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Featured researches published by Ta-Yuan Chang.


Molecular Cell | 1997

Complementation Cloning of S2P ,a Gene Encoding a Putative Metalloprotease Required for Intramembrane Cleavage of SREBPs

Robert B. Rawson; Nikolai G. Zelenski; Deepak Nijhawan; Jin Ye; Juro Sakai; Mazahir T. Hasan; Ta-Yuan Chang; Michael S. Brown; Joseph L. Goldstein

We report the cloning of a gene, S2P, that encodes a putative metalloprotease required for intramembrane proteolysis of sterol-regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs) at Site-2. SREBPs are membrane-bound transcription factors that activate genes regulating cholesterol metabolism. The active NH2-terminal domains of SREBPs are released from membranes by sequential cleavage at two sites: Site-1, within the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum; and Site-2, within a transmembrane segment. The human S2P gene was cloned by complementation of mutant CHO cells that cannot cleave SREBPs at Site-2 and are cholesterol auxotrophs. S2P defines a new family of polytopic membrane proteins that contain an HEXXH sequence characteristic of zinc metalloproteases. Mutation of the putative zinc-binding residues abolishes S2P activity. S2P encodes an unusual metalloprotease that cleaves proteins within transmembrane segments.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferases

Ta-Yuan Chang; Bo-Liang Li; Catherine C. Y. Chang; Yasuomi Urano

The enzymes acyl-coenzyme A (CoA):cholesterol acyltransferases (ACATs) are membrane-bound proteins that utilize long-chain fatty acyl-CoA and cholesterol as substrates to form cholesteryl esters. In mammals, two isoenzymes, ACAT1 and ACAT2, encoded by two different genes, exist. ACATs play important roles in cellular cholesterol homeostasis in various tissues. This chapter summarizes the current knowledge on ACAT-related research in two areas: 1) ACAT genes and proteins and 2) ACAT enzymes as drug targets for atherosclerosis and for Alzheimers disease.


Current Opinion in Lipidology | 2001

Roles of acyl-coenzyme A : cholesterol acyltransferase-1 and-2

Ta-Yuan Chang; Catherine C. Y. Chang; Song Lin; Chunjiang Yu; Bo-Liang Li; Akira Miyazaki

Acyl-coenzyme A : cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) is an intracellular enzyme that produces cholesteryl esters in various tissues. In mammals, two ACAT genes (ACAT1 and ACAT2) have been identified. Together, these two enzymes are involved in storing cholesteryl esters as lipid droplets, in macrophage foam-cell formation, in absorbing dietary cholesterol, and in supplying cholesteryl esters as part of the core lipid for lipoprotein synthesis and assembly. The key difference in tissue distribution of ACAT1 and ACAT2 between humans, mice and monkeys is that, in adult human liver (including hepatocytes and bile duct cells), the major enzyme is ACAT1, rather than ACAT2. There is compelling evidence implicating a role for ACAT1 in macrophage foam-cell formation, and for ACAT2 in intestinal cholesterol absorption. However, further studies at the biochemical and cell biological levels are needed in order to clarify the functional roles of ACAT1 and ACAT2 in the VLDL or chylomicron synthesis/assembly process.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Role of Niemann-Pick type C1 protein in intracellular trafficking of low density lipoprotein-derived cholesterol.

Jonathan C. Cruz; Shigeki Sugii; Chunjiang Yu; Ta-Yuan Chang

Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) is a disease that affects intracellular cholesterol-trafficking pathways. By cloning the hamster ortholog of NPC1, we identified the molecular lesions in two independently isolated Chinese hamster ovary cell mutants, CT60 and CT43. Both mutants lead to premature translational terminations of the NPC1 protein. Transfecting hamster NPC1cDNA complemented the defects of the mutants. Investigation of the CT mutants, their parental cells, and an NPC1-stable transfectant allow us to present evidence that NPC1 is involved in a post-plasma membrane cholesterol-trafficking pathway. We found that the initial movement of low density lipoprotein (LDL)-derived cholesterol to the plasma membrane (PM) did not require NPC1. After reaching the PM and subsequent internalization, however, cholesterol trafficking back to the PM did involve NPC1. Both LDL-derived cholesterol and cholesterol originating from the PM accumulated in a dense, intracellular compartment in the CT mutants. Cholesterol movement from this compartment to the PM or endoplasmic reticulum was defective in the CT mutants. Our results functionally distinguish the dense, intracellular compartment from the early endocytic hydrolytic organelle and imply that NPC1 is involved in sorting cholesterol from the intracellular compartment back to the PM or to the endoplasmic reticulum.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1998

Expression of ACAT-1 Protein in Human Atherosclerotic Lesions and Cultured Human Monocytes-Macrophages

Akira Miyazaki; Naomi Sakashita; Oneil Lee; Kiyoshi Takahashi; Seikoh Horiuchi; Hideki Hakamata; Peter M. Morganelli; Catherine C. Y. Chang; Ta-Yuan Chang

The acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) gene was first cloned in 1993 (Chang et al, J Biol Chem. 1993;268:20747-20755; designated ACAT-1). Using affinity-purified antibodies raised against the N-terminal portion of human ACAT-1 protein, we performed immunohistochemical localization studies and showed that the ACAT-1 protein was highly expressed in atherosclerotic lesions of the human aorta. We also performed cell-specific localization studies using double immunostaining and showed that ACAT-1 was predominantly expressed in macrophages but not in smooth muscle cells. We then used a cell culture system in vitro to monitor the ACAT-1 expression in differentiating monocytes-macrophages. The ACAT-1 protein content increased by up to 10-fold when monocytes spontaneously differentiated into macrophages. This increase occurred within the first 2 days of culturing the monocytes and reached a plateau level within 4 days of culturing, indicating that the increase in ACAT-1 protein content is an early event during the monocyte differentiation process. The ACAT-1 protein expressed in the differentiating monocytes-macrophages was shown to be active by enzyme assay in vitro. The high levels of ACAT-1 present in macrophages maintained in culture can explain the high ACAT-1 contents found in atherosclerotic lesions. Our results thus support the idea that ACAT-1 plays an important role in differentiating monocytes and in forming macrophage foam cells during the development of human atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Niemann-Pick Type C Disease and Intracellular Cholesterol Trafficking

Ta-Yuan Chang; Patrick C. Reid; Shigeki Sugii; Nobutaka Ohgami; Jonathan C. Cruz; Catherine C. Y. Chang

Ta-Yuan Chang‡§, Patrick C. Reid¶, Shigeki Sugii , Nobutaka Ohgami‡, Jonathan C. Cruz**, and Catherine C. Y. Chang‡ From the ‡Department of Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, ¶Department of Molecular Biology and Medicine, RCAST, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 153-8904, Japan, Gene Expression Laboratory, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037, and **Department of Pathology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995

Tissue-specific Expression and Cholesterol Regulation of Acylcoenzyme A:Cholesterol Acyltransferase (ACAT) in Mice MOLECULAR CLONING OF MOUSE ACAT cDNA, CHROMOSOMAL LOCALIZATION, AND REGULATION OF ACAT IN VIVO AND IN VITRO

Patricia J. Uelmen; Kazuhiro Oka; Merry Sullivan; Catherine C. Y. Chang; Ta-Yuan Chang; Lawrence Chan

Acyl-coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) catalyzes the esterification of cholesterol with long chain fatty acids and is believed to play an important part in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. To facilitate the study of ACATs role in this process, we have used the human ACAT K1 clone previously described (Chang, C. C. Y., Huh, H. Y., Cadigan, K. M., and Chang, T. Y.(1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 20747-20755) to isolate mouse ACAT cDNA from a liver cDNA library. The 3.7-kilobase cDNA clone isolated contains a 1620-base pair open reading frame which encodes a protein of 540 amino acids. The predicted mouse ACAT protein is 87% identical to the protein product of human ACAT K1 and shares many of the same secondary structural features, including two transmembrane domains, a leucine heptad motif consistent with dimer or multimer formation, and five regions homologous to the “signature sequences” found in other enzymes that catalyze acyl adenylation followed by acyl thioester formation and acyl transfer. Using the cDNA as a hybridization probe, we mapped the gene encoding mouse ACAT to chromosome 1 in a region syntenic to human chromosome 1 where the ACAT gene is located. Northern blot analysis and RNase protection assays of mouse tissues revealed that ACAT mRNA is expressed most highly in the adrenal gland, ovary, and preputial gland and is least abundant in skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, heart, and brain. To study the dietary regulation of ACAT mRNA expression in mouse tissues, we fed C57BL/6J mice a high-fat, high-cholesterol (HF/HC) atherogenic diet for 3 weeks and measured ACAT mRNA levels in various tissues by RNase protection. The HF/HC diet had little effect on ACAT mRNA levels in the small intestine, aorta, adrenal, or peritoneal macrophages, whereas hepatic ACAT mRNA levels were doubled in mice fed the atherogenic diet. ACAT activity in liver microsomes was similarly increased in cholesterol-fed mice, suggesting that mouse ACAT is regulated at least in part at the level of mRNA abundance. Additionally, a significant positive correlation was observed between ACAT activity and microsomal free cholesterol levels in chow- and cholesterol-fed mice, supporting the concept of cholesterol availability as a regulator of ACAT. To further investigate the regulation of ACAT activity under controlled conditions, ACAT-deficient Chinese hamster ovary cells were stably transfected with the mouse ACAT cDNA clone driven by a cytomegalovirus promoter. Two transfected Chinese hamster ovary cell lines that expressed the mouse ACAT transgene regained the ability to esterify cholesterol. Cholesterol esterification activity in both of these cell lines was further increased by exposure of these cells to low density lipoprotein. Thus we have demonstrated that mouse ACAT expression in vivo and in vitro is regulated by at least two mechanisms: control of mRNA abundance and post-transcriptional regulation of the enzyme activity, probably by cholesterol availability.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

ACAT1 gene ablation increases 24(S)-hydroxycholesterol content in the brain and ameliorates amyloid pathology in mice with AD

Elena Y. Bryleva; Maximillian A. Rogers; Catherine C. Y. Chang; Floyd Buen; Brent T. Harris; Estelle Rousselet; Nabil G. Seidah; Salvatore Oddo; Frank M. LaFerla; Thomas A. Spencer; William F. Hickey; Ta-Yuan Chang

Cholesterol metabolism has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases, including the abnormal accumulation of amyloid-β, one of the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer disease (AD). Acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferases (ACAT1 and ACAT2) are two enzymes that convert free cholesterol to cholesteryl esters. ACAT inhibitors have recently emerged as promising drug candidates for AD therapy. However, how ACAT inhibitors act in the brain has so far remained unclear. Here we show that ACAT1 is the major functional isoenzyme in the mouse brain. ACAT1 gene ablation (A1−) in triple transgenic (i.e., 3XTg-AD) mice leads to more than 60% reduction in full-length human APPswe as well as its proteolytic fragments, and ameliorates cognitive deficits. At 4 months of age, A1− causes a 32% content increase in 24-hydroxycholesterol (24SOH), the major oxysterol in the brain. It also causes a 65% protein content decrease in HMG-CoA reductase (HMGR) and a 28% decrease in sterol synthesis rate in AD mouse brains. In hippocampal neurons, A1− causes an increase in the 24SOH synthesis rate; treating hippocampal neuronal cells with 24SOH causes rapid declines in hAPP and in HMGR protein levels. A model is provided to explain our findings: in neurons, A1− causes increases in cholesterol and 24SOH contents in the endoplasmic reticulum, which cause reductions in hAPP and HMGR protein contents and lead to amelioration of amyloid pathology. Our study supports the potential of ACAT1 as a therapeutic target for treating certain forms of AD.


Nature | 2016

Potentiating the antitumour response of CD8+ T cells by modulating cholesterol metabolism

Wei Yang; Yibing Bai; Ying Xiong; Jin Zhang; Shuokai Chen; Xiaojun Zheng; Xiangbo Meng; L. Li; Jing Wang; Chenguang Xu; Chengsong Yan; Li-Juan Wang; Catharine C.Y. Chang; Ta-Yuan Chang; Ti Zhang; Penghui Zhou; Bao-Liang Song; Wanli Liu; Shao Cong Sun; Xiaolong Liu; Bo-Liang Li; Chenqi Xu

CD8+ T cells have a central role in antitumour immunity, but their activity is suppressed in the tumour microenvironment. Reactivating the cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells is of great clinical interest in cancer immunotherapy. Here we report a new mechanism by which the antitumour response of mouse CD8+ T cells can be potentiated by modulating cholesterol metabolism. Inhibiting cholesterol esterification in T cells by genetic ablation or pharmacological inhibition of ACAT1, a key cholesterol esterification enzyme, led to potentiated effector function and enhanced proliferation of CD8+ but not CD4+ T cells. This is due to the increase in the plasma membrane cholesterol level of CD8+ T cells, which causes enhanced T-cell receptor clustering and signalling as well as more efficient formation of the immunological synapse. ACAT1-deficient CD8+ T cells were better than wild-type CD8+ T cells at controlling melanoma growth and metastasis in mice. We used the ACAT inhibitor avasimibe, which was previously tested in clinical trials for treating atherosclerosis and showed a good human safety profile, to treat melanoma in mice and observed a good antitumour effect. A combined therapy of avasimibe plus an anti-PD-1 antibody showed better efficacy than monotherapies in controlling tumour progression. ACAT1, an established target for atherosclerosis, is therefore also a potential target for cancer immunotherapy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Fate of Endogenously Synthesized Cholesterol in Niemann-Pick Type C1 Cells

Jonathan C. Cruz; Ta-Yuan Chang

Mammalian cells obtain cholesterol via two pathways: endogenous synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum and exogenous sources mainly through the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor pathway. We performed pulse-chase experiments to monitor the fate of endogenously synthesized cholesterol and showed that, after reaching the plasma membrane from the endoplasmic reticulum, the newly synthesized cholesterol eventually accumulates in an internal compartment in Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) cells. Thus, the ultimate fate of endogenously synthesized cholesterol in NPC1 cells is the same as LDL-derived cholesterol. However, the time required for endogenous cholesterol to accumulate internally is much slower than LDL-derived cholesterol. Different pathways thus govern the post-plasma membrane trafficking of endogenous cholesterol and LDL-derived cholesterol to the internal compartment. Results using the inhibitorN-butyldeoxynojirimycin, which depletes cellular complex glycosphingolipids, demonstrates that the cholesterol trafficking defect in NPC1 cells is not caused by ganglioside accumulation. The ultimate cause of death in NPC disease is progressive neurological deterioration in the central nervous system, where the major source of cholesterol is derived from endogenous synthesis. Our current study provides a plausible link between defects in intracellular trafficking of endogenous cholesterol and the etiology of Niemann-Pick type C disease.

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Bo-Liang Li

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Shigeki Sugii

National University of Singapore

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Jia Chen

ShanghaiTech University

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