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Dive into the research topics where Leslie A. Rowland is active.

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Featured researches published by Leslie A. Rowland.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Sarcolipin is a newly identified regulator of muscle-based thermogenesis in mammals

Naresh C. Bal; Santosh K. Maurya; Danesh H. Sopariwala; Sanjaya K. Sahoo; Subash C. Gupta; Sana Shaikh; Meghna Pant; Leslie A. Rowland; Eric Bombardier; Sanjeewa A. Goonasekera; A. Russell Tupling; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Muthu Periasamy

The role of skeletal muscle in nonshivering thermogenesis (NST) is not well understood. Here we show that sarcolipin (Sln), a newly identified regulator of the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (Serca) pump, is necessary for muscle-based thermogenesis. When challenged to acute cold (4 °C), Sln−/− mice were not able to maintain their core body temperature (37 °C) and developed hypothermia. Surgical ablation of brown adipose tissue and functional knockdown of Ucp1 allowed us to highlight the role of muscle in NST. Overexpression of Sln in the Sln-null background fully restored muscle-based thermogenesis, suggesting that Sln is the basis for Serca-mediated heat production. We show that ryanodine receptor 1 (Ryr1)-mediated Ca2+ leak is an important mechanism for Serca-activated heat generation. Here we present data to suggest that Sln can continue to interact with Serca in the presence of Ca2+, which can promote uncoupling of the Serca pump and cause futile cycling. We further show that loss of Sln predisposes mice to diet-induced obesity, which suggests that Sln-mediated NST is recruited during metabolic overload. These data collectively suggest that SLN is an important mediator of muscle thermogenesis and whole-body energy metabolism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Sarcolipin Is a Key Determinant of the Basal Metabolic Rate, and Its Overexpression Enhances Energy Expenditure and Resistance against Diet-induced Obesity

Santosh K. Maurya; Naresh C. Bal; Danesh H. Sopariwala; Meghna Pant; Leslie A. Rowland; Sana Shaikh; Muthu Periasamy

Background: Sarcolipin (SLN), a regulator of SR Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) in muscle, can promote the uncoupling of SERCA from Ca2+ transport and increase heat production. Results: Overexpression of SLN in muscle increases energy expenditure and provides resistance against diet-induced obesity. Conclusion: SLN plays a role in whole-body metabolism. Significance: SLN can serve as novel target to increase energy expenditure in muscle. Sarcolipin (SLN) is a novel regulator of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) in muscle. SLN binding to SERCA uncouples Ca2+ transport from ATP hydrolysis. By this mechanism, SLN promotes the futile cycling of SERCA, contributing to muscle heat production. We recently showed that SLN plays an important role in cold- and diet-induced thermogenesis. However, the detailed mechanism of how SLN regulates muscle metabolism remains unclear. In this study, we used both SLN knockout (Sln−/−) and skeletal muscle-specific SLN overexpression (SlnOE) mice to explore energy metabolism by pair feeding (fixed calories) and high-fat diet feeding (ad libitum). Our results show that, upon pair feeding, SlnOE mice lost weight compared with the WT, but Sln−/− mice gained weight. Interestingly, when fed with a high-fat diet, SlnOE mice consumed more calories but gained less weight and maintained a normal metabolic profile in comparison with WT and Sln−/− mice. We found that oxygen consumption and fatty acid oxidation were increased markedly in SlnOE mice. There was also an increase in both mitochondrial number and size in SlnOE muscle, together with increased expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ (PPARδ) and PPAR γ coactivator 1 α (PGC1α), key transcriptional activators of mitochondrial biogenesis and enzymes involved in oxidative metabolism. These results, taken together, establish an important role for SLN in muscle metabolism and energy expenditure. On the basis of these data we propose that SLN is a novel target for enhancing whole-body energy expenditure.


Biological Reviews | 2015

The role of skeletal-muscle-based thermogenic mechanisms in vertebrate endothermy.

Leslie A. Rowland; Naresh C. Bal; Muthu Periasamy

Thermogenesis is one of the most important homeostatic mechanisms that evolved during vertebrate evolution. Despite its importance for the survival of the organism, the mechanistic details behind various thermogenic processes remain incompletely understood. Although heat production from muscle has long been recognized as a thermogenic mechanism, whether muscle can produce heat independently of contraction remains controversial. Studies in birds and mammals suggest that skeletal muscle can be an important site of non‐shivering thermogenesis (NST) and can be recruited during cold adaptation, although unequivocal evidence is lacking. Much research on thermogenesis during the last two decades has been focused on brown adipose tissue (BAT). These studies clearly implicate BAT as an important site of NST in mammals, in particular in newborns and rodents. However, BAT is either absent, as in birds and pigs, or is only a minor component, as in adult large mammals including humans, bringing into question the BAT‐centric view of thermogenesis. This review focuses on the evolution and emergence of various thermogenic mechanisms in vertebrates from fish to man. A careful analysis of the existing data reveals that muscle was the earliest facultative thermogenic organ to emerge in vertebrates, long before the appearance of BAT in eutherian mammals. Additionally, these studies suggest that muscle‐based thermogenesis is the dominant mechanism of heat production in many species including birds, marsupials, and certain mammals where BAT‐mediated thermogenesis is absent or limited. We discuss the relevance of our recent findings showing that uncoupling of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+‐ATPase (SERCA) by sarcolipin (SLN), resulting in futile cycling and increased heat production, could be the basis for NST in skeletal muscle. The overall goal of this review is to highlight the role of skeletal muscle as a thermogenic organ and provide a balanced view of thermogenesis in vertebrates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Uncoupling Protein 1 and Sarcolipin Are Required to Maintain Optimal Thermogenesis, and Loss of Both Systems Compromises Survival of Mice under Cold Stress

Leslie A. Rowland; Naresh C. Bal; Leslie P. Kozak; Muthu Periasamy

Background: The mechanisms underlying UCP1-independent thermogenesis are not well understood. Results: Loss of both SLN and UCP1 results in compromised thermogenic ability and severe sensitivity to acute cold. Conclusion: Sarcolipin-mediated thermogenesis is required for optimal thermogenesis and is up-regulated in the absence of UCP1. Significance: Sarcolipin is a crucial contributor to thermogenesis and energy expenditure. The importance of brown adipose tissue as a site of nonshivering thermogenesis has been well documented. Emerging studies suggest that skeletal muscle is also an important site of thermogenesis especially when brown adipose tissue function is lacking. We recently showed that sarcolipin (SLN), an uncoupler of the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA) pump, could contribute to heat production in skeletal muscle. In this study, we sought to understand how loss of UCP1 or SLN is compensated during cold exposure and whether they are both necessary for thermogenesis. Toward this goal, we generated a UCP1;SLN double knock-out (DKO) mouse model and challenged the single and DKO mice to acute and long-term cold exposures. Results from this study show that there is up-regulation of SLN expression in UCP1-KO mice, and loss of SLN is compensated by increased expression of UCP1 and browning of white adipose tissue. We found that the DKO mice were viable when reared at thermoneutrality. When challenged to acute cold, the DKO were extremely cold-sensitive and became hypothermic. Paradoxically, the DKO mice were able to survive gradual cold challenge, but these mice lost significant weight and depleted their fat stores, despite having higher caloric intake. These studies suggest that UCP1 and SLN are required to maintain optimal thermogenesis and that loss of both systems compromises survival of mice under cold stress.


Obesity | 2016

Sarcolipin and uncoupling protein 1 play distinct roles in diet-induced thermogenesis and do not compensate for one another

Leslie A. Rowland; Santosh K. Maurya; Naresh C. Bal; Leslie P. Kozak; Muthu Periasamy

It is well known that uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) in brown adipose tissue plays an important role in diet‐induced thermogenesis. In this study, whether sarcolipin (SLN), a regulator of sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+‐ATPase pump in muscle, is also an important player of diet‐induced thermogenesis was investigated, as well as whether loss of SLN could be compensated by increased UCP1 expression and vice versa.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Disruption of the Murine Protein Kinase Cβ Gene Promotes Gallstone Formation and Alters Biliary Lipid and Hepatic Cholesterol Metabolism

Wei Huang; Rishipal R. Bansode; Yan Xie; Leslie A. Rowland; Madhu Mehta; Nicholas O. Davidson; Kamal D. Mehta

The protein kinase C (PKC) family of Ca2+ and/or lipid-activated serine-threonine protein kinases is implicated in the pathogenesis of obesity and insulin resistance. We recently reported that protein kinase Cβ (PKCβ), a calcium-, diacylglycerol-, and phospholipid-dependent kinase, is critical for maintaining whole body triglyceride homeostasis. We now report that PKCβ deficiency has profound effects on murine hepatic cholesterol metabolism, including hypersensitivity to diet-induced gallstone formation. The incidence of gallstones increased from 9% in control mice to 95% in PKCβ−/− mice. Gallstone formation in the mutant mice was accompanied by hyposecretion of bile acids with no alteration in fecal bile acid excretion, increased biliary cholesterol saturation and hydrophobicity indices, as well as hepatic p42/44MAPK activation, all of which enhance susceptibility to gallstone formation. Lithogenic diet-fed PKCβ−/− mice also displayed decreased expression of hepatic cholesterol-7α-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) and sterol 12α-hydroxylase (CYP8b1). Finally, feeding a modified lithogenic diet supplemented with milk fat, instead of cocoa butter, both increased the severity of and shortened the interval for gallstone formation in PKCβ−/− mice and was associated with dramatic increases in cholesterol saturation and hydrophobicity indices. Taken together, the findings reveal a hitherto unrecognized role of PKCβ in fine tuning diet-induced cholesterol and bile acid homeostasis, thus identifying PKCβ as a major physiological regulator of both triglyceride and cholesterol homeostasis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Both brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle thermogenesis processes are activated during mild to severe cold adaptation in mice

Naresh. C. Bal; Sushant Singh; Felipe C.G. Reis; Santosh K. Maurya; Sunil Pani; Leslie A. Rowland; Muthu Periasamy

Thermogenesis is an important homeostatic mechanism essential for survival and normal physiological functions in mammals. Both brown adipose tissue (BAT) (i.e. uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1)-based) and skeletal muscle (i.e. sarcolipin (SLN)-based) thermogenesis processes play important roles in temperature homeostasis, but their relative contributions differ from small to large mammals. In this study, we investigated the functional interplay between skeletal muscle- and BAT-based thermogenesis under mild versus severe cold adaptation by employing UCP1−/− and SLN−/− mice. Interestingly, adaptation of SLN−/− mice to mild cold conditions (16 °C) significantly increased UCP1 expression, suggesting increased reliance on BAT-based thermogenesis. This was also evident from structural alterations in BAT morphology, including mitochondrial architecture, increased expression of electron transport chain proteins, and depletion of fat droplets. Similarly, UCP1−/− mice adapted to mild cold up-regulated muscle-based thermogenesis, indicated by increases in muscle succinate dehydrogenase activity, SLN expression, mitochondrial content, and neovascularization, compared with WT mice. These results further confirm that SLN-based thermogenesis is a key player in muscle non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) and can compensate for loss of BAT activity. We also present evidence that the increased reliance on BAT-based NST depends on increased autonomic input, as indicated by abundant levels of tyrosine hydroxylase and neuropeptide Y. Our findings demonstrate that both BAT and muscle-based NST are equally recruited during mild and severe cold adaptation and that loss of heat production from one thermogenic pathway leads to increased recruitment of the other, indicating a functional interplay between these two thermogenic processes.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Corrigendum: Sarcolipin is a newly identified regulator of muscle-based thermogenesis in mammals

Naresh C. Bal; Santosh K. Maurya; Danesh H. Sopariwala; Sanjaya K. Sahoo; Subash C. Gupta; Sana Shaikh; Meghna Pant; Leslie A. Rowland; Sanjeewa A. Goonasekera; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Muthu Periasamy


Archive | 2015

The Unique and Complementary Roles of Sarcolipin and Uncoupling Protein 1 in Adaptive Thermogenesis

Leslie A. Rowland


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Sarcolipin overexpression in mice increases their endurance exercise capacity (1162.2)

Danesh H. Sopariwala; Sana Shaikh; Meghna Pant; Leslie A. Rowland; Muthu Periasamy

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Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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