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Dive into the research topics where Robert Mckay is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Mckay.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

PTP1B antisense oligonucleotide lowers PTP1B protein, normalizes blood glucose, and improves insulin sensitivity in diabetic mice

Bradley A. Zinker; Cristina M. Rondinone; James M. Trevillyan; Rebecca J. Gum; Jill E. Clampit; Jeffrey F. Waring; Nancy Xie; Denise Wilcox; Peer B. Jacobson; Leigh Frost; Paul E. Kroeger; Regina M. Reilly; Sandra Koterski; Terry J. Opgenorth; Roger G. Ulrich; Seth D. Crosby; Madeline M. Butler; Susan F. Murray; Robert Mckay; Sanjay Bhanot; Brett P. Monia; Michael R. Jirousek

The role of protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) in diabetes was investigated using an antisense oligonucleotide in ob/ob and db/db mice. PTP1B antisense oligonucleotide treatment normalized plasma glucose levels, postprandial glucose excursion, and HbA1C. Hyperinsulinemia was also reduced with improved insulin sensitivity. PTP1B protein and mRNA were reduced in liver and fat with no effect in skeletal muscle. Insulin signaling proteins, insulin receptor substrate 2 and phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI3)-kinase regulatory subunit p50α, were increased and PI3-kinase p85α expression was decreased in liver and fat. These changes in protein expression correlated with increased insulin-stimulated protein kinase B phosphorylation. The expression of liver gluconeogenic enzymes, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase was also down-regulated. These findings suggest that PTP1B modulates insulin signaling in liver and fat, and that therapeutic modalities targeting PTP1B inhibition may have clinical benefit in type 2 diabetes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Role of resistin in diet-induced hepatic insulin resistance

Evan D. Muse; Silvana Obici; Sanjay Bhanot; Brett P. Monia; Robert Mckay; Michael W. Rajala; Philipp E. Scherer; Luciano Rossetti

Resistin is an adipose-derived hormone postulated to link adiposity to insulin resistance. To determine whether resistin plays a causative role in the development of diet-induced insulin resistance, we lowered circulating resistin levels in mice by use of a specific antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ASO) directed against resistin mRNA and assessed in vivo insulin action by the insulin-clamp technique. After 3 weeks on a high-fat (HF) diet, mice displayed severe insulin resistance associated with an approximately 80% increase in plasma resistin levels. In particular, the rate of endogenous glucose production (GP) increased more than twofold compared with that in mice fed a standard chow. Treatment with the resistin ASO for 1 week normalized the plasma resistin levels and completely reversed the hepatic insulin resistance. Importantly, in this group of mice, the acute infusion of purified recombinant mouse resistin, designed to acutely elevate the levels of circulating resistin up to those observed in the HF-fed mice, was sufficient to reconstitute hepatic insulin resistance. These results provide strong support for a physiological role of resistin in the development of hepatic insulin resistance in this model.


Hepatology | 2005

Antisense oligonucleotide reduction of DGAT2 expression improves hepatic steatosis and hyperlipidemia in obese mice

Xing Xian Yu; Susan F. Murray; Sanjay K. Pandey; Sheri L. Booten; Dingjiu Bao; Xiu-Zhen Song; Susan Kelly; Songyuan Chen; Robert Mckay; Brett P. Monia; Sanjay Bhanot

In this study, we investigated the role of acyl‐coenzyme A:diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 (DGAT2) in glucose and lipid metabolism in obese mice by reducing its expression in liver and fat with an optimized antisense oligonucleotide (ASO). High‐fat diet‐induced obese (DIO) C57BL/6J mice and ob/ob mice were treated with DGAT2 ASO, control ASO, or saline. DGAT2 ASO treatment reduced DGAT2 messenger RNA (mRNA) levels by more than 75% in both liver and fat but did not change DGAT1 mRNA levels in either of these tissues, which resulted in decreased DGAT activity in liver but not in fat. DGAT2 ASO treatment did not cause significant changes in body weight, adiposity, metabolic rate, insulin sensitivity, or skin microstructure. However, DGAT2 ASO treatment caused a marked reduction in hepatic triglyceride content and improved hepatic steatosis in both models, which was consistent with a dramatic decrease in triglyceride synthesis and an increase in fatty acid oxidation observed in primary mouse hepatocytes treated with DGAT2 ASO. In addition, the treatment lowered hepatic triglyceride secretion rate and plasma triglyceride levels, and improved plasma lipoprotein profile in DIO mice. The positive effects of the DGAT2 ASO were accompanied by a reduction in the mRNA levels of several hepatic lipogenic genes, including SCD1, FAS, ACC1, ACC2, ATP‐citrate lyase, glycerol kinase, and HMG‐CoA reductase. In conclusion, reduction of DGAT2 expression in obese animals can reduce hepatic lipogenesis and hepatic steatosis as well as attenuate hyperlipidemia, thereby leading to an improvement in metabolic syndrome. (HEPATOLOGY 2005;42:362–371.)


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Characterization of a Potent and Specific Class of Antisense Oligonucleotide Inhibitor of Human Protein Kinase C-α Expression

Robert Mckay; Loren Miraglia; Lendell L. Cummins; Stephen R. Owens; Henri Sasmor; Nicholas M. Dean

The use of antisense oligonucleotides to inhibit the expression of targeted mRNA sequences is becoming increasingly commonplace. Although effective, the most widely used oligonucleotide modification (phosphorothioate) has some limitations. In previous studies we have described a 20-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide inhibitor of human protein kinase C-α expression. In an effort to identify improved antisense inhibitors of protein kinase C expression, a series of 2′ modifications have been incorporated into the protein kinase C-α targeting oligonucleotide, and the effects on oligonucleotide biophysical characteristics and pharmacology evaluated. The incorporation of 2′-O-(2-methoxy)ethyl chemistry resulted in a number of significant improvements in oligonucleotide characteristics. These include an increase in hybridization affinity toward a complementary RNA (1.5° C per modification) and an increase in resistance toward both 3′-exonuclease and intracellular nucleases. These improvements result in a substantial increase in oligonucleotide potency (>20-fold after 72 h). The most active compound identified was used to examine the role played by protein kinase C-α in mediating the phorbol ester-induced changes in c-fos, c-jun, and junB expression in A549 lung epithelial cells. Depletion of protein kinase C-α protein expression by this oligonucleotide lead to a reduction in c-jun expression but not c-fos orjunB. These results demonstrate that 2′-O-(2-methoxy)ethyl-modified antisense oligonucleotides are 1) effective inhibitors of protein kinase C-α expression, and 2) represent a class of antisense oligonucleotide which are much more effective inhibitors of gene expression than the widely used phosphorothioate antisense oligodeoxynucleotides.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

The Jun Kinase 2 Isoform Is Preferentially Required for Epidermal Growth Factor-Induced Transformation of Human A549 Lung Carcinoma Cells

Frédéric Bost; Robert Mckay; Myriam Bost; Olga Potapova; Nicholas M. Dean; Dan Mercola

ABSTRACT We have previously found that epidermal growth factor (EGF) mediates growth through the Jun N-terminal kinase/stress-activated kinase (JNK/SAPK) pathway in A549 human lung carcinoma cells. As observed here, EGF treatment also greatly enhances the tumorigenicity of A549 cells, suggesting an important role for JNK in cancer cell growth (F. Bost, R. McKay, N. Dean, and D. Mercola, J. Biol. Chem. 272:33422–33429, 1997). Several isoforms families of JNK, JNK1, JNK2, and JNK3, have been isolated; they arise from alternative splicing of three different genes and have distinct substrate binding properties. Here we have used specific phosphorothioate oligonucleotides targeted against the two major isoforms, JNK1 and JNK2, to discriminate their roles in EGF-induced transformation. Multiple antisense sequences have been screened, and two high-affinity and specific candidates have been identified. Antisense JNK1 eliminated steady-state mRNA and JNK1 protein expression with a 50% effective concentration (EC50) of <0.1 μM but did not alter JNK2 mRNA or protein levels. Conversely, antisense JNK2 specifically eliminated JNK2 steady-state mRNA and protein expression with an EC50 of 0.1 μM. Antisense JNK1 and antisense JNK2 inhibited by 40 and 70%, respectively, EGF-induced total JNK activity, whereas sense and scrambled-sequence control oligonucleotides had no effect. The elimination of mRNA, protein, and JNK activities lasted 48 and 72 h following a single Lipofectin treatment with antisense JNK1 and JNK2, respectively, indicating sufficient duration for examining the impact of specific elimination on the phenotype. Direct proliferation assays demonstrated that antisense JNK2 inhibited EGF-induced doubling of growth as well as the combination of active antisense oligonucleotides did. EGF treatment also induced colony formation in soft agar. This effect was completely inhibited by antisense JNK2 and combined-antisense treatment but not altered by antisense JNK1 alone. These results show that EGF doubles the proliferation (growth in soft agar as well as tumorigenicity in athymic mice) of A549 lung carcinoma cells and that the JNK2 isoform but not JNK1 is utilized for mediating the effects of EGF. This study represents the first demonstration of a cellular phenotype regulated by a JNK isoform family, JNK2.


Diabetes | 2006

Targeting Foxo1 in Mice Using Antisense Oligonucleotide Improves Hepatic and Peripheral Insulin Action

Varman T. Samuel; Cheol Soo Choi; Trevor G. Phillips; Anthony J. Romanelli; John G. Geisler; Sanjay Bhanot; Robert Mckay; Brett P. Monia; John R. Shutter; Richard Lindberg; Gerald I. Shulman; Murielle M. Véniant

Fasting hyperglycemia, a prominent finding in diabetes, is primarily due to increased gluconeogenesis. The transcription factor Foxo1 links insulin signaling to decreased transcription of PEPCK and glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) and provides a possible therapeutic target in insulin-resistant states. Synthetic, optimized antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) specifically inhibit Foxo1 expression. Here we show the effect of such therapy on insulin resistance in mice with diet-induced obesity (DIO). Reducing Foxo1 mRNA expression with ASO therapy in mouse hepatocytes decreased levels of Foxo1 protein and mRNA expression of PEPCK by 48 ± 4% and G6Pase by 64 ± 3%. In mice with DIO and insulin resistance, Foxo1 ASO therapy lowered plasma glucose concentration and the rate of basal endogenous glucose production. In addition, Foxo1 ASO therapy lowered both hepatic triglyceride and diacylglycerol content and improved hepatic insulin sensitivity. Foxo1 ASO also improved adipocyte insulin action. At a tissue-specific level, this manifested as improved insulin-mediated 2-deoxyglucose uptake and suppression of lipolysis. On a whole-body level, the result was improved glucose tolerance after an intraperitoneal glucose load and increased insulin-stimulated whole-body glucose disposal during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. In conclusion, Foxo1 ASO therapy improved both hepatic insulin and peripheral insulin action. Foxo1 is a potential therapeutic target for improving insulin resistance.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 1997

Definition by specific antisense oligonucleotides of a role for protein kinase Cα in expression of differentiation markers in normal and neoplastic mouse epidermal keratinocytes

Yun-Sil Lee; Andrzej A. Dlugosz; Robert Mckay; Nicholas M. Dean; Stuart H. Yuspa

Epidermal keratinocyte differentiation is a tightly regulated, stepwise process that requires protein kinase C (PKC) activation. Studies using cultured mouse keratinocytes induced to differentiate with Ca2+ have indirectly implicated the α isoform of PKC in upregulation of “late” (granular cell) epidermal differentiation markers. Activation of this isoform is also implicated in the suppression of “early” differentiation markers keratin (K) 1 and 10 that characterizes the neoplastic phenotype produced by the v‐Ha‐ras oncogene. We used antisense oligonucleotides (AS) to directly address the role of PKCα in regulating expression of these markers in normal and v‐Ha‐ras‐transduced primary keratinocytes and a keratinocyte cell line (SP‐1) containing an activating mutation of the c‐Ha‐ras gene. Transfection of PKCα AS reduced the PKCα protein level in a dose‐dependent manner, with a maximum effect at doses of 100 nM or higher. Immunoblot analysis with antibodies against PKCα, PKCδ, PKCϵ, and PKCν confirmed that PKCα AS selectively reduced the level of PKCα but not the other isoforms. In vitro kinase assays also revealed suppression of Ca2+‐dependent PKC activity, which is the PKCα activity in this cell type, after transfection of PKCα AS. When PKCα AS‐treated normal keratinocytes were stimulated to terminally differentiate with Ca2+, induction of the late differentiation markers loricrin, filaggrin, and SPR‐1, as well as transglutaminase K mRNA, was suppressed when compared with their induction in scrambled AS‐treated controls. In neoplastic v‐Ha‐ras‐transduced keratinocytes and SP‐1 cells, transfection of PKCα AS, but not the scrambled AS control, selectively downregulated PKCα and restored differentiation specific expression of K1. These findings directly confirm that PKCα is an important component of the signaling pathway regulating terminal differentiation of normal keratinocytes and that activation of PKCα contributes to the altered differentiation program of neoplastic murine keratinocytes. Mol. Carcinog. 18:44–53, 1997.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Inhibition of antigen-induced eosinophilia and late phase airway hyperresponsiveness by an IL-5 antisense oligonucleotide in mouse models of asthma.

James G. Karras; Kathy McGraw; Robert Mckay; Scott Cooper; Dmitri Lerner; Tao Lu; Christoph Walker; Nicholas M. Dean; Brett P. Monia

Chronic airway eosinophilia is associated with allergic asthma and is mediated in part by secretion of IL-5 from allergen-specific Th2 lymphocytes. IL-5 is a known maturation and antiapoptotic factor for eosinophils and stimulates release of nascent eosinophils from bone marrow into the peripheral circulation. An antisense oligonucleotide found to specifically inhibit IL-5 expression in vitro was observed to significantly reduce experimentally induced eosinophilia in vivo, in both the murine OVA lung challenge and allergic peritonitis models. Intravenous administration resulted in sequence-dependent inhibition of eosinophilia coincident with reduction of IL-5 protein levels, supporting an antisense mechanism of action. Potent suppression of lung eosinophilia was observed up to 17 days after cessation of oligonucleotide dosing, indicating achievement of prolonged protection with this strategy. Furthermore, sequence-specific, antisense oligonucleotide-mediated inhibition of Ag-mediated late phase airway hyperresponsiveness was also observed. These data underscore the potential utility of an antisense approach targeting IL-5 for the treatment of asthma and eosinophilic diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Reduction of low molecular weight protein-tyrosine phosphatase expression improves hyperglycemia and insulin sensitivity in obese mice

Sanjay K. Pandey; Xing Xian Yu; Lynnetta Watts; M. Dodson Michael; Kyle W. Sloop; Amber R. Rivard; Thomas A. Leedom; Vara Prasad Manchem; Laura Samadzadeh; Robert Mckay; Brett P. Monia; Sanjay Bhanot

To investigate the role of low molecular weight protein-tyrosine phosphatase (LMW-PTP) in glucose metabolism and insulin action, a specific antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) was used to reduce its expression both in vitro and in vivo. Reduction of LMW-PTP expression with the ASO in cultured mouse hepatocytes and in liver and fat tissues of diet-induced obese (DIO) mice and ob/ob mice led to increased phosphorylation and activity of key insulin signaling intermediates, including insulin receptor-β subunit, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and Akt in response to insulin stimulation. The ASO-treated DIO and ob/ob animals showed improved insulin sensitivity, which was reflected by a lowering of both plasma insulin and glucose levels and improved glucose and insulin tolerance in DIO mice. The treatment did not decrease body weight or increase metabolic rate. These data demonstrate that LMW-PTP is a key negative regulator of insulin action and a potential novel target for the treatment of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.


Endocrinology | 2009

Inhibition of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase-1B with Antisense Oligonucleotides Improves Insulin Sensitivity and Increases Adiponectin Concentrations in Monkeys

Michael M. Swarbrick; Peter J. Havel; Arthur A. Levin; Andrew A. Bremer; Kimber L. Stanhope; Madeline M. Butler; Sheri L. Booten; James L. Graham; Robert Mckay; Susan F. Murray; Lynnetta Watts; Brett P. Monia; Sanjay Bhanot

Protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)-1B antagonizes insulin signaling and is a potential therapeutic target for insulin resistance associated with obesity and type 2 diabetes. To date, studies of PTP-1B have been limited by the availability of specific antagonists; however, treatment of rodents with antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) directed against PTP-1B improves insulin sensitivity, inhibits lipogenic gene expression, and reduces triglyceride accumulation in liver and adipose tissue. Here we investigated ASO-mediated PTP-1B inhibition in primates. First, PTP-1B ASO (ISIS 113715) dose-dependently inhibited PTP-1B mRNA and protein expression in cultured monkey hepatocytes. Subcutaneous administration of ISIS 113715 reduced PTP-1B mRNA expression in liver and adipose tissue of normal-weight monkeys by 40-50% and improved insulin sensitivity during an iv glucose tolerance test (IVGTT). In obese, insulin-resistant rhesus monkeys, treatment with 20 mg/kg ISIS 113715 for 4 wk reduced fasting concentrations of insulin and glucose and reduced insulin responses during an IVGTT. In these animals, adiponectin concentrations were also increased by 70%, most of which was an increase of high-molecular-weight oligomers. These effects were not observed in monkeys on a lower, dose-escalation regimen (1-10 mg/kg over 9 wk). Overall, the increase of adiponectin concentrations during ISIS 113715 treatment was correlated with the lowering of insulin responses during IVGTT (r = -0.47, P = 0.042). These results indicate that inhibition of PTP-1B with ASOs such as ISIS 113715 may be a viable approach for the treatment and prevention of obesity-associated insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes because they potently increase adiponectin concentrations in addition to improving insulin sensitivity.

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