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Featured researches published by LeBris S. Quinn.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Oversecretion of interleukin-15 from skeletal muscle reduces adiposity

LeBris S. Quinn; Barbara G. Anderson; Lena Strait-Bodey; Ashley M. Stroud; Josep M. Argilés

Obesity is a risk factor for development of insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, osteoarthritis, and some forms of cancer. Many of the adverse health consequences of excess fat deposition are caused by increased secretion of proinflammatory adipokines by adipose tissue. Reciprocal muscle-to-fat signaling factors, or myokines, are starting to be identified. Interleukin-15 (IL-15) is a cytokine that is highly expressed in muscle tissue and that, on the basis of cell culture experiments, has been proposed to act as a circulating myokine that inhibits adipose tissue deposition. To test this hypothesis in vivo, two lines of transgenic mice that overexpressed IL-15 mRNA and protein in skeletal muscle tissue were constructed. By substitution of the inefficient native IL-15 signal peptide with a more efficient signal peptide, one of the transgenic mouse lines also exhibited elevated secretion of IL-15 in the circulation. Overexpression of IL-15 in muscle tissue without secretion in the bloodstream resulted in no differences in body composition. Elevated circulating levels of IL-15 resulted in significant reductions in body fat and increased bone mineral content, without appreciably affecting lean body mass or levels of other cytokines. Elevated circulating levels of IL-15 also inhibited adiposity induced by consumption of a high-fat/high-energy diet in male, but not female, transgenic mice. Female mice with elevated serum IL-15 exhibited increased deposition of lean body mass on a low-fat/low-energy diet and a high-fat/high-energy diet. These findings indicate that muscle-derived circulating IL-15 can modulate adipose tissue deposition and support addition of IL-15 to the growing list of potential myokines that are increasingly being implicated in regulation of body composition.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Interleukin-15 mediates reciprocal regulation of adipose and muscle mass: a potential role in body weight control

Neus Carbó; Joaquín López-Soriano; Paola Costelli; Belén Alvarez; Sílvia Busquets; Francesco M. Baccino; LeBris S. Quinn; Francisco J. López-Soriano; Josep M. Argilés

Interleukin (IL)-15 is a cytokine which is highly expressed in skeletal muscle. Cell culture studies have indicated that IL-15 may have an important role in muscle fiber growth and anabolism. However, data concerning the metabolic effects of this cytokine in vivo are lacking. In the present study, IL-15 was administered to adult rats for 7 days. While IL-15 did not cause changes in either muscle mass or muscle protein content, it induced significant changes in the fractional rates of both muscle protein synthesis and degradation, with no net changes in protein accumulation. Additionally, IL-15 administration resulted in a 33% decrease in white adipose tissue mass and a 20% decrease in circulating triacylglycerols; this was associated with a 47% lower hepatic lipogenic rate and a 36% lower plasma VLDL triacylglycerol content. The decrease in white fat induced by IL-15 was in adipose tissue. No changes were observed in the rate of lipolysis as a result of cytokine administration. These findings indicate that IL-15 has significant effects on both protein and lipid metabolism, and suggest that this cytokine may participate in reciprocal regulation of muscle and adipose tissue mass.


Developmental Biology | 1987

Isolation and clonal analysis of satellite cells from chicken pectoralis muscle

Zipora Yablonka-Reuveni; LeBris S. Quinn; Mark Nameroff

Satellite cells, liberated from the breast muscle of young adult chickens by sequential treatment with collagenase and trypsin, were fractionated by Percoll density centrifugation to remove myofibril fragments and cell debris which otherwise heavily contaminate the preparation. This procedure allowed direct measurements of cell yields (1.5-4 X 10(5) cells/g tissue), plating efficiencies (27-40%) and identification of single cells in culture. In mass cultures, satellite cells gave rise to myotubes on the fifth day, and the progeny of these cells were sequentially passaged several times without losing myogenic traits. In clonal studies, over 90% of the satellite cells gave rise to large clones of which more than 99% were myogenic as demonstrated by the appearance of myotubes. The results obtained with satellite cells differ from observations made using embryonic muscle cell preparation from chicks. In the embryonic system massive formation of myotubes was observed following the third day of culture; sequential subculturing led to overgrowth of fibroblast-like cells following the first passage; and cells gave rise to both small myogenic clones (up to 16 terminally differentiated cells per clone) and non-myogenic clones in addition to large myogenic clones. We conclude that the isolated satellite cells represent a homogeneous cell population and reside in a stem cell compartment.


Cell Biology International | 2005

Interleukin-15 stimulates adiponectin secretion by 3T3-L1 adipocytes: evidence for a skeletal muscle-to-fat signaling pathway.

LeBris S. Quinn; Lena Strait-Bodey; Barbara G. Anderson; Josep M. Argilés; Peter J. Havel

Interleukin‐15 (IL‐15) is a cytokine which is highly expressed in skeletal muscle tissue, and which has anabolic effects on skeletal muscle protein dynamics both in vivo and in vitro. Additionally, administration of IL‐15 to rats and mice inhibits white adipose tissue deposition. To determine if the action of IL‐15 on adipose tissue is direct, the capacity of cultured murine 3T3‐L1 preadipocytes and adipocytes to respond to IL‐15 was examined. IL‐15 administration inhibited lipid accumulation in differentiating 3T3‐L1 preadipocytes, and stimulated secretion of the adipocyte‐specific hormone adiponectin by differentiated 3T3‐L1 adipocytes. The latter observation constitutes the first report of a cytokine or growth factor which stimulates adiponectin production. IL‐15 mRNA expression by cultured 3T3‐L1 adipogenic cells and C2C12 murine skeletal myogenic cells was also examined. Quantitative real‐time PCR indicated IL‐15 mRNA was expressed by C2C12 skeletal myogenic cells, and was upregulated more than 10‐fold in differentiated skeletal myotubes compared to undifferentiated myoblasts. In contrast, 3T3‐L1 cells expressed little or no IL‐15 mRNA at either the undifferentiated preadipocyte or differentiated adipocyte stages. These findings provide support for the hypothesis that IL‐15 functions in a muscle‐to‐fat endocrine axis which modulates fat:lean body composition and insulin sensitivity.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Effects of interleukin-15 (IL-15) on adipose tissue mass in rodent obesity models: evidence for direct IL-15 action on adipose tissue.

Belén Alvarez; Neus Carbó; Joaquín López-Soriano; Rolf Drivdahl; Sílvia Busquets; Francisco J. López-Soriano; Josep M. Argilés; LeBris S. Quinn

Interleukin-15 (IL-15) is a proinflammatory cytokine with multifunctional effects outside the immune system. Previous studies have indicated that treatment of normal rats with IL-15 reduces white adipose tissue (WAT) mass, but it was unclear if these effects were direct or indirect. In the present study, the effects of IL-15 on WAT mass and lipid metabolism were studied in two genetic models of obesity: the leptin receptor-negative fa/fa Zucker rat and the leptin-deficient ob/ob mouse. Lean Zucker rats, lean (+/+), and obese mice (ob/ob) responded to IL-15 with reductions in WAT mass and lipoprotein lipase activity (LPL), with no decreases in food intake. In contrast, fa/fa Zucker rats did not respond to IL-15 administration by any of the above measures of fat mass or lipid metabolism. In addition, ribonuclease protection assays (RPAs) were used to demonstrate that all three subunits (gamma(c), beta and alpha) of the IL-15 receptor complex are expressed by rat and mouse WAT, suggesting that the effects of IL-15 on adipose tissue metabolism could be direct. Additionally, the fa/fa rats expressed 84% lower levels of the gamma(c) signaling receptor subunit than lean Zucker rats, suggesting this decrease may play a role in the lack of adipose tissue response to IL-15 in the fa/fa genotype and lending further support for a direct action of IL-15 on adipose tissue.


Cell Biology International | 2003

Interleukin-15 increases myosin accretion in human skeletal myogenic cultures

Paul S. Furmanczyk; LeBris S. Quinn

Interleukin‐15 (IL‐15) has been shown to have anabolic effects on skeletal muscle in rodent studies conducted in vitro and in vivo. The mechanism of IL‐15 action on muscle appears to be distinct from that of the well‐characterized muscle anabolic factor insulin‐like growth factor‐I (IGF‐I). IL‐15 action has not been investigated in a human culture system nor in detail in primary skeletal myogenic cells. The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of IL‐15 and IGF‐I in primary human skeletal myogenic cells. Accretion of a major myofibrillar protein, myosin heavy chain (MHC), was used as a measure of muscle anabolism. We found that both growth factors induced increases in MHC accretion in primary human skeletal myogenic cultures; however, IL‐15 and IGF‐I actions were temporally distinct. IL‐15 was more effective at stimulating MHC accretion when added to cultures after differentiation of myoblasts had occurred. In contrast, IGF‐I was more effective at stimulating MHC accretion when added to cultures prior to differentiation of myoblasts. These results using a human system support recent findings from rodent models which indicate that the primary mode of IGF‐I action on skeletal muscle anabolism is through stimulation of myogenic precursor cells, whereas the primary target of IL‐15 action is the differentiated muscle fiber. Further, since clinical and experimental studies have shown IGF‐I is not effective in preventing skeletal muscle wasting, the distinct mode of action of IL‐15 suggests it may be of potential usefulness in the treatment of muscle wasting disorders.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2009

Changes in IL-15 expression and death-receptor apoptotic signaling in rat gastrocnemius muscle with aging and life-long calorie restriction.

Emanuele Marzetti; Christy S. Carter; Stephanie E. Wohlgemuth; Hazel A. Lees; Silvia Giovannini; Barbara G. Anderson; LeBris S. Quinn; Christiaan Leeuwenburgh

TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis is enhanced in aged rodent muscles, suggesting that this pathway may be involved in sarcopenia. Interleukin-15 (IL-15), a muscle-derived anabolic cytokine, mitigates muscle wasting and apoptosis in cachectic rats. This effect is thought to occur through inhibition of TNF-alpha-triggered apoptosis. We investigated IL-15 signaling and the TNF-alpha-mediated pathway of apoptosis in the gastrocnemius muscle of Fischer344xBrown Norway rats across the ages of 8, 18, 29 and 37 months, in relation to life-long calorie restriction (CR, 40% calorie intake reduction). Aging caused loss of muscle mass and increased apoptotic DNA fragmentation, which were mitigated by CR. Protein levels of IL-15 and mRNA abundance of IL-15 receptor a-chain decreased in senescent ad libitum (AL) fed rats, but were maintained in CR rodents. Elevations of TNF-alpha, TNF-receptor 1, cleaved caspase-8 and -3 were observed at advanced age in AL rats. These changes were prevented or mitigated by CR. Our results indicate that aging is associated with decreased IL-15 signaling in rat gastrocnemius muscle, which may contribute to sarcopenia partly through enhanced TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis. Preservation of IL-15 signaling by CR may therefore represent a further mechanism contributing to the anti-aging effect of this dietary intervention in skeletal muscle.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Tumor necrosis factor-α exerts interleukin-6-dependent and -independent effects on cultured skeletal muscle cells

Belén Alvarez; LeBris S. Quinn; Sílvia Busquets; Marı́a T Quiles; Francisco J. López-Soriano; Josep M. Argilés

In vivo studies have shown that cancer-associated skeletal muscle wasting (cachexia) is mediated by two cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). It has been unclear from these studies whether TNF exerts direct effects on skeletal muscle and/or whether these effects are mediated via IL-6. Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that TNF induces IL-6 mRNA expression in cultured skeletal muscle cells. To further investigate the relationship between TNF and IL-6, the effects of TNF and IL-6 on protein and DNA dynamics in murine C2C12 skeletal myotube cultures were determined. At 1000 U/ml, TNF induced 30% increases in protein and DNA content. The effects of TNF on protein accumulation were inhibited by aphidicolin, an inhibitor of DNA synthesis. IL-6 mimicked the effects of TNF on C2C12 cultures, inducing a 32% increase in protein accumulation and a 71% increase in the rate of protein synthesis. IL-6 also decreased expression of mRNA for several proteolytic system components, including ubiquitin 2.4 kb (51%) and 1.2 kb (63%), cathepsin B (39%) and m-calpain (47%), indicating that IL-6 acts on both protein synthesis and degradation. Incubation of murine C2C12 myotube cultures with TNF (1000 U/ml) in the presence of a polyclonal mouse anti-IL-6 antibody resulted in an abolishment of the effects of TNF on protein synthesis, but did not inhibit TNF-induced stimulation of DNA synthesis. These findings indicate that the effects of TNF on muscle protein synthesis are mediated by IL-6, but that TNF exerts IL-6-independent effects on proliferation of murine skeletal myoblasts.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Loss of IL-15 receptor α alters the endurance, fatigability, and metabolic characteristics of mouse fast skeletal muscles

Emidio E. Pistilli; Sasha Bogdanovich; Fleur Garton; Nan Yang; Jason P. Gulbin; Jennifer D. Conner; Barbara G. Anderson; LeBris S. Quinn; Kathryn N. North; Rexford S. Ahima; Tejvir S. Khurana

IL-15 receptor α (IL-15Rα) is a component of the heterotrimeric plasma membrane receptor for the pleiotropic cytokine IL-15. However, IL-15Rα is not merely an IL-15 receptor subunit, as mice lacking either IL-15 or IL-15Rα have unique phenotypes. IL-15 and IL-15Rα have been implicated in muscle phenotypes, but a role in muscle physiology has not been defined. Here, we have shown that loss of IL-15Rα induces a functional oxidative shift in fast muscles, substantially increasing fatigue resistance and exercise capacity. IL-15Rα-knockout (IL-15Rα-KO) mice ran greater distances and had greater ambulatory activity than controls. Fast muscles displayed fatigue resistance and a slower contractile phenotype. The molecular signature of these muscles included altered markers of mitochondrial biogenesis and calcium homeostasis. Morphologically, fast muscles had a greater number of muscle fibers, smaller fiber areas, and a greater ratio of nuclei to fiber area. The alterations of physiological properties and increased resistance to fatigue in fast muscles are consistent with a shift toward a slower, more oxidative phenotype. Consistent with a conserved functional role in humans, a genetic association was found between a SNP in the IL15RA gene and endurance in athletes stratified by sport. Therefore, we propose that IL-15Rα has a role in defining the phenotype of fast skeletal muscles in vivo.


Endocrinology | 2013

IL-15 overexpression promotes endurance, oxidative energy metabolism, and muscle PPARδ, SIRT1, PGC-1α, and PGC-1β expression in male mice.

LeBris S. Quinn; Barbara G. Anderson; Jennifer D. Conner; Tami Wolden-Hanson

Endurance exercise initiates a pattern of gene expression that promotes fat oxidation, which in turn improves endurance, body composition, and insulin sensitivity. The signals from exercise that initiate these pathways have not been completely characterized. IL-15 is a cytokine that is up-regulated in skeletal muscle after exercise and correlates with leanness and insulin sensitivity. To determine whether IL-15 can induce any of the metabolic adaptations associated with exercise, substrate metabolism, endurance, and molecular expression patterns were examined in male transgenic mice with constitutively elevated muscle and circulating IL-15 levels. IL-15 transgenic mice ran twice as long as littermate control mice in a run-to-exhaustion trial and preferentially used fat for energy metabolism. Fast muscles in IL-15 transgenic mice exhibited high expression of intracellular mediators of oxidative metabolism that are induced by exercise, including sirtuin 1, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-δ, PPAR-γ coactivator-1α, and PPAR-γ coactivator-1β. Muscle tissue in IL-15 transgenic mice exhibited myosin heavy chain and troponin I mRNA isoform expression patterns indicative of a more oxidative phenotype than controls. These findings support a role for IL-15 in induction of exercise endurance, oxidative metabolism, and skeletal muscle molecular adaptations induced by physical training.

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Kathleen Haugk

University of Washington

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Mark Nameroff

University of Washington

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Karen Swisshelm

University of Colorado Denver

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