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Dive into the research topics where Reuben J. Shaw is active.

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Featured researches published by Reuben J. Shaw.


Nature | 2006

Resveratrol improves health and survival of mice on a high-calorie diet.

Joseph A. Baur; Kevin J. Pearson; Nathaniel O Price; Hamish A. Jamieson; Carles Lerin; Avash Kalra; Vinayakumar Prabhu; Joanne S. Allard; Guillermo López-Lluch; Kaitlyn N. Lewis; Paul J. Pistell; Suresh Poosala; Kevin G. Becker; Olivier Boss; Dana M. Gwinn; Mingyi Wang; Sharan Ramaswamy; Kenneth W. Fishbein; Richard G. Spencer; Edward G. Lakatta; David G. Le Couteur; Reuben J. Shaw; Plácido Navas; Pere Puigserver; Donald K. Ingram; Rafael de Cabo; David A. Sinclair

Resveratrol (3,5,4′-trihydroxystilbene) extends the lifespan of diverse species including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster. In these organisms, lifespan extension is dependent on Sir2, a conserved deacetylase proposed to underlie the beneficial effects of caloric restriction. Here we show that resveratrol shifts the physiology of middle-aged mice on a high-calorie diet towards that of mice on a standard diet and significantly increases their survival. Resveratrol produces changes associated with longer lifespan, including increased insulin sensitivity, reduced insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I) levels, increased AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α) activity, increased mitochondrial number, and improved motor function. Parametric analysis of gene set enrichment revealed that resveratrol opposed the effects of the high-calorie diet in 144 out of 153 significantly altered pathways. These data show that improving general health in mammals using small molecules is an attainable goal, and point to new approaches for treating obesity-related disorders and diseases of ageing.


Molecular Cell | 2008

AMPK phosphorylation of raptor mediates a metabolic checkpoint

Dana M. Gwinn; David B. Shackelford; Daniel F. Egan; Maria M. Mihaylova; Annabelle Mery; Debbie S. Vasquez; Benjamin E. Turk; Reuben J. Shaw

AMPK is a highly conserved sensor of cellular energy status that is activated under conditions of low intracellular ATP. AMPK responds to energy stress by suppressing cell growth and biosynthetic processes, in part through its inhibition of the rapamycin-sensitive mTOR (mTORC1) pathway. AMPK phosphorylation of the TSC2 tumor suppressor contributes to suppression of mTORC1; however, TSC2-deficient cells remain responsive to energy stress. Using a proteomic and bioinformatics approach, we sought to identify additional substrates of AMPK that mediate its effects on growth control. We report here that AMPK directly phosphorylates the mTOR binding partner raptor on two well-conserved serine residues, and this phosphorylation induces 14-3-3 binding to raptor. The phosphorylation of raptor by AMPK is required for the inhibition of mTORC1 and cell-cycle arrest induced by energy stress. These findings uncover a conserved effector of AMPK that mediates its role as a metabolic checkpoint coordinating cell growth with energy status.


Nature | 2006

Ras, PI(3)K and mTOR signalling controls tumour cell growth.

Reuben J. Shaw; Lewis C. Cantley

All eukaryotic cells coordinate cell growth with the availability of nutrients in their environment. The mTOR protein kinase has emerged as a critical growth-control node, receiving stimulatory signals from Ras and phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) downstream from growth factors, as well as nutrient inputs in the form of amino-acid, glucose and oxygen availability. Notably, components of the Ras and PI(3)K signalling pathways are mutated in most human cancers. The preponderance of mutations in these interconnected pathways suggests that the loss of growth-control checkpoints and promotion of cell survival in nutrient-limited conditions may be an obligate event in tumorigenesis.


Science | 2005

The Kinase LKB1 Mediates Glucose Homeostasis in Liver and Therapeutic Effects of Metformin

Reuben J. Shaw; Katja A. Lamia; Debbie S. Vasquez; Seung Hoi Koo; Nabeel Bardeesy; Ronald A. DePinho; Marc Montminy; Lewis C. Cantley

The Peutz-Jegher syndrome tumor-suppressor gene encodes a protein-threonine kinase, LKB1, which phosphorylates and activates AMPK [adenosine monophosphate (AMP)–activated protein kinase]. The deletion of LKB1 in the liver of adult mice resulted in a nearly complete loss of AMPK activity. Loss of LKB1 function resulted in hyperglycemia with increased gluconeogenic and lipogenic gene expression. In LKB1-deficient livers, TORC2, a transcriptional coactivator of CREB (cAMP response element–binding protein), was dephosphorylated and entered the nucleus, driving the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α), which in turn drives gluconeogenesis. Adenoviral small hairpin RNA (shRNA) for TORC2 reduced PGC-1α expression and normalized blood glucose levels in mice with deleted liver LKB1, indicating that TORC2 is a critical target of LKB1/AMPK signals in the regulation of gluconeogenesis. Finally, we show that metformin, one of the most widely prescribed type 2 diabetes therapeutics, requires LKB1 in the liver to lower blood glucose levels.


Science | 2011

Phosphorylation of ULK1 (hATG1) by AMP-Activated Protein Kinase Connects Energy Sensing to Mitophagy

Daniel F. Egan; David B. Shackelford; Maria M. Mihaylova; Sara Gelino; Rebecca A. Kohnz; William Mair; Debbie S. Vasquez; Aashish Joshi; Dana M. Gwinn; Rebecca Taylor; John M. Asara; James A.J. Fitzpatrick; Andrew Dillin; Benoit Viollet; Mondira Kundu; Malene Hansen; Reuben J. Shaw

A protein kinase links energy stores to control of autophagy. Adenosine monophosphate–activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a conserved sensor of intracellular energy activated in response to low nutrient availability and environmental stress. In a screen for conserved substrates of AMPK, we identified ULK1 and ULK2, mammalian orthologs of the yeast protein kinase Atg1, which is required for autophagy. Genetic analysis of AMPK or ULK1 in mammalian liver and Caenorhabditis elegans revealed a requirement for these kinases in autophagy. In mammals, loss of AMPK or ULK1 resulted in aberrant accumulation of the autophagy adaptor p62 and defective mitophagy. Reconstitution of ULK1-deficient cells with a mutant ULK1 that cannot be phosphorylated by AMPK revealed that such phosphorylation is required for mitochondrial homeostasis and cell survival during starvation. These findings uncover a conserved biochemical mechanism coupling nutrient status with autophagy and cell survival.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

The AMPK signalling pathway coordinates cell growth, autophagy and metabolism

Maria M. Mihaylova; Reuben J. Shaw

One of the central regulators of cellular and organismal metabolism in eukaryotes is AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), which is activated when intracellular ATP production decreases. AMPK has critical roles in regulating growth and reprogramming metabolism, and has recently been connected to cellular processes such as autophagy and cell polarity. Here we review a number of recent breakthroughs in the mechanistic understanding of AMPK function, focusing on a number of newly identified downstream effectors of AMPK.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2009

The LKB1–AMPK pathway: metabolism and growth control in tumour suppression

David B. Shackelford; Reuben J. Shaw

In the past decade, studies of the human tumour suppressor LKB1 have uncovered a novel signalling pathway that links cell metabolism to growth control and cell polarity. LKB1 encodes a serine–threonine kinase that directly phosphorylates and activates AMPK, a central metabolic sensor. AMPK regulates lipid, cholesterol and glucose metabolism in specialized metabolic tissues, such as liver, muscle and adipose tissue. This function has made AMPK a key therapeutic target in patients with diabetes. The connection of AMPK with several tumour suppressors suggests that therapeutic manipulation of this pathway using established diabetes drugs warrants further investigation in patients with cancer.


Cell | 2008

AMPK and PPARδ Agonists Are Exercise Mimetics

Vihang A. Narkar; Michael Downes; Ruth T. Yu; Emi Embler; Yong-Xu Wang; Ester Banayo; Maria M. Mihaylova; Michael C. Nelson; Yuhua Zou; Henry Juguilon; Heonjoong Kang; Reuben J. Shaw; Ronald M. Evans

The benefits of endurance exercise on general health make it desirable to identify orally active agents that would mimic or potentiate the effects of exercise to treat metabolic diseases. Although certain natural compounds, such as reseveratrol, have endurance-enhancing activities, their exact metabolic targets remain elusive. We therefore tested the effect of pathway-specific drugs on endurance capacities of mice in a treadmill running test. We found that PPARbeta/delta agonist and exercise training synergistically increase oxidative myofibers and running endurance in adult mice. Because training activates AMPK and PGC1alpha, we then tested whether the orally active AMPK agonist AICAR might be sufficient to overcome the exercise requirement. Unexpectedly, even in sedentary mice, 4 weeks of AICAR treatment alone induced metabolic genes and enhanced running endurance by 44%. These results demonstrate that AMPK-PPARdelta pathway can be targeted by orally active drugs to enhance training adaptation or even to increase endurance without exercise.


Cell Metabolism | 2011

AMPK Phosphorylates and Inhibits SREBP Activity to Attenuate Hepatic Steatosis and Atherosclerosis in Diet-Induced Insulin-Resistant Mice

Yu Li; Shanqin Xu; Maria M. Mihaylova; Bin Zheng; Xiuyun Hou; Bingbing Jiang; Ogyi Park; Zhijun Luo; Etienne Lefai; John Y.-J. Shyy; Bin Gao; Michel Wierzbicki; Tony J. Verbeuren; Reuben J. Shaw; Richard A. Cohen; Mengwei Zang

AMPK has emerged as a critical mechanism for salutary effects of polyphenols on lipid metabolic disorders in type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Here we demonstrate that AMPK interacts with and directly phosphorylates sterol regulatory element binding proteins (SREBP-1c and -2). Ser372 phosphorylation of SREBP-1c by AMPK is necessary for inhibition of proteolytic processing and transcriptional activity of SREBP-1c in response to polyphenols and metformin. AMPK stimulates Ser372 phosphorylation, suppresses SREBP-1c cleavage and nuclear translocation, and represses SREBP-1c target gene expression in hepatocytes exposed to high glucose, leading to reduced lipogenesis and lipid accumulation. Hepatic activation of AMPK by the synthetic polyphenol S17834 protects against hepatic steatosis, hyperlipidemia, and accelerated atherosclerosis in diet-induced insulin-resistant LDL receptor-deficient mice in part through phosphorylation of SREBP-1c Ser372 and suppression of SREBP-1c- and -2-dependent lipogenesis. AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of SREBP may offer therapeutic strategies to combat insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and atherosclerosis.


Science | 2009

AMPK Regulates the Circadian Clock by Cryptochrome Phosphorylation and Degradation

Katja A. Lamia; Uma M. Sachdeva; Luciano DiTacchio; Elliot C. Williams; Jacqueline G.A. Alvarez; Daniel F. Egan; Debbie S. Vasquez; Henry Juguilon; Satchidananda Panda; Reuben J. Shaw; Craig B. Thompson; Ronald M. Evans

Coupling Clocks and Metabolism Circadian clocks in mammals coordinate behavior and physiology with daily light-dark cycles by driving rhythmic transcription of thousands of genes. The master clock in the brain is set by light, but clocks in peripheral tissues, such as the liver, are set by daily feeding. Such coupling should allow tissues to “anticipate” food consumption and optimize the timing of metabolic processes, but how nutritional status is communicated to peripheral clocks is unclear. Studying cell culture models and mice, Lamia et al. (p. 437; see the Perspective by Suter and Schibler) show that the nutrient-responsive signaling molecule AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) provides metabolic information to circadian clocks by triggering phosphorylation and subsequent degradation of the clock component cryptochrome-1. Thus—cryptochromes, which originally evolved as blue-light photoreceptors in plants, act as chemical energy sensors in mammals. The protein kinase AMPK couples circadian clocks and metabolism in mammals through effects on a cryptochrome protein. Circadian clocks coordinate behavioral and physiological processes with daily light-dark cycles by driving rhythmic transcription of thousands of genes. Whereas the master clock in the brain is set by light, pacemakers in peripheral organs, such as the liver, are reset by food availability, although the setting, or “entrainment,” mechanisms remain mysterious. Studying mouse fibroblasts, we demonstrated that the nutrient-responsive adenosine monophosphate–activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylates and destabilizes the clock component cryptochrome 1 (CRY1). In mouse livers, AMPK activity and nuclear localization were rhythmic and inversely correlated with CRY1 nuclear protein abundance. Stimulation of AMPK destabilized cryptochromes and altered circadian rhythms, and mice in which the AMPK pathway was genetically disrupted showed alterations in peripheral clocks. Thus, phosphorylation by AMPK enables cryptochrome to transduce nutrient signals to circadian clocks in mammalian peripheral organs.

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Maria M. Mihaylova

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Robert U. Svensson

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Ronald M. Evans

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Debbie S. Vasquez

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Mathias Leblanc

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Nabeel Bardeesy

University of Pennsylvania

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Andrew Dillin

University of California

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