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Dive into the research topics where Pamuditha N. Silva is active.

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Featured researches published by Pamuditha N. Silva.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor Like-1 (FGFRL1) Interacts with SHP-1 Phosphatase at Insulin Secretory Granules and Induces Beta-cell ERK1/2 Protein Activation

Pamuditha N. Silva; Svetlana M. Altamentova; Dawn M. Kilkenny; Jonathan V. Rocheleau

Background: FGFRL1 has a unique intracellular domain predicted to inhibit intracellular signaling. Results: FGFRL1 localizes to pancreatic beta-cell insulin granules and enhances intracellular signaling, insulin content, and matrix adhesion. Signaling was reduced by mutation of the intracellular domain. Conclusion: Contrary to prediction, FGFRL1 enhances biological responses in these cells. Significance: This study reveals a novel mechanism of intracellular signaling regulation. FGFRL1 is a newly identified member of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) family expressed in adult pancreas. Unlike canonical FGFRs that initiate signaling via tyrosine kinase domains, the short intracellular sequence of FGFRL1 consists of a putative Src homology domain-2 (SH2)-binding motif adjacent to a histidine-rich C terminus. As a consequence of nonexistent kinase domains, FGFRL1 has been postulated to act as a decoy receptor to inhibit canonical FGFR ligand-induced signaling. In pancreatic islet beta-cells, canonical FGFR1 signaling affects metabolism and insulin processing. This study determined beta-cell expression of FGFRL1 as well as consequent effects on FGFR1 signaling and biological responses. We confirmed FGFRL1 expression at the plasma membrane and within distinct intracellular granules of both primary beta-cells and βTC3 cells. Fluorescent protein-tagged FGFRL1 (RL1) induced a significant ligand-independent increase in MAPK signaling. Removal of the histidine-rich domain (RL1-ΔHis) or entire intracellular sequence (RL1-ΔC) resulted in greater retention at the plasma membrane and significantly reduced ligand-independent ERK1/2 responses. The SHP-1 phosphatase was identified as an RL1-binding substrate. Point mutation of the SH2-binding motif reduced the ability of FGFRL1 to bind SHP-1 and activate ERK1/2 but did not affect receptor localization to insulin secretory granules. Finally, overexpression of RL1 increased cellular insulin content and matrix adhesion. Overall, these data suggest that FGFRL1 does not function as a decoy receptor in beta-cells, but rather it enhances ERK1/2 signaling through association of SHP-1 with the receptors intracellular SH2-binding motif.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Clarifying intact 3D tissues on a microfluidic chip for high-throughput structural analysis.

Yih Yang Chen; Pamuditha N. Silva; Abdullah Muhammad Syed; Shrey Sindhwani; Jonathan V. Rocheleau; Warren C. W. Chan

Significance Structural analysis of microscale three-dimensional tissues (3D microtissues) in high-throughput is becoming increasingly important in drug discovery, regenerative medicine, and other biomedical areas because they recapitulate many in vivo biological features not present in 2D models. This can be done by using microfluidic technology to control and apply external forces to on-chip 3D microtissues, and imaging these organ-on-chip systems with confocal microscopy. However, the high cellular density of 3D microtissues scatters light and fundamentally limits the ability to characterize the entire tissue construct. We developed an on-chip strategy to rapidly clarify, image, and analyze whole intact microtissues without compromising internal structures. Our technique removes the imaging depth limit, allowing accurate analysis and characterization of entire tissues in microfluidic chips. On-chip imaging of intact three-dimensional tissues within microfluidic devices is fundamentally hindered by intratissue optical scattering, which impedes their use as tissue models for high-throughput screening assays. Here, we engineered a microfluidic system that preserves and converts tissues into optically transparent structures in less than 1 d, which is 20× faster than current passive clearing approaches. Accelerated clearing was achieved because the microfluidic system enhanced the exchange of interstitial fluids by 567-fold, which increased the rate of removal of optically scattering lipid molecules from the cross-linked tissue. Our enhanced clearing process allowed us to fluorescently image and map the segregation and compartmentalization of different cells during the formation of tumor spheroids, and to track the degradation of vasculature over time within extracted murine pancreatic islets in static culture, which may have implications on the efficacy of beta-cell transplantation treatments for type 1 diabetes. We further developed an image analysis algorithm that automates the analysis of the vasculature connectivity, volume, and cellular spatial distribution of the intact tissue. Our technique allows whole tissue analysis in microfluidic systems, and has implications in the development of organ-on-a-chip systems, high-throughput drug screening devices, and in regenerative medicine.


Cell Reports | 2017

Dynamin-Related Protein 1-Dependent Mitochondrial Fission Changes in the Dorsal Vagal Complex Regulate Insulin Action

Beatrice M. Filippi; Mona A. Abraham; Pamuditha N. Silva; Mozhgan Rasti; Mary P. LaPierre; Paige V. Bauer; Jonathan V. Rocheleau; Tony K.T. Lam

Mitochondria undergo dynamic changes to maintain function in eukaryotic cells. Insulin action in parallel regulates glucose homeostasis, but whether specific changes in mitochondrial dynamics alter insulin action and glucose homeostasis remains elusive. Here, we report that high-fat feeding in rodents incurred adaptive dynamic changes in mitochondria through an increase in mitochondrial fission in parallel to an activation of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) in the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) of the brain. Direct inhibition of Drp1 negated high-fat-feeding-induced mitochondrial fission, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and insulin resistance in the DVC and subsequently restored hepatic glucose production regulation. Conversely, molecular activation of DVC Drp1 in healthy rodents was sufficient to induce DVC mitochondrial fission, ER stress, and insulin resistance. Together, these data illustrate that Drp1-dependent mitochondrial fission changes in the DVC regulate insulin action and suggest that targeting the Drp1-mitochondrial-dependent pathway in the brain may have therapeutic potential in insulin resistance.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Isolation of Phenotypically Distinct Cancer Cells Using Nanoparticle-Mediated Sorting

Brenda J. Green; Leyla Kermanshah; Mahmoud Labib; Sharif Ahmed; Pamuditha N. Silva; Laili Mahmoudian; I-Hsin Chang; Reza M. Mohamadi; Jonathan V. Rocheleau; Shana O. Kelley

Isolating subpopulations of heterogeneous cancer cells is an important capability for the meaningful characterization of circulating tumor cells at different stages of tumor progression and during the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Here, we present a microfluidic device that can separate phenotypically distinct subpopulations of cancer cells. Magnetic nanoparticles coated with antibodies against the epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) are used to separate breast cancer cells in the microfluidic platform. Cells are sorted into different zones on the basis of the levels of EpCAM expression, which enables the detection of cells that are losing epithelial character and becoming more mesenchymal. The phenotypic properties of the isolated cells with low and high EpCAM are then assessed using matrix-coated surfaces for collagen uptake analysis, and an NAD(P)H assay that assesses metabolic activity. We show that low-EpCAM expressing cells have higher collagen uptake and higher folate-induced NAD(P)H responses compared to those of high-EpCAM expressing cells. In addition, we tested SKBR3 cancer cells undergoing chemically induced hypoxia. The induced cells have reduced expression of EpCAM, and we find that these cells have higher collagen uptake and NAD(P)H metabolism relative to noninduced cells. This work demonstrates that nanoparticle-mediated binning facilitates the isolation of functionally distinct cell subpopulations and allows surface marker expression to be associated with invasiveness, including collagen uptake and metabolic activity.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Jagn1 Is Induced in Response to ER Stress and Regulates Proinsulin Biosynthesis

Courtney Nosak; Pamuditha N. Silva; Pietro Sollazzo; Kyung-Mee Moon; Tanya Odisho; Leonard J. Foster; Jonathan V. Rocheleau; Allen Volchuk

The Jagn1 protein was indentified in a SILAC proteomic screen of proteins that are increased in insulinoma cells expressing a folding-deficient proinsulin. Jagn1 mRNA was detected in primary rodent islets and in insulinoma cell lines and the levels were increased in response to ER stress. The function of Jagn1 was assessed in insulinoma cells by both knock-down and overexpression approaches. Knock-down of Jagn1 caused an increase in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion resulting from an increase in proinsulin biosynthesis. In contrast, overexpression of Jagn1 in insulinoma cells resulted in reduced cellular proinsulin and insulin levels. Our results identify a novel role for Jagn1 in regulating proinsulin biosynthesis in pancreatic β-cells. Under ER stress conditions Jagn1 is induced which might contribute to reducing proinsulin biosynthesis, in part by helping to relieve the protein folding load in the ER in an effort to restore ER homeostasis.


Lab on a Chip | 2013

A microfluidic device designed to induce media flow throughout pancreatic islets while limiting shear-induced damage.

Pamuditha N. Silva; Brenda J. Green; Svetlana M. Altamentova; Jonathan V. Rocheleau


Lab on a Chip | 2016

Highly efficient adenoviral transduction of pancreatic islets using a microfluidic device

Pamuditha N. Silva; Zaid Atto; Romario Regeenes; Uilki Tufa; Yih Yang Chen; Warren C. W. Chan; Allen Volchuk; Dawn M. Kilkenny; Jonathan V. Rocheleau


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

Fibroblast growth factor receptor 5 (FGFR5) is a co-receptor for FGFR1 that is up-regulated in beta-cells by cytokine-induced inflammation

Romario Regeenes; Pamuditha N. Silva; Huntley H. Chang; Edith J. Arany; Andrey I. Shukalyuk; Julie Audet; Dawn M. Kilkenny; Jonathan V. Rocheleau


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Quantitative Fluorescence Microscopy Reveals Higher Order Oligomerization of FGFR5

Romario Regeenes; Pamuditha N. Silva; Dawn M. Kilkenny; Jonathan V. Rocheleau


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Heat-on-a-Chip: A Microfluidic Device for Highly Efficient Adenoviral Transduction of EX Vivo Pancreatic Islets

Pamuditha N. Silva; Romario Regeenes; Zaid Atto; Uilki Tufa; Yih Yang Chen; Allen Volchuk; Dawn M. Kilkenny; Jonathan V. Rocheleau

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Zaid Atto

University of Toronto

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