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Dive into the research topics where Nidhi Rohatgi is active.

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Featured researches published by Nidhi Rohatgi.


Diabetes | 2009

Glycogen Synthase Kinase-3 and Mammalian Target of Rapamycin Pathways Contribute to DNA Synthesis, Cell Cycle Progression, and Proliferation in Human Islets

Hui Liu; Maria S. Remedi; Kirk L. Pappan; Guim Kwon; Nidhi Rohatgi; Connie A. Marshall; Michael L. McDaniel

OBJECTIVE—Our previous studies demonstrated that nutrient regulation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling promotes regenerative processes in rodent islets but rarely in human islets. Our objective was to extend these findings by using therapeutic agents to determine whether the regulation of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3)/β-catenin and mTOR signaling represent key components necessary for effecting a positive impact on human β-cell mass relevant to type 1 and 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Primary adult human and rat islets were treated with the GSK-3 inhibitors, LiCl and the highly potent 1-azakenpaullone (1-Akp), and with nutrients. DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, and proliferation of β-cells were assessed. Measurement of insulin secretion and content and Western blot analysis of GSK-3 and mTOR signaling components were performed. RESULTS—Human islets treated for 4 days with LiCl or 1-Akp exhibited significant increases in DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, and proliferation of β-cells that displayed varying degrees of sensitivity to rapamycin. Intermediate glucose (8 mmol/l) produced a striking degree of synergism in combination with GSK-3 inhibition to enhance bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation and Ki-67 expression in human β-cells. Nuclear translocation of β-catenin responsible for cell proliferation was found to be particularly sensitive to rapamycin. CONCLUSIONS—A combination of GSK-3 inhibition and nutrient activation of mTOR contributes to enhanced DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, and proliferation of human β-cells. Identification of therapeutic agents that appropriately regulate GSK-3 and mTOR signaling may provide a feasible and available approach to enhance human islet growth and proliferation.


Islets | 2012

β-cell metabolic alterations under chronic nutrient overload in rat and human islets.

Stephanie Vernier; Angela Chiu; Joseph Schober; Theresa Weber; Phuong Nguyen; Mark Luer; Timothy McPherson; Paul E. Wanda; Connie A. Marshall; Nidhi Rohatgi; Michael L. McDaniel; Andrew S. Greenberg; Guim Kwon

The aim of this study was to assess multifactorial β-cell responses to metabolic perturbations in primary rat and human islets. Treatment of dispersed rat islet cells with elevated glucose and free fatty acids (FFAs, oleate:palmitate = 1:1 v/v) resulted in increases in the size and the number of lipid droplets in β-cells in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Glucose and FFAs synergistically stimulated the nutrient sensor mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1). A potent mTORC1 inhibitor, rapamycin (25 nM), significantly reduced triglyceride accumulation in rat islets. Importantly, lipid droplets accumulated only in β-cells but not in α-cells in an mTORC1-dependent manner. Nutrient activation of mTORC1 upregulated the expression of adipose differentiation related protein (ADRP), known to stabilize lipid droplets. Rat islet size and new DNA synthesis also increased under nutrient overload. Insulin secretion into the culture medium increased steadily over a 4-day period without any significant difference between glucose (10 mM) alone and the combination of glucose (10 mM) and FFAs (240 μM). Insulin content and insulin biosynthesis, however, were significantly reduced under the combination of nutrients compared with glucose alone. Elevated nutrients also stimulated lipid droplet formation in human islets in an mTORC1-dependent manner. Unlike rat islets, however, human islets did not increase in size under nutrient overload despite a normal response to nutrients in releasing insulin. The different responses of islet cell growth under nutrient overload appear to impact insulin biosynthesis and storage differently in rat and human islets.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Novel Strategy to Increase the Proliferative Potential of Adult Human β-Cells While Maintaining Their Differentiated Phenotype

Haytham Aly; Nidhi Rohatgi; Connie A. Marshall; Tiffani C. Grossenheider; Hiroyuki Miyoshi; Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck; Scot J. Matkovich; Michael L. McDaniel

Our previous studies demonstrated that Wnt/GSK-3/β-catenin and mTOR signaling are necessary to stimulate proliferative processes in adult human β-cells. Direct inhibition of GSK-3, that engages Wnt signaling downstream of the Wnt receptor, increases β-catenin nuclear translocation and β-cell proliferation but results in lower insulin content. Our current goal was to engage canonical and non-canonical Wnt signaling at the receptor level to significantly increase human β-cell proliferation while maintaining a β-cell phenotype in intact islets. We adopted a system that utilized conditioned medium from L cells that expressed Wnt3a, R-spondin-3 and Noggin (L-WRN conditioned medium). In addition we used a ROCK inhibitor (Y-27632) and SB-431542 (that results in RhoA inhibition) in these cultures. Treatment of intact human islets with L-WRN conditioned medium plus inhibitors significantly increased DNA synthesis ∼6 fold in a rapamycin-sensitive manner. Moreover, this treatment strikingly increased human β-cell proliferation ∼20 fold above glucose alone. Only the combination of L-WRN conditioned medium with RhoA/ROCK inhibitors resulted in substantial proliferation. Transcriptome-wide gene expression profiling demonstrated that L-WRN medium provoked robust changes in several signaling families, including enhanced β-catenin-mediated and β-cell-specific gene expression. This treatment also increased expression of Nr4a2 and Irs2 and resulted in phosphorylation of Akt. Importantly, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and content were not downregulated by L-WRN medium treatment. Our data demonstrate that engaging Wnt signaling at the receptor level by this method leads to necessary crosstalk between multiple signaling pathways including activation of Akt, mTOR, Wnt/β-catenin, PKA/CREB, and inhibition of RhoA/ROCK that substantially increase human β-cell proliferation while maintaining the β-cell phenotype.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Novel Insulin Sensitizer Modulates Nutrient Sensing Pathways and Maintains β-Cell Phenotype in Human Islets

Nidhi Rohatgi; Haytham Aly; Connie A. Marshall; William G. McDonald; Rolf F. Kletzien; Jerry R. Colca; Michael L. McDaniel

Major bottlenecks in the expansion of human β-cell mass are limited proliferation, loss of β-cell phenotype, and increased apoptosis. In our previous studies, activation of Wnt and mTOR signaling significantly enhanced human β-cell proliferation. However, isolated human islets displayed insulin signaling pathway resistance, due in part to chronic activation of mTOR/S6K1 signaling that results in negative feedback of the insulin signaling pathway and a loss of Akt phosphorylation and insulin content. We evaluated the effects of a new generation insulin sensitizer, MSDC-0160, on restoring insulin/IGF-1 sensitivity and insulin content in human β-cells. This novel TZD has low affinity for binding and activation of PPARγ and has insulin-sensitizing effects in mouse models of diabetes and ability to lower glucose in Phase 2 clinical trials. MSDC-0160 treatment of human islets increased AMPK activity and reduced mTOR activity. This was associated with the restoration of IGF-1-induced phosphorylation of Akt, GSK-3, and increased protein expression of Pdx1. Furthermore, MSDC-0160 in combination with IGF-1 and 8 mM glucose increased β-cell specific gene expression of insulin, pdx1, nkx6.1, and nkx2.2, and maintained insulin content without altering glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Human islets were unable to simultaneously promote DNA synthesis and maintain the β-cell phenotype. Lithium-induced GSK-3 inhibition that promotes DNA synthesis blocked the ability of MSDC-0160 to maintain the β-cell phenotype. Conversely, MSDC-0160 prevented an increase in DNA synthesis by blocking β-catenin nuclear translocation. Due to the counteracting pathways involved in these processes, we employed a sequential ex vivo strategy to first induce human islet DNA synthesis, followed by MSDC-0160 to promote the β-cell phenotype and insulin content. This new generation PPARγ sparing insulin sensitizer may provide an initial tool for relieving inherent human islet insulin signaling pathway resistance that is necessary to preserve the β-cell phenotype during β-cell expansion for the treatment of diabetes.


Cell Reports | 2015

ASXL2 Regulates Glucose, Lipid, and Skeletal Homeostasis

Takashi Izawa; Nidhi Rohatgi; Tomohiro Fukunaga; Qun Tian Wang; Matthew J. Silva; Michael J. Gardner; Michael L. McDaniel; Nada A. Abumrad; Clay F. Semenkovich; Steven L. Teitelbaum; Wei Zou

ASXL2 is an ETP family protein that interacts with PPARγ. We find that ASXL2-/- mice are insulin resistant, lipodystrophic, and fail to respond to a high-fat diet. Consistent with genetic variation at the ASXL2 locus and human bone mineral density, ASXL2-/- mice are also severely osteopetrotic because of failed osteoclast differentiation attended by normal bone formation. ASXL2 regulates the osteoclast via two distinct signaling pathways. It induces osteoclast formation in a PPARγ/c-Fos-dependent manner and is required for RANK ligand- and thiazolidinedione-induced bone resorption independent of PGC-1β. ASXL2 also promotes osteoclast mitochondrial biogenesis in a process mediated by PGC-1β but independent of c-Fos. Thus, ASXL2 is a master regulator of skeletal, lipid, and glucose homeostasis.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2015

An insulin-sensitizing thiazolidinedione, which minimally activates PPARγ, does not cause bone loss.

Tomohiro Fukunaga; Wei Zou; Nidhi Rohatgi; Jerry R. Colca; Steven L. Teitelbaum

Rosiglitazone is an insulin‐sensitizing thiazolidinedione (TZD) that activates the transcription factor peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor gamma (PPARγ). Although rosiglitazone effectively treats type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM), it carries substantial complications, including increased fracture risk. This predisposition to fracture is consistent with the fact that PPARγ preferentially promotes formation of adipocytes at the cost of osteoblasts. Rosiglitazone‐activated PPARγ, however, also stimulates osteoclast formation. A new TZD analog with low affinity for binding and activation of PPARγ but whose insulin‐sensitizing properties mirror those of rosiglitazone has been recently developed. Because of its therapeutic implications, we investigated the effects of this new TZD analog (MSDC‐0602) on skeletal homeostasis, in vitro and in vivo. Confirming it activates the nuclear receptor in osteoclasts, rosiglitazone enhances expression of the PPARγ target gene, CD36. MSDC‐0602, in contrast, minimally activates PPARγ and does not alter CD36 expression in the bone‐resorptive cells. Consistent with this finding, rosiglitazone increases receptor activator of NF‐κB ligand (RANKL)‐induced osteoclast differentiation and number, whereas MSDC‐0602 fails to do so. To determine if this new TZD analog is bone sparing, in vivo, we fed adult male C57BL/6 mice MSDC‐0602 or rosiglitazone. Six months of a rosiglitazone diet results in a 35% decrease in bone mass with increased number of osteoclasts, whereas that of MSDC‐0602–fed mice is indistinguishable from control. Thus, PPARγ sparing eliminates the skeletal side effects of TZDs while maintaining their insulin‐sensitizing properties.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2015

Correlating RANK ligand/RANK binding kinetics with osteoclast formation and function.

Julia T. Warren; Wei Zou; Corinne E. Decker; Nidhi Rohatgi; Christopher A. Nelson; Daved H. Fremont; Steven L. Teitelbaum

The interaction between Receptor Activator of NF‐κB Ligand (RANKL) and its receptor RANK is essential for the differentiation and bone resorbing capacity of the osteoclast. Osteoprotegerin (OPG), a soluble homodimer, acts as a decoy receptor for RANKL and thus inhibits osteoclastogenesis. An imbalance in the RANKL/RANK/OPG axis, with decreased OPG and/or increased RANKL, is associated with diseases that favor bone loss, including osteoporosis. Recently, we established a yeast surface display system and screened libraries of randomly mutated RANKL proteins to identify mutations that abolish binding to OPG while preserving recognition of RANK. These efforts yielded several RANKL variants possessing substantially higher affinity for RANK compared to their wild‐type (WT) counterpart. Using recombinant RANKL mutant proteins, we find those with increased affinity for RANK produce more robust signaling in osteoclast lineage cells and have greater osteoclastogenic potential. Our results are the first to document gain of function RANKL mutations. They indicate that the physiological RANKL/RANK interaction is not optimized for maximal signaling and function, perhaps reflecting the need to maintain receptor specificity within the tumor necrosis factor superfamily (TNFSF). Instead, we find, a biphasic relationship exists between RANKL/RANK affinity and osteoclastogenic capacity. In our panel of RANKL variants, this relationship is driven entirely by manipulation of the kinetic off‐rate. Our structure‐based and yeast surface display‐derived insights into manipulating this critical signaling axis may aid in the design of novel anti‐resorptive therapies as well as provide a paradigm for design of other receptor‐specific TNF superfamily ligand variants. J. Cell. Biochem. 116: 2476–2483, 2015.


Autophagy | 2017

Intermittent Fasting Preserves Beta-Cell Mass in Obesity-induced Diabetes via the Autophagy-Lysosome Pathway

Haiyan Liu; Ali Javaheri; Rebecca J. Godar; John Murphy; Xiucui Ma; Nidhi Rohatgi; Jana Mahadevan; Krzysztof L. Hyrc; Paul Saftig; Connie A. Marshall; Michael L. McDaniel; Maria S. Remedi; Babak Razani; Fumihiko Urano; Abhinav Diwan

ABSTRACT Obesity-induced diabetes is characterized by hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and progressive beta cell failure. In islets of mice with obesity-induced diabetes, we observe increased beta cell death and impaired autophagic flux. We hypothesized that intermittent fasting, a clinically sustainable therapeutic strategy, stimulates autophagic flux to ameliorate obesity-induced diabetes. Our data show that despite continued high-fat intake, intermittent fasting restores autophagic flux in islets and improves glucose tolerance by enhancing glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, beta cell survival, and nuclear expression of NEUROG3, a marker of pancreatic regeneration. In contrast, intermittent fasting does not rescue beta-cell death or induce NEUROG3 expression in obese mice with lysosomal dysfunction secondary to deficiency of the lysosomal membrane protein, LAMP2 or haplo-insufficiency of BECN1/Beclin 1, a protein critical for autophagosome formation. Moreover, intermittent fasting is sufficient to provoke beta cell death in nonobese lamp2 null mice, attesting to a critical role for lysosome function in beta cell homeostasis under fasting conditions. Beta cells in intermittently-fasted LAMP2- or BECN1-deficient mice exhibit markers of autophagic failure with accumulation of damaged mitochondria and upregulation of oxidative stress. Thus, intermittent fasting preserves organelle quality via the autophagy-lysosome pathway to enhance beta cell survival and stimulates markers of regeneration in obesity-induced diabetes.


Nature Medicine | 2016

PPAR-γ regulates pharmacological but not physiological or pathological osteoclast formation

Wei Zou; Nidhi Rohatgi; Timothy Hung-Po Chen; Joel D. Schilling; Yousef Abu-Amer; Steven L. Teitelbaum

PPAR-γ regulates pharmacological but not physiological or pathological osteoclast formation


The Open Endocrinology Journal | 2010

Therapeutic Strategies to Increase Human β-Cell Growth and Proliferation by Regulating mTOR and GSK-3/β-Catenin Pathways

Nidhi Rohatgi; Maria S. Remedi; Guim Kwon; Kirk L. Pappan; Connie A. Marshall; Michael L. McDaniel

This perspective delineates approaches to develop therapeutic strategies to stimulate the proliferative potential of adult human β-cells in vitro. Previous findings demonstrated that nutrients, through regulation of mTOR signaling, promote regenerative processes including DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression and β-cell proliferation in rodent islets but rarely in human islets. Recently, we discovered that regulation of the Wnt/GSK-3/β-catenin pathway by directly inhibiting GSK-3 with pharmacologic agents, in combination with nutrient activation of mTOR, was required to increase growth and proliferation in human islets. Studies also revealed that nuclear translocation of β-catenin in response to GSK-3 inhibition regulated these processes and was rapamycin sensitive, indicating a role for mTOR. Human islets displayed a high level of insulin resistance consistent with the inability of exogenous insulin to activate Akt and engage the Wnt pathway by GSK-3 inhibition. This insulin resistance in human islets is not present in rodent islets and may explain the differential requirement in human islets to inhibit GSK-3 to enhance these regenerative processes. Human islets exhibited normal insulin secretion but a loss of insulin content, which was independent of all treatment conditions. The loss of insulin content may be related to insulin resistance, the isolation process or culture conditions. In this perspective, we provide strategies to enhance the proliferative capacity of adult human β-cells and highlight important differences between human and rodent islets: the lack of a nutrient response, requirement for direct GSK-3 inhibition, insulin resistance and loss of insulin content that emphasize the physiological significance of conducting studies in human islets.

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Michael L. McDaniel

Washington University in St. Louis

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Connie A. Marshall

Washington University in St. Louis

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Steven L. Teitelbaum

Washington University in St. Louis

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Wei Zou

Washington University in St. Louis

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Haytham Aly

Washington University in St. Louis

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Guim Kwon

Washington University in St. Louis

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Maria S. Remedi

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joel D. Schilling

Washington University in St. Louis

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