Sanoji Wijenayake
Carleton University
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Featured researches published by Sanoji Wijenayake.
PeerJ | 2016
Victoria E.M. Gerber; Sanoji Wijenayake; Kenneth B. Storey
The common wood frog, Rana sylvatica, utilizes freeze tolerance as a means of winter survival. Concealed beneath a layer of leaf litter and blanketed by snow, these frogs withstand subzero temperatures by allowing approximately 65–70% of total body water to freeze. Freezing is generally considered to be an ischemic event in which the blood oxygen supply is impeded and may lead to low levels of ATP production and exposure to oxidative stress. Therefore, it is as important to selectively upregulate cytoprotective mechanisms such as the heat shock protein (HSP) response and expression of antioxidants as it is to shut down majority of ATP consuming processes in the cell. The objective of this study was to investigate another probable cytoprotective mechanism, anti-apoptosis during oxygen deprivation and recovery in the anoxia tolerant wood frog. In particular, relative protein expression levels of two important apoptotic regulator proteins, Bax and p-p53 (S46), and five anti-apoptotic/pro-survival proteins, Bcl-2, p-Bcl-2 (S70), Bcl-xL, x-IAP, and c-IAP in response to normoxic, 24 Hr anoxic exposure, and 4 Hr recovery stages were assessed in the liver and skeletal muscle using western immunoblotting. The results suggest a tissue-specific regulation of the anti-apoptotic pathway in the wood frog, where both liver and skeletal muscle shows an overall decrease in apoptosis and an increase in cell survival. This type of cytoprotective mechanism could be aimed at preserving the existing cellular components during long-term anoxia and oxygen recovery phases in the wood frog.
Journal of Thermal Biology | 2017
Sanoji Wijenayake; Shannon N. Tessier; Kenneth B. Storey
Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is a vital regulatory enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of pyruvate into acetyl-CoA and connects anaerobic glycolysis to aerobic TCA cycle. Post-translational inhibition of PDH activity via three serine phosphorylation sites (pS232, pS293, and pS300) regulate the metabolic flux through the TCA cycle, decrease glucose utilization, and facilitate lipid metabolism during times of nutrient deprivation. As metabolic readjustment is necessary to survive hibernation, the purpose of this study was to explore the post-translational regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase and the expression levels of four mitochondrial serine/threonine kinases (PDHKs), during torpor-arousal cycles in liver, heart, and skeletal muscle of 13-lined ground squirrels. A combination of Luminex multiplex technology and western immunoblotting were used to measure the protein expression levels of total PDH, three phosphorylation sites, S232, 293, 300, and the expression levels of the corresponding PDH kinases (PDHK1-4) during euthermic control, entrance, late torpor, and interbout arousal. Liver and heart showed strong inhibitory PDH regulation, indicating a possible decrease in glucose utilization and a possible preference for β-oxidation of fatty acids during periods of low temperature and starvation. On the contrary, skeletal muscle showed limited PDH regulation via phosphorylation, possibly due to alternate controls. Phosphorylation of PDH may play an important role in regulating aerobic and anaerobic metabolic responses during hibernation in the 13-lined ground squirrel.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2017
Bryan E. Luu; Sanoji Wijenayake; Jing Zhang; Shannon N. Tessier; Julian F. Quintero-Galvis; Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Roberto F. Nespolo; Kenneth B. Storey
When faced with harsh environmental conditions, the South American marsupial, monito del monte (Dromiciops gliroides), reduces its body temperature and uses either daily torpor or multiday hibernation to survive. This study used ELISA and multiplex assays to characterize the responses to hibernation by three regulatory components of protein translation machinery [p-eIF2α(S51), p-eIF4E(S209), p-4EBP(Thr37/46)] and eight targets involved in upstream signaling control of translation [p-IGF-1R(Tyr1135/1136), PTEN(S380), p-Akt(S473), p-GSK-3α(S21), p-GSK-3β(S9), p-TSC2(S939), p-mTOR(S2448), and p70S6K(T412)]. Liver, brain and kidney were analyzed comparing control and hibernation (4days continuous torpor) conditions. In the liver, increased phosphorylation of IGF-1R, Akt, GSK-3β, TSC2, mTOR, eIF2α, and 4EBP (1.60-1.98 fold compared to control) occurred during torpor suggesting that the regulatory phosphorylation cascade and protein synthesis remained active during torpor. However, responses by brain and kidney differed; torpor resulted in increased phosphorylation of GSK-3β (2.15-4.17 fold) and TSC2 (2.03-3.65 fold), but phosphorylated Akt decreased (to 34-62% of control levels). Torpor also led to an increase in phosphorylated eIF2α (1.4 fold) content in the brain. These patterns of differential protein phosphorylation in brain and kidney were indicative of suppression of protein translation but also could suggest an increase in antioxidant and anti-apoptotic signaling during torpor. Previous studies of liver metabolism in hibernating eutherian mammals have shown that Akt kinase and its downstream signaling components play roles in facilitating hypometabolism by suppressing energy expensive anabolic processes during torpor. However, the results in this study reveal differences between eutherian and marsupial hibernators, suggesting alternative actions of liver Akt during torpor.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2017
Sanoji Wijenayake; Bryan E. Luu; Jing Zhang; Shannon N. Tessier; Julian F. Quintero-Galvis; Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Roberto F. Nespolo; Kenneth B. Storey
Hibernation is a period of torpor and heterothermy that is typically associated with a strong reduction in metabolic rate, global suppression of transcription and translation, and upregulation of various genes/proteins that are central to the cellular stress response such as protein kinases, antioxidants, and heat shock proteins. The current study examined cell signaling cascades in hibernating monito del monte, Dromiciops gliroides, a South American marsupial of the Order Microbiotheria. Responses to hibernation by members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, and their roles in coordinating hibernator metabolism were examined in liver, kidney, heart and brain of control and versus hibernating (4days continuous torpor) D. gliroides. The targets evaluated included key protein kinases in their activated phosphorylated forms (p-ERK/MAPK 1/2, p-MEK1, p-MSK1, p-p38, p-JNK) and related target proteins (p-CREB 2, p-ATF2, p-c-Jun and p-p53). Liver exhibited a strong coordinated response by MAPK members to hibernation with significant increases in protein phosphorylation levels of p-MEK1, p-ERK/MAPK1/2, p-MSK1, p-JNK and target proteins c-Jun, and p-ATF2, all combining to signify a strong activation of MAPK signaling during hibernation. Kidney also showed activation of MAPK cascades with significant increases in p-MEK1, p-ERK/MAPK1/2, p-p38, and p-c-Jun levels in hibernating animals. By contrast, responses by heart and brain indicated reduced MAPK pathway function during torpor with reduced phosphorylation of targets including p-ERK/MAPK 1/2 in both tissues as well as lower p-p38 and p-JNK content in heart. Overall, the data indicate a vital role for MAPK signaling in regulating the cell stress response during marsupial hibernation.
Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2018
Bryan E. Luu; Sanoji Wijenayake; Amal Idris Malik; Kenneth B. Storey
African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) endure bouts of severe drought in their natural habitats and survive the loss of approximately 30% of total body water due to dehydration. To investigate molecular mechanisms employed by X. laevis during periods of dehydration, the heat shock protein response, a vital component of the cytoprotective stress response, was characterized. Using western immunoblotting and multiplex technology, the protein levels of HSP27, HSP40, HSP60, HSP70, HSC70, and HSP90 were quantified in the liver, skeletal muscle, kidney, lung, and testes from control frogs and those that underwent medium or high dehydration (~16 or ~30% loss of total body water). Dehydration increased HSP27 (1.45–1.65-fold) in the kidneys and lungs, and HSP40 (1.39–2.50-fold) in the liver, testes, and skeletal muscle. HSP60 decreased in response to dehydration (0.43–0.64 of control) in the kidneys and lungs. HSP70 increased in the liver, lungs, and testes (1.39–1.70-fold) during dehydration, but had a dynamic response in the kidneys (levels increased 1.57-fold with medium dehydration, but decreased to 0.56 of control during high dehydration). HSC70 increased in the liver and kidneys (1.20–1.36-fold), but decreased in skeletal muscle (0.27–0.55 of control) during dehydration. Lastly, HSP90 was reduced in the kidney, lung, and skeletal muscle (0.39–0.69 of control) in response to dehydration, but rose in the testes (1.30-fold). Overall, the results suggest a dynamic tissue-specific heat shock protein response to whole body dehydration in X. laevis.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2017
Bryan E. Luu; Sanoji Wijenayake; Jing Zhang; Shannon N. Tessier; Julian F. Quintero-Galvis; Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Roberto F. Nespolo; Kenneth B. Storey
The South American marsupial, monito del monte (Dromiciops gliroides) uses both daily torpor and multi-day hibernation to survive in its southern Chile native environment. The present study leverages multiplex technology to assess the contributions of key stress-inducible cell cycle regulators and heat shock proteins to hibernation in liver, heart, and brain of monito del monte in a comparison of control versus 4day hibernating conditions. The data indicate that MDM2, a stress-responsive ubiquitin ligase, plays a crucial role in marsupial hibernation since all three tissues showed statistically significant increases in MDM2 levels during torpor (1.6-1.8 fold). MDM2 may have a cytoprotective action to deal with ischemia/reperfusion stress and is also involved in a nutrient sensing pathway where it could help regulate the metabolic switch to fatty acid oxidation during torpor. Elevated levels of stress-sensitive cell cycle regulators including ATR (2.32-3.91 fold), and the phosphorylated forms of p-Chk1 (Ser345) (1.92 fold), p-Chk2 (Thr68) (2.20 fold) and p21 (1.64 fold) were observed in heart and liver during hibernation suggesting that the cell cycle is likely suppressed to conserve energy while animals are in torpor. Upregulation of heat shock proteins also occurred as a cytoprotective strategy with increased levels of hsp27 (2.00 fold) and hsp60 (1.72-2.76 fold) during hibernation. The results suggest that cell cycle control and selective chaperone action are significant components of hibernation in D. gliroides and reveal common molecular responses to those seen in eutherian hibernators.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2017
Sanoji Wijenayake; Bryan E. Luu; Jing Zhang; Shannon N. Tessier; Julian F. Quintero-Galvis; Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Roberto F. Nespolo; Kenneth B. Storey
Mammalian hibernation is characterized by extensive adjustments to metabolism that typically include suppression of carbohydrate catabolism and a switch to triglycerides as the primary fuel during torpor. A crucial locus of control in this process is the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex that gates carbohydrate entry into the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Within the complex, the E1 enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is the main regulatory site and is subject to inhibitory phosphorylation at three serine residues (S232, S293, S300). To determine if marsupial hibernators show a comparable focus on PDH to regulate fuel metabolism, the current study explored PDH control by site-specific phosphorylation in the South American marsupial, monito del monte (Dromiciops gliroides). Luminex multiplex technology was used to analyze PDH responses in six tissues comparing control and hibernating (4days continuous torpor) animals. Total PDH content did not change significantly during hibernation in any tissue but phospho-PDH content increased in all. Heart PDH showed increased phosphorylation at all three sites by 8.1-, 10.6- and 2.1-fold for S232, S293 and S300, respectively. Liver also showed elevated p-S300 (2.5-fold) and p-S293 (4.7-fold) content. Phosphorylation of S232 and S293 increased significantly in brain and lung but only S232 phosphorylation increased in kidney and skeletal muscle. The results show that PDH suppression via enzyme phosphorylation during torpor is a conserved mechanism for inhibiting carbohydrate catabolism in both marsupial and eutherian mammals, an action that would also promote the switch to fatty acid oxidation instead.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Shannon N. Tessier; Yichi Zhang; Sanoji Wijenayake; Kenneth B. Storey
BACKGROUND The thirteen-lined ground squirrel (I. tridecemlineatus) becomes hypometabolic during hibernation; characterized by reductions in energy expensive processes like transcription during periods of low temperature and starvation. We were interested in elucidating the mechanisms of transcriptional control by studying the MAPK pathway and downstream transcription factors in skeletal muscle. We were also interested in how environmental factors, such as body temperature, that fluctuate during hibernation, can affect transcriptional regulation. METHODS Protein abundance of MAPKs and effectors were quantified using immunoblotting and Luminex® multiplex assays. DNA-protein interaction (DPI)-ELISA was used to quantitatively assess the binding of transcription factors to DNA promoter sequences under environmental conditions which are reflective of those during torpor. RESULTS JNK2/3 showed increases in protein abundance during early arousal. The transcription factor, Elk1, showed increases in phosphorylation of S383 (which is indicative of increased activity) during arousal that accompany decreases in total protein levels. Further analysis on the relative binding of this transcription factor to its consensus sequence during euthermia and torpor showed that its binding is significantly different when environmental conditions such as temperature, [urea], and [Ca2+] were changed. CONCLUSION We show evidence of Elk1 regulation during hibernation, and its activity could be influenced by environmental factors such as temperature, [urea] and [Ca2+], as well as post-translational modifications via JNK2/3. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE I. tridecemlineatus has natural mechanisms of transcriptional regulation during hibernation through phosphorylation and changes to the cellular environment. We identify regulation of JNK and Elk1 in the skeletal muscle of hibernating I. tridecemlineatus.
Gene | 2018
Sanoji Wijenayake; Liam J. Hawkins; Kenneth B. Storey
The importance of histone lysine methylation is well established in health, disease, early development, aging, and cancer. However, the potential role of histone H3 methylation in regulating gene expression in response to extended periods of oxygen deprivation (anoxia) in a natural, anoxia-tolerant model system is underexplored. Red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans) can tolerate and survive three months of absolute anoxia and recover without incurring detrimental cellular damage, mainly by reducing the overall metabolic rate by 90% when compared to normoxia. Stringent regulation of gene expression is a vital aspect of metabolic rate depression in red-eared sliders, and as such we examined the anoxia-responsive regulation of histone lysine methylation in the liver during 5 h and 20 h anoxia exposure. Interestingly, this is the first study to illustrate the existence of histone lysine methyltransferases (HKMTs) and corresponding histone H3 lysine methylation levels in the liver of anoxia-tolerant red-eared sliders. In brief, H3K4me1, a histone mark associated with active transcription, and two corresponding histone lysine methyltransferases that modify H3K4me1 site, significantly increased in response to anoxia. On the contrary, H3K27me1, another transcriptionally active histone mark, significantly decreased during 20 h anoxia, and a transcriptionally repressive histone mark, H3K9me3, and the corresponding KMTs, similarly increased during 20 h anoxia. Overall, the results suggest a dynamic regulation of histone H3 lysine methylation in the liver of red-eared sliders that could theoretically aid in the selective upregulation of genes that are necessary for anoxia survival, while globally suppressing others to conserve energy.
Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 2016
Sanoji Wijenayake; Kenneth B. Storey