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Dive into the research topics where Manjula Darshi is active.

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Featured researches published by Manjula Darshi.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

ChChd3, an Inner Mitochondrial Membrane Protein, Is Essential for Maintaining Crista Integrity and Mitochondrial Function

Manjula Darshi; Vincent L. Mendiola; Mason R. Mackey; Anne N. Murphy; Antonius Koller; Guy A. Perkins; Mark H. Ellisman; Susan S. Taylor

The mitochondrial inner membrane (IM) serves as the site for ATP production by hosting the oxidative phosphorylation complex machinery most notably on the crista membranes. Disruption of the crista structure has been implicated in a variety of cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we characterize ChChd3, a previously identified PKA substrate of unknown function (Schauble, S., King, C. C., Darshi, M., Koller, A., Shah, K., and Taylor, S. S. (2007) J. Biol. Chem. 282, 14952–14959), and show that it is essential for maintaining crista integrity and mitochondrial function. In the mitochondria, ChChd3 is a peripheral protein of the IM facing the intermembrane space. RNAi knockdown of ChChd3 in HeLa cells resulted in fragmented mitochondria, reduced OPA1 protein levels and impaired fusion, and clustering of the mitochondria around the nucleus along with reduced growth rate. Both the oxygen consumption and glycolytic rates were severely restricted. Ultrastructural analysis of these cells revealed aberrant mitochondrial IM structures with fragmented and tubular cristae or loss of cristae, and reduced crista membrane. Additionally, the crista junction opening diameter was reduced to 50% suggesting remodeling of cristae in the absence of ChChd3. Analysis of the ChChd3-binding proteins revealed that ChChd3 interacts with the IM proteins mitofilin and OPA1, which regulate crista morphology, and the outer membrane protein Sam50, which regulates import and assembly of β-barrel proteins on the outer membrane. Knockdown of ChChd3 led to almost complete loss of both mitofilin and Sam50 proteins and alterations in several mitochondrial proteins, suggesting that ChChd3 is a scaffolding protein that stabilizes protein complexes involved in maintaining crista architecture and protein import and is thus essential for maintaining mitochondrial structure and function.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Uniform nomenclature for the mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system

Nikolaus Pfanner; Martin van der Laan; Paolo Amati; Roderick A. Capaldi; Amy A. Caudy; Agnieszka Chacinska; Manjula Darshi; Markus Deckers; Suzanne Hoppins; Tateo Icho; Stefan Jakobs; Jianguo Ji; Vera Kozjak-Pavlovic; Chris Meisinger; Paul R. Odgren; Sang Ki Park; Peter Rehling; Andreas S. Reichert; M. Saeed Sheikh; Susan S. Taylor; Nobuo Tsuchida; Alexander M. van der Bliek; Ida J. van der Klei; Jonathan S. Weissman; Benedikt Westermann; Jiping Zha; Walter Neupert; Jodi Nunnari

The mitochondrial inner membrane contains a large protein complex that functions in inner membrane organization and formation of membrane contact sites. The complex was variably named the mitochondrial contact site complex, mitochondrial inner membrane organizing system, mitochondrial organizing structure, or Mitofilin/Fcj1 complex. To facilitate future studies, we propose to unify the nomenclature and term the complex “mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system” and its subunits Mic10 to Mic60.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

Quantitative Proteomic and Functional Analysis of Liver Mitochondria from High Fat Diet (HFD) Diabetic Mice

Yurong Guo; Manjula Darshi; Yuliang Ma; Guy A. Perkins; Zhouxin Shen; Kristofer J. Haushalter; Rintaro Saito; Ai Chen; Yun Sok Lee; Hemal H. Patel; Steven P. Briggs; Mark H. Ellisman; Jerrold M. Olefsky; Susan S. Taylor

Insulin resistance plays a major role in the development of type 2 diabetes and obesity and affects a number of biological processes such as mitochondrial biogenesis. Though mitochondrial dysfunction has been linked to the development of insulin resistance and pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes, the precise mechanism linking the two is not well understood. We used high fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity dependent diabetes mouse models to gain insight into the potential pathways altered with metabolic disease, and carried out quantitative proteomic analysis of liver mitochondria. As previously reported, proteins involved in fatty acid oxidation, branched chain amino acid degradation, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation were uniformly up-regulated in the liver of HFD fed mice compared with that of normal diet. Further, our studies revealed that retinol metabolism is distinctly down-regulated and the mitochondrial structural proteins—components of mitochondrial inter-membrane space bridging (MIB) complex (Mitofilin, Sam50, and ChChd3), and Tim proteins—essential for protein import, are significantly up-regulated in HFD fed mice. Structural and functional studies on HFD and normal diet liver mitochondria revealed remodeling of HFD mitochondria to a more condensed form with increased respiratory capacity and higher ATP levels compared with normal diet mitochondria. Thus, it is likely that the structural remodeling is essential to accommodate the increased protein content in presence of HFD: the mechanism could be through the MIB complex promoting contact site and crista junction formation and in turn facilitating the lipid and protein uptake.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Targeting and Import Mechanism of Coiled-coil Helix Coiled-coil Helix Domain-containing Protein 3 (ChChd3) into the Mitochondrial Intermembrane Space

Manjula Darshi; Kristina N. Trinh; Anne N. Murphy; Susan S. Taylor

Background: ChChd3 is an inner mitochondrial membrane protein involved in maintaining crista biogenesis. Results: Myristoylation and the CHCH domain are essential for the import; ChChd3 binds to Mia40 for oxidative folding and structural stability of the CHCH domain. Conclusion: Myristoylation represents a novel targeting mechanism for the intermembrane space CHCH domain-containing proteins. Significance: This study identifies ChChd3 as a Mia40 substrate and advances our understanding of ChChd3. Coiled-coil helix coiled-coil helix domain-containing protein 3 (ChChd3) is a mitochondrial inner membrane (IM) protein facing toward the intermembrane space (IMS). In the IMS, ChChd3 complexes with multiple proteins at the crista junctions and contact sites and plays a key role in maintaining crista integrity. ChChd3 is myristoylated at the N terminus and has a CHCH domain with twin CX9C motifs at its C terminus. The CHCH domain proteins are traditionally imported and trapped in the IMS by using a disulfide relay system mediated by Mia40 and Erv1. In this study, we systematically analyzed the role of the myristoylation and the CHCH domain in the import and mitochondrial localization of ChChd3. Based on our results, we predict that myristoylation promotes binding of ChChd3 to the outer membrane and that the CHCH domain translocates the protein across the outer membrane. By analysis of the CHCH domain cysteine mutants, we further show that they have distinct roles in binding to Mia40 in the IMS and proper folding of the protein. The transient disulfide-bonded intermediate with Mia40 is formed preferentially between the second cysteine in helix 1, Cys193, and the active site cysteine in Mia40, Cys55. Although each of the four cysteines is essential for folding of the protein and binding to mitofilin and Sam50, they are not involved in import. Together our results indicate that both the myristoylation and the CHCH domain are essential for the import and mitochondrial localization of ChChd3. Once imported, ChChd3 binds to Mia40 for further folding and assembly into macromolecular complexes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Identification of ChChd3 as a novel substrate of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) using an analog-sensitive catalytic subunit.

Sharmin Schauble; Charles C. King; Manjula Darshi; Antonius Koller; Kavita Shah; Susan S. Taylor

Due to the numerous kinases in the cell, many with overlapping substrates, it is difficult to find novel substrates for a specific kinase. To identify novel substrates of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), the PKA catalytic subunit was engineered to accept bulky N6-substituted ATP analogs, using a chemical genetics approach initially pioneered with v-Src (1). Methionine 120 was mutated to glycine in the ATP-binding pocket of the catalytic subunit. To express the stable mutant C-subunit in Escherichia coli required co-expression with PDK1. This mutant protein was active and fully phosphorylated on Thr197 and Ser338. Based on its kinetic properties, the engineered C-subunit preferred N6(benzyl)-ATP and N6(phenethyl)-ATP over other ATP analogs, but still retained a 30 μm Km for ATP. This mutant recombinant C-subunit was used to identify three novel PKA substrates. One protein, a novel mitochondrial ChChd protein, ChChd3, was identified, suggesting that PKA may regulate mitochondria proteins.


JCI insight | 2016

Tissue-specific metabolic reprogramming drives nutrient flux in diabetic complications

Kelli M. Sas; Pradeep Kayampilly; Jaeman Byun; Viji Nair; Lucy M. Hinder; Junguk Hur; Hongyu Zhang; Cheng-Mao Lin; Nathan R. Qi; George Michailidis; Per-Henrik Groop; Robert G. Nelson; Manjula Darshi; Kumar Sharma; Jeffrey R. Schelling; John R. Sedor; Rodica Pop-Busui; Joel M. Weinberg; Scott A. Soleimanpour; Steven F. Abcouwer; Thomas W. Gardner; Charles F. Burant; Eva L. Feldman; Matthias Kretzler; Frank C. Brosius; Subramaniam Pennathur

Diabetes is associated with altered cellular metabolism, but how altered metabolism contributes to the development of diabetic complications is unknown. We used the BKS db/db diabetic mouse model to investigate changes in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in kidney cortex, peripheral nerve, and retina. A systems approach using transcriptomics, metabolomics, and metabolic flux analysis identified tissue-specific differences, with increased glucose and fatty acid metabolism in the kidney, a moderate increase in the retina, and a decrease in the nerve. In the kidney, increased metabolism was associated with enhanced protein acetylation and mitochondrial dysfunction. To confirm these findings in human disease, we analyzed diabetic kidney transcriptomic data and urinary metabolites from a cohort of Southwestern American Indians. The urinary findings were replicated in 2 independent patient cohorts, the Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy and the Family Investigation of Nephropathy and Diabetes studies. Increased concentrations of TCA cycle metabolites in urine, but not in plasma, predicted progression of diabetic kidney disease, and there was an enrichment of pathways involved in glycolysis and fatty acid and amino acid metabolism. Our findings highlight tissue-specific changes in metabolism in complication-prone tissues in diabetes and suggest that urinary TCA cycle intermediates are potential prognostic biomarkers of diabetic kidney disease progression.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

A kinase interacting protein (AKIP1) is a key regulator of cardiac stress.

Mira Sastri; Kristofer J. Haushalter; Mathivadhani Panneerselvam; Philip Chang; Heidi N. Fridolfsson; J. Cameron Finley; Daniel Ng; Jan M. Schilling; Atsushi Miyanohara; Michele E. Day; Hiro Hakozaki; Susanna Petrosyan; Antonius Koller; Charles C. King; Manjula Darshi; Donald K. Blumenthal; Sameh S. Ali; David Roth; Hemal H. Patel; Susan S. Taylor

Significance Early signaling events leading to protection in the heart under cardiac injury are poorly understood. We identified one such protein, A kinase interacting protein (AKIP1), as a modulator that responds to oxidative stress; up-regulation of AKIP1 showed protection to ischemic injury through enhanced mitochondrial integrity. We show AKIP1 functions as a molecular scaffold via interaction with mitochondrial apoptosis inducing factor and increases protein kinase A activity. These mitochondrial signaling complexes assembled by AKIP1 alter the physiological response of the heart under ischemic stress. Understanding molecular activity and regulation of AKIP1 could lead to novel therapeutic approaches to limit myocardial injury. cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) regulates a myriad of functions in the heart, including cardiac contractility, myocardial metabolism, and gene expression. However, a molecular integrator of the PKA response in the heart is unknown. Here, we show that the PKA adaptor A-kinase interacting protein 1 (AKIP1) is up-regulated in cardiac myocytes in response to oxidant stress. Mice with cardiac gene transfer of AKIP1 have enhanced protection to ischemic stress. We hypothesized that this adaptation to stress was mitochondrial-dependent. AKIP1 interacted with the mitochondrial localized apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) under both normal and oxidant stress. When cardiac myocytes or whole hearts are exposed to oxidant and ischemic stress, levels of both AKIP1 and AIF were enhanced. AKIP1 is preferentially localized to interfibrillary mitochondria and up-regulated in this cardiac mitochondrial subpopulation on ischemic injury. Mitochondria isolated from AKIP1 gene-transferred hearts showed increased mitochondrial localization of AKIP1, decreased reactive oxygen species generation, enhanced calcium tolerance, decreased mitochondrial cytochrome C release, and enhance phosphorylation of mitochondrial PKA substrates on ischemic stress. These observations highlight AKIP1 as a critical molecular regulator and a therapeutic control point for stress adaptation in the heart.


EBioMedicine | 2016

Mass Spectrometry Imaging Reveals Elevated Glomerular ATP/AMP in Diabetes/obesity and Identifies Sphingomyelin as a Possible Mediator

Satoshi Miyamoto; Cheng-Chih Hsu; Gregory Hamm; Manjula Darshi; Maggie K. Diamond-Stanic; Anne-Emilie Declèves; Larkin Slater; Subramaniam Pennathur; Jonathan Stauber; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Kumar Sharma

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is suppressed in diabetes and may be due to a high ATP/AMP ratio, however the quantitation of nucleotides in vivo has been extremely difficult. Via matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) to localize renal nucleotides we found that the diabetic kidney had a significant increase in glomerular ATP/AMP ratio. Untargeted MALDI-MSI analysis revealed that a specific sphingomyelin species (SM(d18:1/16:0)) accumulated in the glomeruli of diabetic and high-fat diet-fed mice compared with wild-type controls. In vitro studies in mesangial cells revealed that exogenous addition of SM(d18:1/16:0) significantly elevated ATP via increased glucose consumption and lactate production with a consequent reduction of AMPK and PGC1α. Furthermore, inhibition of sphingomyelin synthases reversed these effects. Our findings suggest that AMPK is reduced in the diabetic kidney due to an increase in the ATP/AMP ratio and that SM(d18:1/16:0) could be responsible for the enhanced ATP production via activation of the glycolytic pathway.


JCI insight | 2016

Systems biology analysis reveals role of MDM2 in diabetic nephropathy

Rintaro Saito; Anaïs Rocanin-Arjo; Young-Hyun You; Manjula Darshi; Benjamin Van Espen; Satoshi Miyamoto; Jessica Pham; Minya Pu; Simone Romoli; Loki Natarajan; Wenjun Ju; Matthias Kretzler; Robert G. Nelson; Keiichiro Ono; Dana Thomasova; Shrikant R. Mulay; Trey Ideker; Vivette D’Agati; Ergin Beyret; Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte; Hans-Joachim Anders; Kumar Sharma

To derive new insights in diabetic complications, we integrated publicly available human protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks with global metabolic networks using metabolomic data from patients with diabetic nephropathy. We focused on the participating proteins in the network that were computationally predicted to connect the urine metabolites. MDM2 had the highest significant number of PPI connections. As validation, significant downregulation of MDM2 gene expression was found in both glomerular and tubulointerstitial compartments of kidney biopsy tissue from 2 independent cohorts of patients with diabetic nephropathy. In diabetic mice, chemical inhibition of MDM2 with Nutlin-3a led to reduction in the number of podocytes, increased blood urea nitrogen, and increased mortality. Addition of Nutlin-3a decreased WT1+ cells in embryonic kidneys. Both podocyte- and tubule-specific MDM2-knockout mice exhibited severe glomerular and tubular dysfunction, respectively. Interestingly, the only 2 metabolites that were reduced in both podocyte and tubule-specific MDM2-knockout mice were 3-methylcrotonylglycine and uracil, both of which were also reduced in human diabetic kidney disease. Thus, our bioinformatics tool combined with multi-omics studies identified an important functional role for MDM2 in glomeruli and tubules of the diabetic nephropathic kidney and links MDM2 to a reduction in 2 key metabolite biomarkers.


EBioMedicine | 2017

Metabolomics and Gene Expression Analysis Reveal Down-regulation of the Citric Acid (TCA) Cycle in Non-diabetic CKD Patients

Stein Hallan; Maryam Afkarian; Leila R. Zelnick; Bryan Kestenbaum; Shoba Sharma; Rintaro Saito; Manjula Darshi; Gregory Barding; Daniel Raftery; Wenjun Ju; Matthias Kretzler; Kumar Sharma; Ian H. de Boer

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a public health problem with very high prevalence and mortality. Yet, there is a paucity of effective treatment options, partly due to insufficient knowledge of underlying pathophysiology. We combined metabolomics (GCMS) with kidney gene expression studies to identify metabolic pathways that are altered in adults with non-diabetic stage 3–4 CKD versus healthy adults. Urinary excretion rate of 27 metabolites and plasma concentration of 33 metabolites differed significantly in CKD patients versus controls (estimate range − 68% to + 113%). Pathway analysis revealed that the citric acid cycle was the most significantly affected, with urinary excretion of citrate, cis-aconitate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate and succinate reduced by 40–68%. Reduction of the citric acid cycle metabolites in urine was replicated in an independent cohort. Expression of genes regulating aconitate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate and succinate were significantly reduced in kidney biopsies. We observed increased urine citrate excretion (+ 74%, p = 0.00009) and plasma 2-oxoglutarate concentrations (+ 12%, p = 0.002) in CKD patients during treatment with a vitamin-D receptor agonist in a randomized trial. In conclusion, urinary excretion of citric acid cycle metabolites and renal expression of genes regulating these metabolites were reduced in non-diabetic CKD. This supports the emerging view of CKD as a state of mitochondrial dysfunction.

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Kumar Sharma

University of California

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Guy A. Perkins

University of California

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Anne N. Murphy

University of California

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Ping Zhang

University of California

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Ronit Ilouz

University of California

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