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Dive into the research topics where Pooja B. Sandesara is active.

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Featured researches published by Pooja B. Sandesara.


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Inhibition of FoxO transcriptional activity prevents muscle fiber atrophy during cachexia and induces hypertrophy

S. A. Reed; Pooja B. Sandesara; Sarah M. Senf; Andrew R. Judge

Cachexia is characterized by inexorable muscle wasting that significantly affects patient prognosis and increases mortality. Therefore, understanding the molecular basis of this muscle wasting is of significant importance. Recent work showed that components of the forkhead box O (FoxO) pathway are increased in skeletal muscle during cachexia. In the current study, we tested the physiological significance of FoxO activation in the progression of muscle atrophy associated with cachexia. FoxO‐DNA binding dependent transcription was blocked in the muscles of mice through injection of a dominant negative (DN) FoxO expression plasmid prior to inoculation with Lewis lung carcinoma cells or the induction of sepsis. Expression of DN FoxO inhibited the increased mRNA levels of atrogin‐1, MuRF1, cathepsin L, and/or Bnip3 and inhibited muscle fiber atrophy during cancer cachexia and sepsis. Interestingly, during control conditions, expression of DN FoxO decreased myostatin expression, increased MyoD expression and satellite cell proliferation, and induced fiber hypertrophy, which required de novo protein synthesis. Collectively, these data show that FoxO‐DNA binding‐dependent transcription is necessary for normal muscle fiber atrophy during cancer cachexia and sepsis, and further suggest that basal levels of FoxO play an important role during normal conditions to depress satellite cell activation and limit muscle growth.—Reed, S. A., Sandesara, P. B., Senf, S. F., Judge, A. R. Inhibition of FoxO transcriptional activity prevents muscle fiber atrophy during cachexia and induces hypertrophy. FASEB J. 26, 987‐1000 (2012). www.fasebj.org


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2011

p300 Acetyltransferase activity differentially regulates the localization and activity of the FOXO homologues in skeletal muscle

Sarah M. Senf; Pooja B. Sandesara; S. A. Reed; Andrew R. Judge

The Forkhead Box O (FOXO) transcription factors regulate diverse cellular processes, and in skeletal muscle are both necessary and sufficient for muscle atrophy. Although the regulation of FOXO by Akt is well evidenced in skeletal muscle, the current study demonstrates that FOXO is also regulated in muscle via the histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activities of p300/CREB-binding protein (CBP). Transfection of rat soleus muscle with a dominant-negative p300, which lacks HAT activity and inhibits endogenous p300 HAT activity, increased FOXO reporter activity and induced transcription from the promoter of a bona fide FOXO target gene, atrogin-1. Conversely, increased HAT activity via transfection of either wild-type (WT) p300 or WT CBP repressed FOXO activation in vivo in response to muscle disuse, and in C2C12 cells in response to dexamethasone and acute starvation. Importantly, manipulation of HAT activity differentially regulated the expression of various FOXO target genes. Cotransfection of FOXO1, FOXO3a, or FOXO4 with the p300 constructs further identified p300 HAT activity to also differentially regulate the activity of the FOXO homologues. Markedly, decreased HAT activity strongly increased FOXO3a transcriptional activity, while increased HAT activity repressed FOXO3a activity and prevented its nuclear localization in response to nutrient deprivation. In contrast, p300 increased FOXO1 nuclear localization. In summary, this study provides the first evidence to support the acetyltransferase activities of p300/CBP in regulating FOXO signaling in skeletal muscle and suggests that acetylation may be an important mechanism to differentially regulate the FOXO homologues and dictate which FOXO target genes are activated in response to varying atrophic stimuli.


Journal of Cell Science | 2014

HDAC1 activates FoxO and is both sufficient and required for skeletal muscle atrophy

Adam W. Beharry; Pooja B. Sandesara; Brandon M. Roberts; Leonardo F. Ferreira; Sarah M. Senf; Andrew R. Judge

ABSTRACT The Forkhead box O (FoxO) transcription factors are activated, and necessary for the muscle atrophy, in several pathophysiological conditions, including muscle disuse and cancer cachexia. However, the mechanisms that lead to FoxO activation are not well defined. Recent data from our laboratory and others indicate that the activity of FoxO is repressed under basal conditions via reversible lysine acetylation, which becomes compromised during catabolic conditions. Therefore, we aimed to determine how histone deacetylase (HDAC) proteins contribute to activation of FoxO and induction of the muscle atrophy program. Through the use of various pharmacological inhibitors to block HDAC activity, we demonstrate that class I HDACs are key regulators of FoxO and the muscle-atrophy program during both nutrient deprivation and skeletal muscle disuse. Furthermore, we demonstrate, through the use of wild-type and dominant-negative HDAC1 expression plasmids, that HDAC1 is sufficient to activate FoxO and induce muscle fiber atrophy in vivo and is necessary for the atrophy of muscle fibers that is associated with muscle disuse. The ability of HDAC1 to cause muscle atrophy required its deacetylase activity and was linked to the induction of several atrophy genes by HDAC1, including atrogin-1, which required deacetylation of FoxO3a. Moreover, pharmacological inhibition of class I HDACs during muscle disuse, using MS-275, significantly attenuated both disuse muscle fiber atrophy and contractile dysfunction. Together, these data solidify the importance of class I HDACs in the muscle atrophy program and indicate that class I HDAC inhibitors are feasible countermeasures to impede muscle atrophy and weakness.


Archive | 2015

unloadingeffects of thyroid hormone and mechanical Novel transitions in MHC isoforms: separate and

Michael J. Baker; Kenneth M. Baldwin; Stefano Schiaffino; Carlo Reggiani; Katherine H. Pavlovich; Elisabeth L. Shamoon; Rudolph L. Leibel; M. Baldwin; Denis R. Joanisse; Fadia Haddad; Rochelle L. Goldsmith; Andrew R. Judge; Adam W. Beharry; Pooja B. Sandesara; Brandon M. Roberts; Leonardo F. Ferreira; Sarah M. Senf


Archive | 2015

Review: Microgravity and skeletal muscle Invited Physiology of a Microgravity Environment

Danny R. Riley; Jeffrey J. Widrick; Jason R. Carter; John B. West; Erick O. Hernández-Ochoa; Tova Neustadt Schachter; Martin F. Schneider; Andrew R. Judge; Adam W. Beharry; Pooja B. Sandesara; Brandon M. Roberts; Leonardo F. Ferreira; M Sarah; Phil Wyrick; M. Dean Palmer; Ronald G. Haller; Benjamin D. Levine; Felix Krainski; Jeffrey L. Hastings; Katja Heinicke; Nadine Romain; Eric Pacini


Archive | 2015

attenuates disuse muscle atrophy and weakness in Acute antibody-directed myostatin inhibition

S. Lynch; Kate T. Murphy; James G. Ryall; Chikwendu Ibebunjo; Andrew R. Judge; Adam W. Beharry; Pooja B. Sandesara; Brandon M. Roberts; Leonardo F. Ferreira; M Sarah; René Koopman; Daniel J. Ham; Tahnee L Kennedy; Marissa K. Caldow; Annabel Chee; Gordon S. Lynch


Archive | 2011

and is directly regulated by Hsp70 FOXO signaling is required for disuse muscle atrophy

Sarah M. Senf; Stephen L. Dodd; Andrew R. Judge; Kimberly A. Reich; Yi-Wen Chen; Paul D. Thompson; Eric P. Hoffman; Heather M. Argadine; Carlos B. Mantilla; Wen-Zhi Zhan; Gary C. Sieck; Pooja B. Sandesara; S. A. Reed


Archive | 2011

p300 Acetyltransferase Activity Differentially Regulates the

Sarah M. Senf; Pooja B. Sandesara; S. A. Reed; Andrew R. Judge


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2010

Foxo Activity is Required for the Normal Muscle Atrophy Program during Cancer Induced Cachexia

S. A. Reed; Pooja B. Sandesara; Andrew R. Judge


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2010

Foxo Signaling is Required for Muscle Atrophy Associated with Sepsis

Andrew R. Judge; S. A. Reed; Pooja B. Sandesara

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S. A. Reed

University of Connecticut

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Benjamin D. Levine

Baylor University Medical Center

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