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Dive into the research topics where Nakon Aroonsakool is active.

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Featured researches published by Nakon Aroonsakool.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

The cyclic AMP effector Epac integrates pro- and anti-fibrotic signals

Utako Yokoyama; Hemal H. Patel; N. Chin Lai; Nakon Aroonsakool; David Roth; Paul A. Insel

Scar formation occurs during the late stages of the inflammatory response but, when excessive, produces fibrosis that can lead to functional and structural damage of tissues. Here, we show that the profibrogenic agonist, transforming growth factor β1, transcriptionally decreases expression of Exchange protein activated by cAMP 1 (Epac1) in fibroblasts/fibroblast-like cells from multiple tissues (i.e., cardiac, lung, and skin fibroblasts and hepatic stellate cells). Overexpression of Epac1 inhibits transforming growth factor β1-induced collagen synthesis, indicating that a decrease of Epac1 expression appears to be necessary for the fibrogenic phenotype, an idea supported by evidence that Epac1 expression in cardiac fibroblasts is inhibited after myocardial infarction. Epac and protein kinase A, a second mediator of cAMP action, have opposite effects on migration but both inhibit synthesis of collagen and DNA by fibroblasts. Epac is preferentially activated by low concentrations of cAMP and stimulates migration via the small G protein Rap1 but inhibits collagen synthesis in a Rap1-independent manner. The regulation of Epac expression and activation thus appear to be critical for the integration of pro- and anti-fibrotic signals and for the regulation of fibroblast function.


Nature Communications | 2014

GIV/Girdin is a central hub for profibrogenic signalling networks during liver fibrosis

Inmaculada Lopez-Sanchez; Ying Dunkel; Yoon Seok Roh; Yash Mittal; Samuele De Minicis; Andrea Muranyi; Shalini Singh; Kandavel Shanmugam; Nakon Aroonsakool; Fiona Murray; Samuel B. Ho; Ekihiro Seki; David A. Brenner; Pradipta Ghosh

Progressive liver fibrosis is characterized by the deposition of collagen by activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). Activation of HSCs is a multiple receptor-driven process in which profibrotic signals are enhanced, and anti-fibrotic pathways are suppressed. Here we report the discovery of a novel signaling platform comprised of G protein subunit, Gαi and GIV, its guanine exchange factor (GEF), which serves as a central hub within the fibrogenic signalling network initiated by diverse classes of receptors. GIV is expressed in the liver after fibrogenic injury and is required for HSC activation. Once expressed, GIV enhances the profibrotic (PI3K-Akt-FoxO1 and TGFβ-SMAD) and inhibits the anti-fibrotic (cAMP-PKA-pCREB) pathways to skew the signalling network in favor of fibrosis, all via activation of Gαi. We also provide evidence that GIV may serve as a biomarker for progression of fibrosis after liver injury and a therapeutic target for arresting and/or reversing HSC activation during liver fibrosis.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012

cAMP and Epac in the regulation of tissue fibrosis

Paul A. Insel; Fiona Murray; Utako Yokoyama; Silvia Romano; Hongruo Yun; Loren M. Brown; Aaron Snead; David Lu; Nakon Aroonsakool

Fibrosis, the result of excess deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM), in particular collagen, leads to scarring and loss of function in tissues that include the heart, lung, kidney and liver. The second messenger cAMP can inhibit the formation and extent of ECM during this late phase of inflammation, but the mechanisms for these actions of cAMP and of agents that elevate tissue cAMP levels are not well understood. In this article, we review the fibrotic process and focus on two recently recognized aspects of actions of cAMP and its effector Epac (Exchange protein activated by cAMP): (a) blunting of epithelial–mesenchymal transformation (EMT) and (b) down‐regulation of Epac expression by profibrotic agents (e.g. TGF‐β, angiotensin II), which may promote tissue fibrosis by decreasing Epac‐mediated antifibrotic actions. Pharmacological approaches that raise cAMP or blunt the decrease in Epac expression by profibrotic agents may thus be strategies to block or perhaps reverse tissue fibrosis.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2010

Uridine triphosphate (UTP) induces profibrotic responses in cardiac fibroblasts by activation of P2Y2 receptors

Oscar Ö. Braun; David Lu; Nakon Aroonsakool; Paul A. Insel

Cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) play a key role in response to injury and remodeling of the heart. Nucleotide (P2) receptors regulate the heart but limited information is available regarding such receptors in CFs. We thus sought to determine if extracellular nucleotides regulate fibrotic responses (e.g., proliferation, migration and expression of profibrotic markers) of CFs in primary culture. UTP increased rat CF migration 3-fold (p<0.001), proliferation by 30% (p<0.05) and mRNA expression of profibrotic markers: alpha smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), transforming growth factor beta, soluble ST2, interleukin-6 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) by 3.0-, 15-, 2.0-, 7.6-, 11-, and 6.1-fold, respectively (p<0.05). PAI-1 protein expression induced by UTP was dependent on protein kinase C (PKC) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), based on blockade by the PKC inhibitor Ro-31-8220 and the ERK inhibitor U0126, respectively. The rank order for enhanced expression of PAI-1 and alpha-SMA by nucleotides (UTPgammaS>>UDPbetaS>>ATPgammaS), the expression of P2Y2 receptors as the most abundantly expressed P2Y receptor in rat CFs and a blunted response to UTP in P2Y2(-/-) mice all implicate P2Y2 as the predominant P2Y receptor that mediates nucleotide-promoted profibrotic responses. Additional results indicate that P2Y2 receptor-promoted profibrotic responses in CFs are transient, perhaps as a consequence of receptor desensitization. We conclude that P2Y2 receptor activation is profibrotic in CFs; thus inhibition of P2Y2 receptors may provide a novel means to diminish fibrotic remodeling and turnover of extracellular matrix in the heart.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2013

Increase in Cellular Cyclic AMP Concentrations Reverses the Profibrogenic Phenotype of Cardiac Myofibroblasts: A Novel Therapeutic Approach for Cardiac Fibrosis

David Lu; Nakon Aroonsakool; Utako Yokoyama; Hemal H. Patel; Paul A. Insel

Tissue fibrosis is characterized by excessive production, deposition, and contraction of the extracellular matrix (ECM). The second messenger cAMP has antifibrotic effects in fibroblasts from several tissues, including cardiac fibroblasts (CFs). Increased cellular cAMP levels can prevent the transformation of CFs into profibrogenic myofibroblasts, a critical step that precedes increased ECM deposition and tissue fibrosis. Here we tested two hypotheses: 1) myofibroblasts have a decreased ability to accumulate cAMP in response to G protein–coupled receptor (GPCR) agonists, and 2) increasing cAMP will not only prevent, but also reverse, the myofibroblast phenotype. We found that myofibroblasts produce less cAMP in response to GPCR agonists or forskolin and have decreased expression of several adenylyl cyclase (AC) isoforms and increased expression of multiple cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Furthermore, we found that forskolin-promoted increases in cAMP or N6-phenyladenosine-cAMP, a protein kinase A–selective analog, reverse the myofibroblast phenotype, as assessed by the expression of collagen Iα1, α–smooth muscle actin, plasminogen activator inhibitor–1, and cellular contractile abilities, all hallmarks of a fibrogenic state. These results indicate that: 1) altered expression of AC and PDE isoforms yield a decrease in cAMP concentrations of cardiac myofibroblasts (relative to CFs) that likely contributes to their profibrotic state, and 2) approaches to increase cAMP concentrations not only prevent fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transformation but also can reverse the profibrotic myofibroblastic phenotype. We conclude that therapeutic strategies designed to enhance cellular cAMP concentrations in CFs may provide a means to reverse excessive scar formation following injury and to treat cardiac fibrosis.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2014

Role for high-glucose-induced protein O-GlcNAcylation in stimulating cardiac fibroblast collagen synthesis

Hugo Aguilar; Eduardo Fricovsky; Sang Ihm; Magdalena Schimke; Lisandro Maya-Ramos; Nakon Aroonsakool; Guillermo Ceballos; Wolfgang H. Dillmann; Francisco Villarreal; Israel Ramirez-Sanchez

Excess enzyme-mediated protein O-GlcNAcylation is known to occur with diabetes mellitus. A characteristic of diabetic cardiomyopathy is the development of myocardial fibrosis. The role that enhanced protein O-GlcNAcylation plays in modulating the phenotype of cardiac fibroblasts (CF) is unknown. To address this issue, rat CF were cultured in normal glucose (NG; 5 mM glucose) or high-glucose (HG; 25 mM) media for 48 h. Results demonstrate that CF cultured in HG have higher levels (~50%) of overall protein O-GlcNAcylation vs. NG cells. Key regulators of collagen synthesis such as transforming-growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), SMADs 2/3, and SMAD 7 protein levels, including those of arginase I and II, were altered, leading to increases in collagen levels. The nuclear transcription factor Sp1 and arginase II evidence excess O-GlcNAcylation in HG cells. Expression in CF of an adenovirus coding for the enzyme N-acetylglucosaminidase, which removes O-GlcNAc moieties from proteins, decreased Sp1 and arginase II O-GlcNAcylation and restored HG-induced perturbations in CF back to NG levels. These findings may have important pathophysiological implications for the development of diabetes-induced cardiac fibrosis.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2015

G Protein-Coupled Receptor (GPCR) Expression in Native Cells: "Novel" endoGPCRs as Physiologic Regulators and Therapeutic Targets.

Paul A. Insel; Andrea Wilderman; Alexander C. Zambon; Aaron Snead; Fiona Murray; Nakon Aroonsakool; Daniel McDonald; Shu Zhou; Thalia McCann; Lingzhi Zhang; Krishna Sriram; Amy M. Chinn; Alexander Vladimirovich Michkov; Rebecca M. Lynch; Aaron C. Overland; Ross Corriden

G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest family of signaling receptors in the human genome, are also the largest class of targets of approved drugs. Are the optimal GPCRs (in terms of efficacy and safety) currently targeted therapeutically? Especially given the large number (∼120) of orphan GPCRs (which lack known physiologic agonists), it is likely that previously unrecognized GPCRs, especially orphan receptors, regulate cell function and can be therapeutic targets. Knowledge is limited regarding the diversity and identity of GPCRs that are activated by endogenous ligands and that native cells express. Here, we review approaches to define GPCR expression in tissues and cells and results from studies using these approaches. We identify problems with the available data and suggest future ways to identify and validate the physiologic and therapeutic roles of previously unrecognized GPCRs. We propose that a particularly useful approach to identify functionally important GPCRs with therapeutic potential will be to focus on receptors that show selective increases in expression in diseased cells from patients and experimental animals.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Allosteric Inhibition of Epac COMPUTATIONAL MODELING AND EXPERIMENTAL VALIDATION TO IDENTIFY ALLOSTERIC SITES AND INHIBITORS

Loren M. Brown; Kathleen E. Rogers; Nakon Aroonsakool; J. Andrew McCammon; Paul A. Insel

Background: Epac is a key mediator of cAMP signaling. Results: We identified the hinge region of the cyclic nucleotide binding domain of Epac1 as a druggable region, in particular, for allosteric inhibitors. Conclusion: A thiobarbituric acid derivative allosterically inhibits Epac activation. Significance: Previously unappreciated regions of Epac can be targeted for allosteric regulation of its activity. Epac, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the low molecular weight G protein Rap, is an effector of cAMP signaling and has been implicated to have roles in numerous diseases, including diabetes mellitus, heart failure, and cancer. We used a computational molecular modeling approach to predict potential binding sites for allosteric modulators of Epac and to identify molecules that might bind to these regions. This approach revealed that the conserved hinge region of the cyclic nucleotide-binding domain of Epac1 is a potentially druggable region of the protein. Using a bioluminescence resonance energy transfer-based assay (CAMYEL, cAMP sensor using YFP-Epac-Rluc), we assessed the predicted compounds for their ability to bind Epac and modulate its activity. We identified a thiobarbituric acid derivative, 5376753, that allosterically inhibits Epac activity and used Swiss 3T3 and HEK293 cells to test the ability of this compound to modulate the activity of Epac and PKA, as determined by Rap1 activity and vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein phosphorylation, respectively. Compound 5376753 selectively inhibited Epac in biochemical and cell migration studies. These results document the utility of a computational approach to identify a domain for allosteric regulation of Epac and a novel compound that prevents the activation of Epac1 by cAMP.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Mechanisms of the negative inotropic effects of sphingosine-1-phosphate on adult mouse ventricular myocytes

Lee K. Landeen; Dorothy A. Dederko; Colleen S. Kondo; Betty S. Hu; Nakon Aroonsakool; Jason H. Haga; Wayne R. Giles


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2007

An analysis of the effects of stretch on IGF-I secretion from rat ventricular fibroblasts

Betty S. Hu; Lee K. Landeen; Nakon Aroonsakool; Wayne R. Giles

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Paul A. Insel

University of California

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Fiona Murray

University of California

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David Lu

University of California

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Utako Yokoyama

Yokohama City University

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Hemal H. Patel

University of California

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Wayne R. Giles

University of California

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Aaron Snead

University of California

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Wayne R. Giles

University of California

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