical, structural, and superresolution imaging analysis revealed that MCU oxidation promotes MCU higher order oligomer formation. Both oxidation and mutation of MCU Cys-97 exhibited persistent MCU channel activity with higher [Ca2+]m uptake rate, elevated mROS, and enhanced [Ca2+]m overload-induced cell death. In contrast, these effects were largely independent of MCU interaction with its regulators. These findings reveal a distinct functional role for Cys-97 in ROS sensing and regulation of MCU activity.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2015

BAG3: a new player in the heart failure paradigm

Tijana Knezevic; Valerie D. Myers; Jennifer Gordon; Douglas G. Tilley; Thomas E Sharp; JuFang Wang; Kamel Khalili; Joseph Y. Cheung; Arthur M. Feldman

BAG3 is a cellular protein that is expressed predominantly in skeletal and cardiac muscle but can also be found in the brain and in the peripheral nervous system. BAG3 functions in the cell include: serving as a co-chaperone with members of the heat-shock protein family of proteins to facilitate the removal of misfolded and degraded proteins, inhibiting apoptosis by interacting with Bcl2 and maintaining the structural integrity of the Z-disk in muscle by binding with CapZ. The importance of BAG3 in the homeostasis of myocytes and its role in the development of heart failure was evidenced by the finding that single allelic mutations in BAG3 were associated with familial dilated cardiomyopathy. Furthermore, significant decreases in the level of BAG3 have been found in end-stage failing human heart and in animal models of heart failure including mice with heart failure secondary to trans-aortic banding and in pigs after myocardial infarction. Thus, it becomes relevant to understand the cellular biology and molecular regulation of BAG3 expression in order to design new therapies for the treatment of patients with both hereditary and non-hereditary forms of dilated cardiomyopathy.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2014

Decreased Levels of BAG3 in a Family With a Rare Variant and in Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Arthur M. Feldman; Rene L. Begay; Tijana Knezevic; Valerie D. Myers; Dobromir Slavov; Weizhong Zhu; Katherine Gowan; Sharon L. Graw; Kenneth L. Jones; Douglas G. Tilley; Ryan C. Coleman; Paul Walinsky; Joseph Y. Cheung; Luisa Mestroni; Kamel Khalili; Mathew R.G. Taylor

The most common cause of dilated cardiomyopathy and heart failure (HF) is ischemic heart disease; however, in a third of all patients the cause remains undefined and patients are diagnosed as having idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC). Recent studies suggest that many patients with IDC have a family history of HF and rare genetic variants in over 35 genes have been shown to be causative of disease. We employed whole‐exome sequencing to identify the causative variant in a large family with autosomal dominant transmission of dilated cardiomyopathy. Sequencing and subsequent informatics revealed a novel 10‐nucleotide deletion in the BCL2‐associated athanogene 3 (BAG3) gene (Ch10:del 121436332_12143641: del. 1266_1275 [NM 004281]) that segregated with all affected individuals. The deletion predicted a shift in the reading frame with the resultant deletion of 135 amino acids from the C‐terminal end of the protein. Consistent with genetic variants in genes encoding other sarcomeric proteins there was a considerable amount of genetic heterogeneity in the affected family members. Interestingly, we also found that the levels of BAG3 protein were significantly reduced in the hearts from unrelated patients with end‐stage HF undergoing cardiac transplantation when compared with non‐failing controls. Diminished levels of BAG3 protein may be associated with both familial and non‐familial forms of dilated cardiomyopathy. J. Cell. Physiol. 229: 1697–1702, 2014.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2013

The second member of transient receptor potential-melastatin channel family protects hearts from ischemia-reperfusion injury.

Barbara A. Miller; JuFang Wang; Iwona Hirschler-Laszkiewicz; Erhe Gao; Jianliang Song; Xue-Qian Zhang; Walter J. Koch; Muniswamy Madesh; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Tongda Gu; Shu-jen Chen; Kerry Keefer; Kathleen Conrad; Arthur M. Feldman; Joseph Y. Cheung

The second member of the transient receptor potential-melastatin channel family (TRPM2) is expressed in the heart and vasculature. TRPM2 channels were expressed in the sarcolemma and transverse tubules of adult left ventricular (LV) myocytes. Cardiac TRPM2 channels were functional since activation with H2O2 resulted in Ca(2+) influx that was dependent on extracellular Ca(2+), was significantly higher in wild-type (WT) myocytes compared with TRPM2 knockout (KO) myocytes, and inhibited by clotrimazole in WT myocytes. At rest, there were no differences in LV mass, heart rate, fractional shortening, and +dP/dt between WT and KO hearts. At 2-3 days after ischemia-reperfusion (I/R), despite similar areas at risk and infarct sizes, KO hearts had lower fractional shortening and +dP/dt compared with WT hearts. Compared with WT I/R myocytes, expression of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1) and NCX1 current were increased, expression of the α1-subunit of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase and Na(+) pump current were decreased, and action potential duration was prolonged in KO I/R myocytes. Post-I/R, intracellular Ca(2+) concentration transients and contraction amplitudes were equally depressed in WT and KO myocytes. After 2 h of hypoxia followed by 30 min of reoxygenation, levels of ROS were significantly higher in KO compared with WT LV myocytes. Compared with WT I/R hearts, oxygen radical scavenging enzymes (SODs) and their upstream regulators (forkhead box transcription factors and hypoxia-inducible factor) were lower, whereas NADPH oxidase was higher, in KO I/R hearts. We conclude that TRPM2 channels protected hearts from I/R injury by decreasing generation and enhancing scavenging of ROS, thereby reducing I/R-induced oxidative stress.

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