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Dive into the research topics where Terhi Vihervaara is active.

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Featured researches published by Terhi Vihervaara.


PLOS ONE | 2011

OSBP-Related Protein 8 (ORP8) Regulates Plasma and Liver Tissue Lipid Levels and Interacts with the Nucleoporin Nup62

Tianhong Zhou; Shiqian Li; Wenbin Zhong; Terhi Vihervaara; Olivier Béaslas; Julia Perttilä; Wei Luo; Yingliang Jiang; Markku Lehto; Vesa M. Olkkonen; Daoguang Yan

We earlier identified OSBP-related protein 8 (ORP8) as an endoplasmic reticulum oxysterol-binding protein implicated in cellular lipid homeostasis. We now investigated its action in hepatic cells in vivo and in vitro. Adenoviral overexpression of ORP8 in mouse liver induced a decrease of cholesterol, phospholipids, and triglycerides in serum (−34%, −26%, −37%, respectively) and liver tissue (−40%, −12%, −24%), coinciding with reduction of nuclear (n)SREBP-1 and -2 and mRNA levels of their target genes. Consistently, excess ORP8 reduced nSREBPs in HuH7 cells, and ORP8 overexpression or silencing by RNA interference moderately suppressed or induced the expression of SREBP-1 and SREBP-2 target genes, respectively. In accordance, cholesterol biosynthesis was reduced by ORP8 overexpression and enhanced by ORP8 silencing in [3H]acetate pulse-labeling experiments. ORP8, previously shown to bind 25-hydroxycholesterol, was now shown to bind also cholesterol in vitro. Yeast two-hybrid, bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC), and co-immunoprecipitation analyses revealed the nuclear pore component Nup62 as an interaction partner of ORP8. Co-localization of ORP8 and Nup62 at the nuclear envelope was demonstrated by BiFC and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. Furthermore, the impact of overexpressed ORP8 on nSREBPs and their target mRNAs was inhibited in cells depleted of Nup62. Our results reveal that ORP8 has the capacity to modulate lipid homeostasis and SREBP activity, probably through an indirect mechanism, and provide clues of an entirely new mode of ORP action.


Toxicological Sciences | 2016

Effects of Cigarette Smoke, Cessation, and Switching to Two Heat-Not-Burn Tobacco Products on Lung Lipid Metabolism in C57BL/6 and Apoe−/− Mice—An Integrative Systems Toxicology Analysis

Bjoern Titz; Stéphanie Boué; Blaine Phillips; Marja Talikka; Terhi Vihervaara; Thomas Schneider; Catherine Nury; Ashraf Elamin; Emmanuel Guedj; Michael J. Peck; Walter K. Schlage; Maciej Cabanski; Patrice Leroy; Gregory Vuillaume; Florian Martin; Nikolai V. Ivanov; Emilija Veljkovic; Kim Ekroos; Reijo Laaksonen; Patrick Vanscheeuwijck; Manuel C. Peitsch; Julia Hoeng

The impact of cigarette smoke (CS), a major cause of lung diseases, on the composition and metabolism of lung lipids is incompletely understood. Here, we integrated quantitative lipidomics and proteomics to investigate exposure effects on lung lipid metabolism in a C57BL/6 and an Apolipoprotein E-deficient (Apoe−/−) mouse study. In these studies, mice were exposed to high concentrations of 3R4F reference CS, aerosol from potential modified risk tobacco products (MRTPs) or filtered air (Sham) for up to 8 months. The 2 assessed MRTPs, the prototypical MRTP for C57BL/6 mice and the Tobacco Heating System 2.2 for Apoe−/− mice, utilize “heat-not-burn” technologies and were each matched in nicotine concentrations to the 3R4F CS. After 2 months of CS exposure, some groups were either switched to the MRTP or underwent cessation. In both mouse strains, CS strongly affected several categories of lung lipids and lipid-related proteins. Candidate surfactant lipids, surfactant proteins, and surfactant metabolizing proteins were increased. Inflammatory eicosanoids, their metabolic enzymes, and several ceramide classes were elevated. Overall, CS induced a coordinated lipid response controlled by transcription regulators such as SREBP proteins and supported by other metabolic adaptations. In contrast, most of these changes were absent in the mice exposed to the potential MRTPs, in the cessation group, and the switching group. Our findings demonstrate the complex biological response of the lungs to CS exposure and support the benefits of cessation or switching to a heat-not-burn product using a design such as those employed in this study.


Experimental Cell Research | 2012

Silencing of OSBP-related protein 8 (ORP8) modifies the macrophage transcriptome, nucleoporin p62 distribution, and migration capacity.

Olivier Béaslas; Terhi Vihervaara; Jiwei Li; Pirkka-Pekka Laurila; Daoguang Yan; Vesa M. Olkkonen

ORP8 is an oxysterol/cholesterol binding protein anchored to the endoplasmic reticulum and the nuclear envelope, and is abundantly expressed in the macrophage. We created and characterized mouse RAW264.7 macrophages with ORP8 stably silenced using shRNA lentiviruses. A microarray transcriptome and gene ontology pathway analysis revealed significant alterations in several nuclear pathways and ones associated with centrosome and microtubule organization. ORP8 knockdown resulted in increased expression and altered subcellular distribution of an interaction partner of ORP8, nucleoporin NUP62, with an intranuclear localization aspect and association with cytoplasmic vesicular structures and lamellipodial edges of the cells. Moreover, ORP8 silenced cells displayed enhanced migration, and a more pronounced microtubule cytoskeleton than controls expressing a non-targeting shRNA. ORP8 was shown to compete with Exo70 for interaction with NUP62, and NUP62 knockdown abolished the migration enhancement of ORP8-silenced cells, suggesting that the endogenous ORP8 suppresses migration via binding to NUP62. As a conclusion, the present study reveals new, unexpected aspects of ORP8 function in macrophages not directly involving lipid metabolism, but rather associated with nuclear functions, microtubule organization, and migration capacity.


Experimental Cell Research | 2015

OSBP-related protein 3 (ORP3) coupling with VAMP-associated protein A regulates R-Ras activity

Marion Weber-Boyvat; Henriikka Kentala; Johanna Lilja; Terhi Vihervaara; Raisa Hanninen; You Zhou; Johan Peränen; Tuula A. Nyman; Johanna Ivaska; Vesa M. Olkkonen

ORP3 is an R-Ras interacting oxysterol-binding protein homolog that regulates cell adhesion and is overexpressed in several cancers. We investigated here a novel function of ORP3 dependent on its targeting to both the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the plasma membrane (PM). Using biochemical and cell imaging techniques we demonstrate the mechanistic requirements for the subcellular targeting and function of ORP3 in control of R-Ras activity. We show that hyperphosphorylated ORP3 (ORP3-P) selectively interacts with the ER membrane protein VAPA, and ORP3-VAPA complexes are targeted to PM sites via the ORP3 pleckstrin homology (PH) domain. A novel FFAT (two phenylalanines in an acidic tract)-like motif was identified in ORP3; only disruption of both the FFAT-like and canonical FFAT motif abolished the phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) stimulated interaction of ORP3-P with VAPA. Co-expression of ORP3 and VAPA induced R-Ras activation, dependent on the interactions of ORP3 with VAPA and the PM. Consistently, downstream AktS473 phosphorylation and β1-integrin activity were enhanced by ORP3-VAPA. To conclude, phosphorylation of ORP3 controls its association with VAPA. Furthermore, we present evidence that ORP3-VAPA complexes stimulate R-Ras signaling.


Drug Discovery Today | 2014

Lipidomics in drug discovery

Terhi Vihervaara; Matti Suoniemi; Reijo Laaksonen

Lipidomics is a rapidly growing technology that can be used in biomedical research to study disease mechanisms, identify novel disease biomarkers and drug efficacy biomarkers, and reveal off-target effects. Lipidomics can also be used to elucidate the mechanism of action of different drug compounds or as readouts in Mendelian randomization approaches. Furthermore, lipidomics can be utilized to identify deviations in metabolic and/or signaling pathways in different stages of disease. Therefore, as we discuss here, this emerging technology also has a substantial potential in various drug discovery programs.


European Heart Journal | 2018

Susceptibility of low-density lipoprotein particles to aggregate depends on particle lipidome, is modifiable, and associates with future cardiovascular deaths.

Maija Ruuth; Su Duy Nguyen; Terhi Vihervaara; Mika Hilvo; Teemu D. Laajala; Pradeep Kumar Kondadi; Anton Gisterå; Hanna Lähteenmäki; Tiia Kittilä; Jenni Huusko; Matti Uusitupa; Ursula Schwab; Markku J. Savolainen; Juha Sinisalo; Marja-Liisa Lokki; Markku S. Nieminen; Antti Jula; Markus Perola; Seppo Ylä-Herttula; Lawrence L. Rudel; Anssi Öörni; Marc Baumann; Amos Baruch; Reijo Laaksonen; Daniel F.J. Ketelhuth; Tero Aittokallio; Matti Jauhiainen; Reijo Käkelä; Jan Borén; Kevin Jon Williams

Abstract Aims Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles cause atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) through their retention, modification, and accumulation within the arterial intima. High plasma concentrations of LDL drive this disease, but LDL quality may also contribute. Here, we focused on the intrinsic propensity of LDL to aggregate upon modification. We examined whether inter-individual differences in this quality are linked with LDL lipid composition and coronary artery disease (CAD) death, and basic mechanisms for plaque growth and destabilization. Methods and results We developed a novel, reproducible method to assess the susceptibility of LDL particles to aggregate during lipolysis induced ex vivo by human recombinant secretory sphingomyelinase. Among patients with an established CAD, we found that the presence of aggregation-prone LDL was predictive of future cardiovascular deaths, independently of conventional risk factors. Aggregation-prone LDL contained more sphingolipids and less phosphatidylcholines than did aggregation-resistant LDL. Three interventions in animal models to rationally alter LDL composition lowered its susceptibility to aggregate and slowed atherosclerosis. Similar compositional changes induced in humans by PCSK9 inhibition or healthy diet also lowered LDL aggregation susceptibility. Aggregated LDL in vitro activated macrophages and T cells, two key cell types involved in plaque progression and rupture. Conclusion Our results identify the susceptibility of LDL to aggregate as a novel measurable and modifiable factor in the progression of human ASCVD.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2017

Lipidomic profiling of patient-specific iPSC-derived hepatocyte-like cells

Mostafa Kiamehr; Leena E. Viiri; Terhi Vihervaara; Kaisa M. Koistinen; Mika Hilvo; Kim Ekroos; Reijo Käkelä; Katriina Aalto-Setälä

ABSTRACT Hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) differentiated from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) offer an alternative model to primary human hepatocytes to study lipid aberrations. However, the detailed lipid profile of HLCs is yet unknown. In the current study, functional HLCs were differentiated from iPSCs generated from dermal fibroblasts of three individuals by a three-step protocol through the definitive endoderm (DE) stage. In parallel, detailed lipidomic analyses as well as gene expression profiling of a set of lipid-metabolism-related genes were performed during the entire differentiation process from iPSCs to HLCs. Additionally, fatty acid (FA) composition of the cell culture media at different stages was determined. Our results show that major alterations in the molecular species of lipids occurring during DE and early hepatic differentiation stages mainly mirror the quality and quantity of the FAs supplied in culture medium at each stage. Polyunsaturated phospholipids and sphingolipids with a very long FA were produced in the cells at a later stage of differentiation. This work uncovers the previously unknown lipid composition of iPSC-HLCs and its alterations during the differentiation in conjunction with the expression of key lipid-associated genes. Together with biochemical, functional and gene expression measurements, the lipidomic analyses allowed us to improve our understanding of the concerted influence of the exogenous metabolite supply and cellular biosynthesis essential for iPSC-HLC differentiation and function. Importantly, the study describes in detail a cell model that can be applied in exploring, for example, the lipid metabolism involved in the development of fatty liver disease or atherosclerosis. Summary: The lipidome of stem cells is remodelled in response to supplies available in the cell culture media, and as a result of changing expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism, as the cells differentiate and mature towards functional HLCs.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2011

Cytoplasmic oxysterol-binding proteins: sterol sensors or transporters?

Terhi Vihervaara; Maurice Jansen; Riikka-Liisa Uronen; Yuki Ohsaki; Elina Ikonen; Vesa M. Olkkonen


Atherosclerosis | 2015

Plasma concentrations of molecular lipid species in relation to coronary plaque characteristics and cardiovascular outcome: Results of the ATHEROREMO-IVUS study

Jin M. Cheng; Matti Suoniemi; Isabella Kardys; Terhi Vihervaara; Sanneke P.M. de Boer; K. Martijn Akkerhuis; Marko Sysi-Aho; Kim Ekroos; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Rohit M. Oemrawsingh; Evelyn Regar; Wolfgang Koenig; Patrick W. Serruys; Robert-Jan van Geuns; Eric Boersma; Reijo Laaksonen


Biochimie | 2013

Modification of the lipidome in RAW264.7 macrophage subjected to stable silencing of oxysterol-binding proteins.

Terhi Vihervaara; Reijo Käkelä; Gerhard Liebisch; Kirill Tarasov; Gerd Schmitz; Vesa M. Olkkonen

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Vesa M. Olkkonen

Minerva Foundation Institute for Medical Research

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Maija Ruuth

University of Helsinki

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Matti Uusitupa

University of Eastern Finland

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Mika Hilvo

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Ursula Schwab

University of Eastern Finland

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