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Dive into the research topics where Omozuanvbo Aisiku is active.

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Featured researches published by Omozuanvbo Aisiku.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Identification of a Novel Binding Partner of Phospholipase Cβ1: Translin-Associated Factor X

Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Loren W. Runnels; Suzanne Scarlata

Mammalian phospholipase Cβ1 (PLCβ1) is activated by the ubiquitous Gαq family of G proteins on the surface of the inner leaflet of plasma membrane where it catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5 bisphosphate. In general, PLCβ1 is mainly localized on the cytosolic plasma membrane surface, although a substantial fraction is also found in the cytosol and, under some conditions, in the nucleus. The factors that localize PLCβ1in these other compartments are unknown. Here, we identified a novel binding partner, translin-associated factor X (TRAX). TRAX is a cytosolic protein that can transit into the nucleus. In purified form, PLCβ1 binds strongly to TRAX with an affinity that is only ten-fold weaker than its affinity for its functional partner, Gαq. In solution, TRAX has little effect on the membrane association or the catalytic activity of PLCβ1. However, TRAX directly competes with Gαq for PLCβ1 binding, and excess TRAX reverses Gαq activation of PLCβ1. In C6 glia cells, endogenous PLCβ1 and TRAX colocalize in the cytosol and the nucleus, but not on the plasma membrane where TRAX is absent. In Neuro2A cells expressing enhanced yellow and cyano fluorescent proteins (i.e., eYFP- PLCβ1 and eCFP-TRAX), Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) is observed mostly in the cytosol and a small amount is seen in the nucleus. FRET does not occur at the plasma membrane where TRAX is not found. Our studies show that TRAX, localized in the cytosol and nucleus, competes with plasma-membrane bound Gαq for PLCβ1 binding thus stabilizing PLCβ1 in other cellular compartments.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2018

Primary Human Lung Alveolus‐on‐a‐chip Model of Intravascular Thrombosis for Assessment of Therapeutics

Abhishek Jain; Riccardo Barrile; A. D. van der Meer; Akiko Mammoto; K. De Ceunynck; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Monicah A. Otieno; Calvert Louden; Geraldine A. Hamilton; Robert Flaumenhaft; Donald E. Ingber

Pulmonary thrombosis is a significant cause of patient mortality; however, there are no effective in vitro models of thrombi formation in human lung microvessels that could also assess therapeutics and toxicology of antithrombotic drugs. Here, we show that a microfluidic lung alveolus‐on‐a‐chip lined by human primary alveolar epithelium interfaced with endothelium and cultured under flowing whole blood can be used to perform quantitative analysis of organ‐level contributions to inflammation‐induced thrombosis. This microfluidic chip recapitulates in vivo responses, including platelet‐endothelial dynamics and revealed that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) endotoxin indirectly stimulates intravascular thrombosis by activating the alveolar epithelium, rather than acting directly on endothelium. This model is also used to analyze inhibition of endothelial activation and thrombosis due to a protease activated receptor‐1 (PAR‐1) antagonist, demonstrating its ability to dissect complex responses and identify antithrombotic therapeutics. Thus, this methodology offers a new approach to study human pathophysiology of pulmonary thrombosis and advance drug development.


Blood | 2015

Parmodulins inhibit thrombus formation without inducing endothelial injury caused by vorapaxar

Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Christian G. Peters; Karen De Ceunynck; Chandra C. Ghosh; James Dilks; Susanna F. Fustolo-Gunnink; Mingdong Huang; Chris Dockendorff; Samir M. Parikh; Robert Flaumenhaft

Protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) couples the coagulation cascade to platelet activation during myocardial infarction and to endothelial inflammation during sepsis. This receptor demonstrates marked signaling bias. Its activation by thrombin stimulates prothrombotic and proinflammatory signaling, whereas its activation by activated protein C (APC) stimulates cytoprotective and antiinflammatory signaling. A challenge in developing PAR1-targeted therapies is to inhibit detrimental signaling while sparing beneficial pathways. We now characterize a novel class of structurally unrelated small-molecule PAR1 antagonists, termed parmodulins, and compare the activity of these compounds to previously characterized compounds that act at the PAR1 ligand-binding site. We find that parmodulins target the cytoplasmic face of PAR1 without modifying the ligand-binding site, blocking signaling through Gαq but not Gα13 in vitro and thrombus formation in vivo. In endothelium, parmodulins inhibit prothrombotic and proinflammatory signaling without blocking APC-mediated pathways or inducing endothelial injury. In contrast, orthosteric PAR1 antagonists such as vorapaxar inhibit all signaling downstream of PAR1. Furthermore, exposure of endothelial cells to nanomolar concentrations of vorapaxar induces endothelial cell barrier dysfunction and apoptosis. These studies demonstrate how functionally selective antagonism can be achieved by targeting the cytoplasmic face of a G-protein-coupled receptor to selectively block pathologic signaling while preserving cytoprotective pathways.


Blood | 2015

VAMP-7 links granule exocytosis to actin reorganization during platelet activation

Secil Koseoglu; Christian G. Peters; Jennifer L. Fitch-Tewfik; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Thierry Galli; Robert Flaumenhaft

Platelet activation results in profound morphologic changes accompanied by release of granule contents. Recent evidence indicates that fusion of granules with the plasma membrane during activation provides auxiliary membrane to cover growing actin structures. Yet little is known about how membrane fusion is coupled with actin reorganization. Vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)-7 is found on platelet vesicles and possesses an N-terminal longin domain capable of linking exocytosis to cytoskeletal remodeling. We have evaluated platelets from VAMP-7(-/-) mice to determine whether this VAMP isoform contributes to granule release and platelet spreading. VAMP-7(-/-) platelets demonstrated a partial defect in dense granule exocytosis and impaired aggregation. α Granule exocytosis from VAMP-7(-/-) platelets was diminished both in vitro and in vivo during thrombus formation. Consistent with a role of VAMP-7 in cytoskeletal remodeling, spreading on matrices was decreased in VAMP-7(-/-) platelets compared to wild-type controls. Immunoprecipitation of VAMP-7 revealed an association with VPS9-domain ankyrin repeat protein (VARP), an adaptor protein that interacts with both membrane-bound and cytoskeleton proteins and with Arp2/3. VAMP-7, VARP, and Arp2/3 localized to the platelet periphery during spreading. These studies demonstrate that VAMP-7 participates in both platelet granule secretion and spreading and suggest a mechanism whereby VAMP-7 links granule exocytosis with actin reorganization.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2011

Protein kinase C phosphorylation of PLCβ1 regulates its cellular localization

Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Louisa Dowal; Suzanne Scarlata

Activation of phospholipase Cβ (PLCβ) by G proteins leads to a chain of events that result in an increase in intracellular calcium and activation of protein kinase C (PKC). It has been found that PKC phosphorylates PLCβ1 on S887 in vitro without affecting its enzymatic activity or its ability to be activated by Gα(q) proteins. To understand whether S887 phosphorylation affects the enzymes activity in cells, we constructed two mutants that mimic the wild type and PKC-phosphorylated enzymes (S887A and S887D). We find that these constructs bind similarly to Gα(q) in vitro. When expressed in HEK293 cells, both mutants associate identically to Gα(q) in both the basal and stimulated states. Both mutants diffuse with similar rates and also interact identically with another known binding partner, translin-associated factor X (TRAX), which associates with PLCβ1 in the cytosol and nucleus. However, the two mutants localize differently in the cell. We find that S887A has a much higher nuclear localization than its S887D counterpart both in HEK293 cells and PC12 cells. Our studies suggest that PKC phosphorylation regulates the level of PLCβ1 cytosolic and nuclear activity by regulating its cellular compartmentalization.


Shock | 2016

Complement Activation in Trauma Patients Alters Platelet Function.

Atefi G; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Nathan I. Shapiro; Carl J. Hauser; Dalle Lucca J; Robert Flaumenhaft; George C. Tsokos

ABSTRACT Trauma remains the main cause of death for both civilians and those in uniform. Trauma-associated coagulopathy is a complex process involving inflammation, coagulation, and platelet dysfunction. It is unknown whether activation of complement, which occurs invariably in trauma patients, is involved in the expression of trauma-associated coagulopathy. We designed a prospective study in which we enrolled 40 trauma patients and 30 healthy donors upon arrival to the emergency department of BIDMC. Platelets from healthy individuals were incubated with sera from trauma patients and their responsiveness to a thrombin receptor-activating peptide was measured using aggregometry. Complement deposition on platelets from trauma patients was measured by flow cytometry. Normal platelets displayed hypoactivity after incubation with trauma sera even though exposure to trauma sera resulted in increased agonist-induced calcium flux. Depletion of complement from sera further blocked activation of hypoactive platelets. Conversely, complement activation increased aggregation of platelets. Platelets from trauma patients were found to have significantly higher amounts of C3a and C4d on their surface compared with platelets from controls. Depletion of complement (C4d, C3a) reversed the ability of trauma sera to augment agonist-induced calcium flux in donor platelets. Our data indicate that complement enhances platelet aggregation. Despite its complement content, trauma sera render platelets hypoactive and complement depletion further blocks activation of hypoactive platelets. The defect in platelet activation induced by trauma sera is distal to receptor activation since agonist-induced Ca2+ flux is elevated in the presence of trauma sera owing to complement deposition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

PAR1 Agonists Stimulate APC-Like Endothelial Cytoprotection and Confer Resistance to Thromboinflammatory Injury

Karen De Ceunynck; Christian G. Peters; Abhishek Jain; Sarah J. Higgins; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Jennifer L. Fitch-Tewfik; Sharjeel A. Chaudhry; Chris Dockendorff; Samir M. Parikh; Donald E. Ingber; Robert Flaumenhaft

Significance Protease-activated receptors (PARs) are G-protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) that are activated by proteolysis and couple to multiple distinct G-proteins. Cleavage of PAR1 in endothelium stimulates either proinflammatory or antiinflammatory signaling depending on the activating protease and is important in thrombosis and inflammation. Yet the biased signaling of PAR1 has made its pharmacological modulation challenging. We show that a family of compounds, parmodulins, acts at the cytosolic face of PAR1 to differentially control G-protein coupling and stimulate cytoprotective signaling while blocking deleterious signaling. Parmodulins are antiinflammatory and antithrombotic in vivo. These compounds demonstrate the utility of targeting the cytosolic face of GPCRs to selectively modulate downstream signaling and could provide an alternative for treatment of thromboinflammatory disorders. Stimulation of protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR1) on endothelium by activated protein C (APC) is protective in several animal models of disease, and APC has been used clinically in severe sepsis and wound healing. Clinical use of APC, however, is limited by its immunogenicity and its anticoagulant activity. We show that a class of small molecules termed “parmodulins” that act at the cytosolic face of PAR1 stimulates APC-like cytoprotective signaling in endothelium. Parmodulins block thrombin generation in response to inflammatory mediators and inhibit platelet accumulation on endothelium cultured under flow. Evaluation of the antithrombotic mechanism showed that parmodulins induce cytoprotective signaling through Gβγ, activating a PI3K/Akt pathway and eliciting a genetic program that includes suppression of NF-κB–mediated transcriptional activation and up-regulation of select cytoprotective transcripts. STC1 is among the up-regulated transcripts, and knockdown of stanniocalin-1 blocks the protective effects of both parmodulins and APC. Induction of this signaling pathway in vivo protects against thromboinflammatory injury in blood vessels. Small-molecule activation of endothelial cytoprotection through PAR1 represents an approach for treatment of thromboinflammatory disease and provides proof-of-principle for the strategy of targeting the cytoplasmic surface of GPCRs to achieve pathway selective signaling.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Discovery of 1,3-Diaminobenzenes as Selective Inhibitors of Platelet Activation at the PAR1 Receptor

Chris Dockendorff; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Lynn VerPlank; James Dilks; Daniel A. Smith; Susanna F. Gunnink; Louisa Dowal; Joseph Negri; Michelle Palmer; Lawrence MacPherson; Stuart L. Schreiber; Robert Flaumenhaft


Blood | 2016

A Chemical APC Mimetic Protects Endothelium from Thromboinflammatory Injury

Karen De Ceunynck; Christian G. Peters; Sharjeel A. Chaudhry; Abhishek Jain; Sarah J. Higgins; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Jennifer L. Fitch-Tewfik; Chris Dockendorff; Samir M. Parikh; Donald E. Ingber; Robert Flaumenhaft


Blood | 2012

Acyl-Protein Thioesterase 1 Functions in Palmitoylation/Depalmitoylation Cycles of G Proteins and Regulates Platelet Activation

Louisa Dowal; James Dilks; Nathalie A. Fadel; Omozuanvbo Aisiku; Glenn Merrill-Skoloff; Robert Flaumenhaft

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Robert Flaumenhaft

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Christian G. Peters

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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James Dilks

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Jennifer L. Fitch-Tewfik

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Karen De Ceunynck

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Samir M. Parikh

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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