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Dive into the research topics where Mahnaz Razandi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mahnaz Razandi.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

A Conserved Mechanism for Steroid Receptor Translocation to the Plasma Membrane

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Richard C.A. Sainson; Jin Kyung Kim; Christopher C.W. Hughes; Ellis R. Levin

Multiple steroid receptors (SR) have been proposed to localize to the plasma membrane. Some structural elements for membrane translocation of the estrogen receptor α (ERα) have been described, but the mechanisms relevant to other steroid receptors are entirely unknown. Here, we identify a highly conserved 9 amino acid motif in the ligand binding domains (E domains) of human/mouse ERα and ERβ, progesterone receptors A and B, and the androgen receptor. Mutation of the phenylalanine or tyrosine at position–2, cysteine at position 0, and hydrophobic isoleucine/leucine or leucine/leucine combinations at positions +5/6, relative to cysteine, significantly reduced membrane localization, MAP and PI 3-kinase activation, thymidine incorporation into DNA, and cell viability, stimulated by specific SR ligands. The localization sequence mediated palmitoylation of each SR, which facilitated caveolin-1 association, subsequent membrane localization, and steroid signaling. Palmitoylation within the E domain is therefore a crucial modification for membrane translocation and function of classical sex steroid receptors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Vasoactive Peptides Modulate Vascular Endothelial Cell Growth Factor Production and Endothelial Cell Proliferation and Invasion

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Ren-Ming Hu; Ellis R. Levin

The proliferation of vascular endothelial cells (EC) is an important event in angiogenesis. The synthesis of the EC growth factor, vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF), is stimulated by a variety of activators; but the effects of important vasoactive peptides are not well understood, and there are no known natural inhibitors of VEGF production. We found that the vasoactive peptides endothelin (ET)-1 and ET-3 stimulated the synthesis of VEGF protein 3–4-fold in cultured human vascular smooth muscle cells, comparable in magnitude to hypoxia. ET-1 and ET-3 acted through the ETA and ETB receptors, respectively, and signaling through protein kinase C was important. Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), C-type natriuretic peptide, and C-ANP-(4–23), a ligand for the natriuretic peptide clearance receptor, equipotently inhibited production of VEGF by as much as 88% and inhibited ET- or hypoxia-stimulated VEGF transcription. EC proliferation and invasion of matrix were stimulated by VEGF secreted into the medium by ET-incubated vascular smooth muscle cells. This was inhibited by ANP. Our results identify the natriuretic peptides as the first peptide inhibitors of VEGF synthesis and indicate a novel mechanism by which vasoactive peptides could modulate angiogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Egr-1 Activates Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor Transcription MECHANISTIC IMPLICATIONS FOR ASTROCYTE PROLIFERATION

Elzbieta Biesiada; Mahnaz Razandi; Ellis R. Levin

The mechanisms controlling the proliferation of astrocytes are of great interest but are not well defined. We have previously shown that the endogenous neuropeptides, endothelin-3 (ET-3), and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), modulate the proliferation of astrocytes through positively and negatively regulating the transcription of the immediate-early gene egr-1 which transactivates basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) by unknown mechanisms. In these studies, we determined the involvement of MAP kinase (Erk) activation by ET-3 in the transcription of egr-1, and the molecular determinants by which Egr-1 transactivates bFGF. Transfection of astrocytes with a mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (MAPK) expression vector increased the transcription of a cotransfected egr-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) construct 3-fold. This induction was totally abolished by a dominant negative MAPK mutant. A 3-fold induction of egr-CAT expression by ET-3 was significantly reduced by treatment with ANP, or a cotransfected dominant negative MAPK plasmid. Using mobility shift assays, we showed that ET-3 induced the expression of Egr-1 protein which bound specifically to several early growth-related protein (Egr-1) binding sites on the bFGF promoter, and that this effect was significantly reversed by treatment with ANP. We also found that the Sp1 transcriptional factor was bound at these same sites, but was not stimulated by ET-3. Deletion experiments indicated that only the site at −160 bp of the bFGF promoter was significant for bFGF transactivation by Egr-1. We conclude that the astrocyte mitogen, ET-3, stimulates egr-1 transcription through a MAP kinase (Erk) related mechanism, and that Egr-1 transactivates bFGF through a specific noncanonical, Egr-1 site on the promoter. ANP inhibits each of these steps, providing a pathway for its anti-proliferative action.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Extracellular Signal-regulated Protein Kinase/Jun Kinase Cross-talk Underlies Vascular Endothelial Cell Growth Factor-induced Endothelial Cell Proliferation

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Ellis R. Levin

Ligand binding to vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF) receptors activates the mitogen-activated protein kinases extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and c-Jun N-terminal protein kinase (JNK). Possible cross-communication of ERK and JNK effecting endothelial cell (EC) actions of VEGF is poorly understood. Incubation of EC with PD 98059, a specific mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inhibitor, or transfection with Y185F, a dominant negative ERK2, strongly inhibited VEGF-activated JNK. JNK was also activated by ERK2 expression in the absence of VEGF, inhibited 82% by co-transfection with dominant negative SEK-1, indicating upstream activation of JNK by ERK. VEGF-stimulated JNK activity was also reversed by dominant negative SEK-1. Other EC growth factors exhibited similar cross-activation of JNK through ERK. VEGF stimulated the nuclear incorporation of thymidine, reversed 89% by PD 98059 and 72% by Y185F. Dominant negative SEK-1 or JNK-1 also significantly reduced VEGF-stimulated thymidine incorporation. Expression of wild type Jip-1, which prevents JNK nuclear translocation, inhibited VEGF-induced EC proliferation by 75%. VEGF stimulated both cyclin D1 synthesis and Cdk4 kinase activity, inhibited by PD 98059 and dominant negative JNK-1. Important events for VEGF-induced G1/S progression and cell proliferation are enhanced through a novel ERK to JNK cross-activation and subsequent JNK action.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Estrogen Prevents Cardiomyocyte Apoptosis through Inhibition of Reactive Oxygen Species and Differential Regulation of p38 Kinase Isoforms

Jin Kyung Kim; Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Ellis R. Levin

From human and animal studies, estrogen is known to protect the myocardium from an ischemic insult. However, there is limited knowledge regarding mechanisms by which estrogen directly protects cardiomyocytes. In this report, we employed an in vitro model, in which cultured rat cardiomyocytes underwent prolonged hypoxia followed by reoxygenation (H/R), to study the cardioprotective mechanism of estrogen. 17-β-estradiol (E2) acting via estrogen receptors inhibited H/R-induced apoptosis of cardiomyocytes. Mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated from H/R activated p38α MAPK, and inhibition of p38α with SB203580 significantly prevented H/R-induced cell death. E2 suppressed ROS formation and p38α activation by H/R and concomitantly augmented the activity of p38β. Unlike p38α, p38β was little affected by H/R. Dominant negative p38β protein expression decreased E2-mediated cardiomyocyte survival and ROS suppression during H/R stress. The prosurvival signaling molecule, phosphoinositol-3 kinase (PI3K), has previously been linked to cell survival following ischemia-reperfusion injury. Here, E2-activated PI3K was found to inhibit ROS generated from H/R injury, leading to inhibition of downstream p38α. We further linked these signaling pathways in that p38β was activated by E2 stimulation of PI3K. Thus, E2 differentially modulated two major isoforms of p38, leading to cardiomyocyte survival. This was achieved by signaling through PI3K, integrating cell survival mediators.


Endocrinology | 2008

Estrogen Inhibits Cardiac Hypertrophy: Role of Estrogen Receptor-β to Inhibit Calcineurin

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Dennis B. Lubahn; Jinghua Liu; Mani A. Vannan; Ellis R. Levin

Estrogen has been reported to prevent development of cardiac hypertrophy in female rodent models and in humans. However, the mechanisms of sex steroid action are incompletely understood. We determined the cellular effects by which 17beta-estradiol (E2) inhibits angiotensin II (AngII)-induced cardiac hypertrophy in vivo. Two weeks of angiotensin infusion in female mice resulted in marked hypertrophy of the left ventricle, exacerbated by the loss of ovarian steroid hormones from oophorectomy. Hypertrophy was 51% reversed by the administration of E2 (insertion of 0.1 mg/21-d-release tablets). The effects of E2 were mainly mediated by the estrogen receptor (ER) beta-isoform, because E2 had little effect in ERbeta-null mice but comparably inhibited AngII-induced hypertrophy in wild-type or ERalpha-null mice. AngII induced a switch of myosin heavy chain production from alpha to beta, but this was inhibited by E2 via ERbeta. AngII-induced ERK activation was also inhibited by E2 through the beta-receptor. E2 stimulated brain natriuretic peptide protein expression and substantially prevented ventricular interstitial cardiac fibrosis (collagen deposition) as induced by AngII. Importantly, E2 inhibited calcineurin activity that was stimulated by AngII, related to E2 stimulating the modulatory calcineurin-interacting protein (MCIP) 1 gene and protein expression. E2 acting mainly through ERbeta mitigates the important signaling by AngII that produces cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis in female mice.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Developmental Phenotype of a Membrane Only Estrogen Receptor α (MOER) Mouse

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Jin Kyung Kim; Fiona O'Mahony; Eva Y.-H. P. Lee; Ulrike Luderer; Ellis R. Levin

Estrogen receptors (ERs) α and β exist as nuclear, cytoplasmic, and membrane cellular pools in a wide variety of organs. The relative contributions of each ERα pool to in vivo phenotypes resulting from estrogen signaling have not been determined. To address this, we generated a transgenic mouse expressing only a functional E domain of ERα at the plasma membrane (MOER). Cells isolated from many organs showed membrane only localized E domain of ERα and no other receptor pools. Liver cells from MOER and wild type mice responded to 17-β-estradiol (E2) with comparable activation of ERK and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, not seen in cells from ERαKO mice. Mating the MOER female mice with proven male wild type breeders produced no pregnancies because the uterus and vagina of the MOER female mice were extremely atrophic. Ovaries of MOER and homozygous Strasbourg ERαKO mice showed multiple hemorrhagic cysts and no corpus luteum, and the mammary gland development in both MOER and ERαKO mice was rudimentary. Despite elevated serum E2 levels, serum LH was not suppressed, and prolactin levels were low in MOER mice. MOER and Strasbourg female mice showed plentiful abdominal visceral and other depots of fat and increased body weight compared to wild type mice despite comparable food consumption. These results provide strong evidence that the normal development and adult functions of important organs in female mice requires nuclear ERα and is not rescued by membrane ERα domain expression alone.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

BRCA1 Inhibits Membrane Estrogen and Growth Factor Receptor Signaling to Cell Proliferation in Breast Cancer

Mahnaz Razandi; Ali Pedram; Eliot M. Rosen; Ellis R. Levin

ABSTRACT BRCA1 mutations and estrogen use are risk factors for the development of breast cancer. Recent work has identified estrogen receptors localized at the plasma membrane that signal to cell biology. We examined the impact of BRCA1 on membrane estrogen and growth factor receptor signaling to breast cancer cell proliferation. MCF-7 and ZR-75-1 cells showed a rapid and sustained activation of extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) in response to estradiol (E2) that was substantially prevented by wild-type (wt) but not mutant BRCA1. The proliferation of MCF-7 cells induced by E2 was significantly inhibited by PD98059, a specific ERK inhibitor, or by dominant negative ERK2 expression and by expression of wt BRCA1 (but not mutant BRCA1). E2 induced the synthesis of cyclins D1 and B1, the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases Cdk4 and CDK1, and G1/S and G2/M cell cycle progression. The intact tumor suppressor inhibited all of these. wt BRCA1 also inhibited epidermal growth factor and insulin-like growth factor I-induced ERK and cell proliferation. The inhibition of ERK and cell proliferation by BRCA1 was prevented by phosphatase inhibitors and by interfering RNA knockdown of the ERK phosphatase, mitogen-activated kinase phosphatase 1. Our findings support a novel tumor suppressor function of BRCA1 that is relevant to breast cancer and identify a potential interactive risk factor for women with BRCA1 mutations.


Gastroenterology | 1994

Protection of cultured rat gastric cells against oxidant-induced damage by exogenous glutathione

Hideyuki Hiraishi; Akira Terano; Shinichi Ota; Hiroyuki Mutoh; Tsuneaki Sugimoto; Takashi Harada; Mahnaz Razandi; Kevin J. Ivey

BACKGROUND/AIMS Reduced glutathione (GSH) is an intracellular protectant against oxidants. The present study determined whether extracellular GSH protects against oxidant damage or whether an uptake system of GSH is present in cultured gastric cells. METHODS Hydrogen peroxide was generated by glucose oxidase and glucose. Cytotoxicity was assessed by 51Cr release. Intracellular GSH was assayed by the method of Tietze. RESULTS Pretreatment with extracellular GSH decreased H2O2-induced 51Cr release. Treatment with GSH enhanced cellular GSH content. Protection by pretreatment with GSH was prevented by buthionine sulfoximine (an inhibitor of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase). Enhancement of intracellular GSH was also prevented by buthionine sulfoximine. Acivicin (an inhibitor of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase) prevented intracellular accumulation of GSH from extracellular GSH. Cysteine was effective in preventing damage and enhancing intracellular GSH content, whereas both glutamine and glycine were not. CONCLUSIONS Extracellular GSH protects cultured gastric cells from H2O2 damage by accelerating intracellular GSH synthesis; this is mediated by membrane-bound gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase acting on extracellular GSH (which supplies these cells with cysteine) and then by intracellular gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Membrane-Localized Estrogen Receptor α Is Required for Normal Organ Development and Function

Ali Pedram; Mahnaz Razandi; Michael T. Lewis; Stephen R. Hammes; Ellis R. Levin

Steroid receptors are found in discrete cellular locations, but it is unknown whether extranuclear pools are necessary for normal organ development. To assess this, we developed a point mutant estrogen receptor α (ERα) knockin mouse (C451A) that precludes palmitoylation and membrane trafficking of the steroid receptor in all organs. Homozygous knockin female mice (nuclear-only ERα [NOER]) show loss of rapid signaling that occurs from membrane ERα in wild-type mice. Multiple developmental abnormalities were found, including infertility, relatively hypoplastic uteri, abnormal ovaries, stunted mammary gland ductal development, and abnormal pituitary hormone regulation in NOER mice. These abnormalities were rescued in heterozygous NOER mice that were comparable to wild-type mice. mRNAs implicated in organ development were often poorly stimulated by estrogen only in homozygous NOER mice. We conclude that many organs require membrane ERα and resulting signal transduction to collaborate with nuclear ERα for normal development and function.

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Ali Pedram

University of California

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Ellis R. Levin

University of California

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Kevin J. Ivey

University of California

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Fiona O'Mahony

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Ren-Ming Hu

University of California

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Marco Romano

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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