Tiago C. Alves
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Tiago C. Alves.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Thomas Galbo; Rachel J. Perry; Michael J. Jurczak; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Tiago C. Alves; Mario Kahn; Blas A. Guigni; Julie Serr; Dongyan Zhang; Sanjay Bhanot; Varman T. Samuel; Gerald I. Shulman
Hepatic insulin resistance is a principal component of type 2 diabetes, but the cellular and molecular mechanisms responsible for its pathogenesis remain unknown. Recent studies have suggested that saturated fatty acids induce hepatic insulin resistance through activation of the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR-4) receptor in the liver, which in turn transcriptionally activates hepatic ceramide synthesis leading to inhibition of insulin signaling. In this study, we demonstrate that TLR-4 receptor signaling is not directly required for saturated or unsaturated fat-induced hepatic insulin resistance in both TLR-4 antisense oligonucleotide treated and TLR-4 knockout mice, and that ceramide accumulation is not dependent on TLR-4 signaling or a primary event in hepatic steatosis and impairment of insulin signaling. Further, we show that both saturated and unsaturated fats lead to hepatic accumulation of diacylglycerols, activation of PKCε, and impairment of insulin-stimulated IRS-2 signaling. These data demonstrate that saturated fat-induced insulin resistance is independent of TLR-4 activation and ceramides.
Nature | 2017
Pengchun Yu; Kerstin Wilhelm; Alexandre Dubrac; Joe K. Tung; Tiago C. Alves; Jennifer S. Fang; Yi Xie; Jie Zhu; Zehua Chen; Frederik De Smet; Jiasheng Zhang; Suk-Won Jin; Lele Sun; Hongye Sun; Richard G. Kibbey; Karen K. Hirschi; Nissim Hay; Peter Carmeliet; Thomas Chittenden; Anne Eichmann; Michael Potente; Michael Simons
Blood and lymphatic vasculatures are intimately involved in tissue oxygenation and fluid homeostasis maintenance. Assembly of these vascular networks involves sprouting, migration and proliferation of endothelial cells. Recent studies have suggested that changes in cellular metabolism are important to these processes. Although much is known about vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-dependent regulation of vascular development and metabolism, little is understood about the role of fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) in this context. Here we identify FGF receptor (FGFR) signalling as a critical regulator of vascular development. This is achieved by FGF-dependent control of c-MYC (MYC) expression that, in turn, regulates expression of the glycolytic enzyme hexokinase 2 (HK2). A decrease in HK2 levels in the absence of FGF signalling inputs results in decreased glycolysis, leading to impaired endothelial cell proliferation and migration. Pan-endothelial- and lymphatic-specific Hk2 knockouts phenocopy blood and/or lymphatic vascular defects seen in Fgfr1/Fgfr3 double mutant mice, while HK2 overexpression partly rescues the defects caused by suppression of FGF signalling. Thus, FGF-dependent regulation of endothelial glycolysis is a pivotal process in developmental and adult vascular growth and development.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Romana Stark; Fitsum Guebre-Egziabher; Xiaojian Zhao; Colleen N. Feriod; Jianying Dong; Tiago C. Alves; Simona Ioja; Rebecca L. Pongratz; Sanjay Bhanot; Michael Roden; Gary W. Cline; Gerald I. Shulman; Richard G. Kibbey
Background: PEPCK-M is generally considered irrelevant for glucose production, although gluconeogenesis has never been characterized in its absence. Results: PEPCK-M loss impaired gluconeogenesis from lactate, lowered plasma glucose, insulin, and triglycerides, reduced hepatic glycogen, and increased glycerol turnover. Conclusion: Approximately a third of gluconeogenesis comes from PEPCK-M. Significance: The nutrient-sensitive PEPCK-M has been overlooked and is potentially important for metabolic diseases such as diabetes. Synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) from oxaloacetate is an absolute requirement for gluconeogenesis from mitochondrial substrates. Generally, this reaction has solely been attributed to the cytosolic isoform of PEPCK (PEPCK-C), although loss of the mitochondrial isoform (PEPCK-M) has never been assessed. Despite catalyzing the same reaction, to date the only significant role reported in mammals for the mitochondrial isoform is as a glucose sensor necessary for insulin secretion. We hypothesized that this nutrient-sensing mitochondrial GTP-dependent pathway contributes importantly to gluconeogenesis. PEPCK-M was acutely silenced in gluconeogenic tissues of rats using antisense oligonucleotides both in vivo and in isolated hepatocytes. Silencing PEPCK-M lowers plasma glucose, insulin, and triglycerides, reduces white adipose, and depletes hepatic glycogen, but raises lactate. There is a switch of gluconeogenic substrate preference to glycerol that quantitatively accounts for a third of glucose production. In contrast to the severe mitochondrial deficiency characteristic of PEPCK-C knock-out livers, hepatocytes from PEPCK-M-deficient livers maintained normal oxidative function. Consistent with its predicted role, gluconeogenesis rates from hepatocytes lacking PEPCK-M are severely reduced for lactate, alanine, and glutamine, but not for pyruvate and glycerol. Thus, PEPCK-M has a direct role in fasted and fed glucose homeostasis, and this mitochondrial GTP-dependent pathway should be reconsidered for its involvement in both normal and diabetic metabolism.
Endocrinology | 2012
François R. Jornayvaz; Hui-Young Lee; Michael J. Jurczak; Tiago C. Alves; Fitsum Guebre-Egziabher; Blas A. Guigni; Dongyan Zhang; Varman T. Samuel; J. Enrique Silva; Gerald I. Shulman
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most frequent chronic liver disease in the United States and is strongly associated with hepatic insulin resistance. We examined whether the thyroid hormone receptor-α (Thra) would be a potential therapeutic target to prevent diet-induced NAFLD and insulin resistance. For that purpose, we assessed insulin action in high-fat diet-fed Thra gene knockout (Thra-0/0) and wild-type mice using hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps combined with (3)H/(14)C-labeled glucose to assess basal and insulin-stimulated rates of glucose and fat metabolism. Body composition was assessed by (1)H magnetic resonance spectroscopy and energy expenditure by indirect calorimetry. Relative rates of hepatic glucose and fat oxidation were assessed in vivo using a novel proton-observed carbon-edited nuclear magnetic resonance technique. Thra-0/0 were lighter, leaner, and manifested greater whole-body insulin sensitivity than wild-type mice during the clamp, which could be attributed to increased insulin sensitivity both in liver and peripheral tissues. Increased hepatic insulin sensitivity could be attributed to decreased hepatic diacylglycerol content, resulting in decreased activation of protein kinase Cε and increased insulin signaling. In conclusion, loss of Thra protects mice from high-fat diet-induced hepatic steatosis and hepatic and peripheral insulin resistance. Therefore, thyroid receptor-α inhibition represents a novel pharmacologic target for the treatment of NAFLD, obesity, and type 2 diabetes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Kitt Falk Petersen; Katsutaro Morino; Tiago C. Alves; Richard G. Kibbey; Sylvie Dufour; Saki Sono; Peter S. Yoo; Gary W. Cline; Gerald I. Shulman
Significance Approximately 40% of Americans over the age of 65 suffer from impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes; however, the pathogenesis of aging-associated reductions in glucose metabolism is poorly understood. Aging is associated with muscle insulin resistance, increased intramyocellular fat content, and reductions in rates of muscle mitochondrial activity. To further examine the potential role of age-associated alterations in mitochondrial metabolism, we applied a novel method to assess muscle specific rates of mitochondrial glucose and fat oxidation and demonstrate that aging is also associated with a marked inability of mitochondria to switch from lipid to glucose oxidation on insulin stimulation, which may further contribute to dysregulated glucose and lipid metabolism in the elderly. Previous studies have implicated age-associated reductions in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation activity in skeletal muscle as a predisposing factor for intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) accumulation and muscle insulin resistance (IR) in the elderly. To further investigate potential alterations in muscle mitochondrial function associated with aging, we assessed basal and insulin-stimulated rates of muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase (VPDH) flux relative to citrate synthase flux (VCS) in healthy lean, elderly subjects and healthy young body mass index- and activity-matched subjects. VPDH/VCS flux was assessed from the 13C incorporation from of infused [1-13C] glucose into glutamate [4-13C] relative to alanine [3-13C] assessed by LC-tandem MS in muscle biopsies. Insulin-stimulated rates of muscle glucose uptake were reduced by 25% (P < 0.01) in the elderly subjects and were associated with ∼70% (P < 0.04) increase in IMCL, assessed by 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Basal VPDH/VCS fluxes were similar between the groups (young: 0.20 ± 0.03; elderly: 0.14 ± 0.03) and increased approximately threefold in the young subjects following insulin stimulation. However, this increase was severely blunted in the elderly subjects (young: 0.55 ± 0.04; elderly: 0.18 ± 0.02, P = 0.0002) and was associated with an ∼40% (P = 0.004) reduction in insulin activation of Akt. These results provide new insights into acquired mitochondrial abnormalities associated with aging and demonstrate that age-associated reductions in muscle mitochondrial function and increased IMCL are associated with a marked inability of mitochondria to switch from lipid to glucose oxidation during insulin stimulation.
Hepatology | 2011
Tiago C. Alves; Douglas E. Befroy; Richard G. Kibbey; Mario Kahn; Roberto Codella; Rui A. Carvalho; Kitt Falk Petersen; Gerald I. Shulman
Pyruvate dehydrogenase plays a critical role in the regulation of hepatic glucose and fatty acid oxidation; however, surprisingly little is known about its regulation in vivo. In this study we examined the individual effects of insulin and substrate availability on the regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase flux (VPDH) to tricarboxylic acid flux (VTCA) in livers of awake rats with lipid‐induced hepatic insulin resistance. VPDH/VTCA flux was estimated from the [4‐13C]glutamate/[3‐13C]alanine enrichments in liver extracts and assessed under conditions of fasting and during a hyperinsulinemic‐euglycemic clamp, whereas the effects of increased plasma glucose concentration on VPDH/VTCA flux was assessed during a hyperglycemic clamp in conjunction with infusions of somatostatin and insulin to maintain basal concentrations of insulin. The effects of increases in both glucose and insulin on VPDH/VTCA were examined during a hyperinsulinemic‐hyperglycemic clamp. The effects of chronic lipid‐induced hepatic insulin resistance on this flux were also examined by performing these measurements in rats fed a high‐fat diet for 3 weeks. Using this approach we found that fasting VPDH/VTCA was reduced by 95% in rats with hepatic insulin resistance (from 17.2 ± 1.5% to 1.3 ± 0.7%, P < 0.00001). Surprisingly, neither hyperinsulinemia per se or hyperglycemia per se were sufficient to increase VPDH/VTCA flux. Only under conditions of combined hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia did VPDH/VTCA flux increase (44.6 ± 3.2%, P < 0.0001 versus basal) in low‐fat fed animals but not in rats with chronic lipid‐induced hepatic insulin resistance. Conclusion: These studies demonstrate that the combination of both hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia are required to increase VPDH/VTCA flux in vivo and that this flux is severely diminished in rats with chronic lipid‐induced hepatic insulin resistance. (HEPATOLOGY 2011.)
Cell Metabolism | 2015
Tiago C. Alves; Rebecca L. Pongratz; Xiaojian Zhao; Orlando Yarborough; Sam Sereda; Orian S. Shirihai; Gary W. Cline; Graeme F. Mason; Richard G. Kibbey
Mass isotopomer multi-ordinate spectral analysis (MIMOSA) is a step-wise flux analysis platform to measure discrete glycolytic and mitochondrial metabolic rates. Importantly, direct citrate synthesis rates were obtained by deconvolving the mass spectra generated from [U-(13)C6]-D-glucose labeling for position-specific enrichments of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA, oxaloacetate, and citrate. Comprehensive steady-state and dynamic analyses of key metabolic rates (pyruvate dehydrogenase, β-oxidation, pyruvate carboxylase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, and PEP/pyruvate cycling) were calculated from the position-specific transfer of (13)C from sequential precursors to their products. Important limitations of previous techniques were identified. In INS-1 cells, citrate synthase rates correlated with both insulin secretion and oxygen consumption. Pyruvate carboxylase rates were substantially lower than previously reported but showed the highest fold change in response to glucose stimulation. In conclusion, MIMOSA measures key metabolic rates from the precursor/product position-specific transfer of (13)C-label between metabolites and has broad applicability to any glucose-oxidizing cell.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Whitney H. Brown; Matthew P. Gillum; Hui-Young Lee; Joao Paulo Camporez; Xian-Man Zhang; Jin Kwon Jeong; Tiago C. Alves; Derek M. Erion; Blas A. Guigni; Mario Kahn; Varman T. Samuel; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Sabrina Diano; Gerald I. Shulman
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) knockout mice are prone to excess energy storage and adiposity, whereas mutations in FAAH are associated with obesity in humans. However, the molecular mechanism by which FAAH affects energy expenditure (EE) remains unknown. Here we show that reduced energy expenditure in FAAH−/− mice could be attributed to decreased circulating triiodothyronine and thyroxine concentrations secondary to reduced mRNA expression of both pituitary thyroid-stimulating hormone and hypothalamic thyrotropin-releasing hormone. These reductions in the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis were associated with activation of hypothalamic peroxisome proliferating-activated receptor γ (PPARγ), and increased hypothalamic deiodinase 2 expression. Infusion of NAEs (anandamide and palmitoylethanolamide) recapitulated increases in PPARγ-mediated decreases in EE. FAAH−/− mice were also prone to diet-induced hepatic insulin resistance, which could be attributed to increased hepatic diacylglycerol content and protein kinase Cε activation. Our data indicate that FAAH deletion, and the resulting increases in NAEs, predispose mice to ectopic lipid storage and hepatic insulin resistance by promoting centrally mediated hypothyroidism.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Anila K. Madiraju; Tiago C. Alves; Xiaojian Zhao; Gary W. Cline; Dongyan Zhang; Sanjay Bhanot; Varman T. Samuel; Richard G. Kibbey; Gerald I. Shulman
Significance The CDC projects that by the year 2050 one in three adults will be affected by diabetes in the United States alone. A key feature of type 2 diabetes is insulin resistance, which is associated with ectopic lipid deposition in tissues such as the liver. We have discovered a novel regulatory mechanism in the liver linking protein catabolism and ureagenesis to increased lipid oxidation. By increasing urea production, flux through the enzyme argininosuccinate synthetase is enhanced, leading to activation of AMP-activated protein kinase and increased hepatic fat oxidation. These findings may lead to the development of new drugs designed to reduce fat accumulation in the liver and reverse insulin resistance. A key sensor of cellular energy status, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), interacts allosterically with AMP to maintain an active state. When active, AMPK triggers a metabolic switch, decreasing the activity of anabolic pathways and enhancing catabolic processes such as lipid oxidation to restore the energy balance. Unlike oxidative tissues, in which AMP is generated from adenylate kinase during states of high energy demand, the ornithine cycle enzyme argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) is a principle site of AMP generation in the liver. Here we show that ASS regulates hepatic AMPK, revealing a central role for ureagenesis flux in the regulation of metabolism via AMPK. Treatment of primary rat hepatocytes with amino acids increased gluconeogenesis and ureagenesis and, despite nutrient excess, induced both AMPK and acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) phosphorylation. Antisense oligonucleotide knockdown of hepatic ASS1 expression in vivo decreased liver AMPK activation, phosphorylation of ACC, and plasma β-hydroxybutyrate concentrations. Taken together these studies demonstrate that increased amino acid flux can activate AMPK through increased AMP generated by ASS, thus providing a novel link between protein catabolism, ureagenesis, and hepatic lipid metabolism.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Rachel J. Perry; Candace B. Borders; Gary W. Cline; Xian-Man Zhang; Tiago C. Alves; Kitt Falk Petersen; Douglas L. Rothman; Richard G. Kibbey; Gerald I. Shulman
In mammals, pyruvate kinase (PK) plays a key role in regulating the balance between glycolysis and gluconeogenesis; however, in vivo regulation of PK flux by gluconeogenic hormones and substrates is poorly understood. To this end, we developed a novel NMR-liquid chromatography/tandem-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method to directly assess pyruvate cycling relative to mitochondrial pyruvate metabolism (VPyr-Cyc/VMito) in vivo using [3-13C]lactate as a tracer. Using this approach, VPyr-Cyc/VMito was only 6% in overnight fasted rats. In contrast, when propionate was infused simultaneously at doses previously used as a tracer, it increased VPyr-Cyc/VMito by 20–30-fold, increased hepatic TCA metabolite concentrations 2–3-fold, and increased endogenous glucose production rates by 20–100%. The physiologic stimuli, glucagon and epinephrine, both increased hepatic glucose production, but only glucagon suppressed VPyr-Cyc/VMito. These data show that under fasting conditions, when hepatic gluconeogenesis is stimulated, pyruvate recycling is relatively low in liver compared with VMito flux and that liver metabolism, in particular pyruvate cycling, is sensitive to propionate making it an unsuitable tracer to assess hepatic glycolytic, gluconeogenic, and mitochondrial metabolism in vivo.