Todd Schraw
Yeshiva University
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Featured researches published by Todd Schraw.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007
Zhao V. Wang; Todd Schraw; Ja Young Kim; Tayeba Khan; Michael W. Rajala; Antonia Follenzi; Philipp E. Scherer
ABSTRACT Adiponectin is a secretory protein abundantly secreted from adipocytes. It assembles into a number of different higher-order complexes. Adipocytes maintain tight control over circulating plasma levels, suggesting the existence of a complex, highly regulated biosynthetic pathway. However, the critical mediators of adiponectin maturation within the secretory pathway have not been elucidated. Previously, we found that a significant portion of de novo-synthesized adiponectin is not secreted and retained in adipocytes. Here, we show that there is an abundant pool of properly folded adiponectin in the secretory pathway that is retained through thiol-mediated retention, as judged by the release of adiponectin in response to treatment of adipocytes with reducing agents. Adiponectin is covalently bound to the ER chaperone ERp44. An adiponectin mutant lacking cysteine 39 fails to stably interact with ERp44, demonstrating that this residue is the primary site mediating the covalent interaction. Another ER chaperone, Ero1-Lα, plays a critical role in the release of adiponectin from ERp44. Levels of both of these proteins are highly regulated in adipocytes and are influenced by the metabolic state of the cell. While less critical for the secretion of trimers, these chaperones play a major role in the assembly of higher-order adiponectin complexes. Our data highlight the importance of posttranslational events controlling adiponectin levels and the release of adiponectin from adipocytes. One mechanism for increasing circulating levels of specific adiponectin complexes by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma agonists may be selective upregulation of rate-limiting chaperones.
Endocrinology | 2008
Todd Schraw; Zhao V. Wang; Nils Halberg; Meredith Hawkins; Philipp E. Scherer
Adipocytes release the secretory protein adiponectin in a number of different higher-order complexes. Once synthesized and assembled in the secretory pathway of the adipocyte, these complexes circulate as biochemically distinct and stable entities with little evidence of interchange between the different forms that include a high-molecular-weight (HMW) species, a hexamer (low-molecular-weight form), and a trimeric form of the complexes. Here, we validate a high-resolution gel filtration method that reproducibly separates the three complexes in recombinant adiponectin and adiponectin from human and murine samples. We demonstrate that the HMW form is prominently reduced in male vs. female subjects and in obese, insulin-resistant vs. lean, insulin-sensitive individuals. A direct comparison of human and mouse adiponectin demonstrates that the trimer is generally more abundant in human serum. Furthermore, when the production of adiponectin is reduced, either by obesity or in mice carrying only a single functional allele of the adiponectin locus, then the amount of the HMW form is selectively reduced in circulation. The complex distribution of adiponectin can be regulated in several ways. Both mouse and human HMW adiponectin are very stable under basic conditions but are exquisitely labile under acidic conditions below pH 7. Murine and human adiponectin HMW forms also display differential susceptibility to the presence of calcium in the buffer. A mutant form of adiponectin unable to bind calcium is less susceptible to changes in calcium concentrations. However, the lack of calcium binding results in a destabilization of the structure. Disulfide bond formation (at position C39) is also important for complex formation. A mutant form of adiponectin lacking C39 prominently forms HMW and trimer but not the low-molecular-weight form. Injection of adiponectin with a fluorescent label reveals that over time, the various complexes do not interconvert in vivo. The stability of adiponectin complexes highlights that the production and secretion of these forms from fat cells has a major influence on the circulating levels of each complex.
Diabetes | 2009
Nils Halberg; Todd Schraw; Zhao V. Wang; Ja Young Kim; James Yi; Mark P. Hamilton; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Philipp E. Scherer
OBJECTIVE The adipocyte-derived secretory protein adiponectin has been widely studied and shown to have potent insulin-sensitizing, antiapoptotic, and anti-inflammatory properties. While its biosynthesis is well understood, its fate, once in circulation, is less well established. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Here, we examine the half-life of adiponectin in circulation by tracking fluorescently labeled recombinant adiponectin in the circulation, following it to its final destination in the hepatocyte. RESULTS Despite its abundant presence in plasma, adiponectin is cleared rapidly with a half-life of ∼75 min. A more bioactive version carrying a mutation at cysteine 39 is cleared within minutes. Even though steady-state levels of adiponectin differ between male and female mice, we failed to detect any differences in clearance rates, suggesting that differences in plasma are mostly due to differential production rates. In a metabolically challenged state (high-fat diet exposure or in an ob/ob background), adiponectin levels are reduced in plasma and clearance is significantly prolonged, reflecting a dramatic drop in adiponectin production levels. CONCLUSIONS Combined, these results show a surprisingly rapid turnover of adiponectin with multiple fat pads contributing to the plasma levels of adiponectin and clearance mediated primarily by the liver. It is surprising that despite high-level production and rapid clearance, plasma levels of adiponectin remain remarkably constant.
Diabetes | 2007
Robert K. Semple; Nils Halberg; Keith Burling; Maria A. Soos; Todd Schraw; Jian'an Luan; Elaine Cochran; David B. Dunger; Nicholas J. Wareham; Philipp E. Scherer; Phillip Gorden; Stephen O'Rahilly
Total plasma adiponectin and high–molecular weight (HMW) polymeric adiponectin are strongly positively correlated with insulin sensitivity. However, we have recently reported paradoxical hyperadiponectinemia in patients with severe insulin resistance due to genetically defective insulin receptors. This implies either that the insulin receptor has a critical physiological role in controlling adiponectin production and/or clearance or that constitutive insulin receptor dysfunction influences adiponectin levels through developmental effects. The aim of the current study was to distinguish between these possibilities using a human model of reversible antibody-mediated insulin receptor dysfunction and to refine the previous observations by determining adiponectin complex distribution. Cross-sectional and longitudinal determination of fasting plasma adiponectin and adiponectin complex distribution was undertaken in patients with extreme insulin resistance due to insulin receptor mutations, anti-insulin receptor antibodies (type B insulin resistance), or an undefined cause. Despite extreme insulin resistance, patients with type B insulin resistance (all women; mean age 42 years [range 12–54]) had dramatically elevated total plasma adiponectin compared with the general population (mean 43.0 mg/l [range 31.3–54.2] vs. 8.9 mg/l [1.5–28.5 for BMI <25 kg/m2]), which was accounted for largely by HMW polymers. Hyperadiponectinemia resolved in parallel with reduction of insulin receptor antibodies and clinical resolution of insulin resistance. Although the well-established inverse relationship between plasma insulin and adiponectin levels may, in part, reflect positive effects of adiponectin on insulin sensitivity, these data suggest that the magnitude of the effect of insulin action on adiponectin levels may have been underestimated.
Diabetes | 2008
Zhao V. Wang; James Mu; Todd Schraw; Laurent Gautron; Joel K. Elmquist; Bei B. Zhang; Michael Brownlee; Philipp E. Scherer
OBJECTIVE—Islet transplantations have been performed clinically, but their practical applications are limited. An extensive effort has been made toward the identification of pancreatic β-cell stem cells that has yielded many insights to date, yet targeted reconstitution of β-cell mass remains elusive. Here, we present a mouse model for inducible and reversible ablation of pancreatic β-cells named the PANIC-ATTAC (pancreatic islet β-cell apoptosis through targeted activation of caspase 8) mouse. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We efficiently induce β-cell death through apoptosis and concomitant hyperglycemia by administration of a chemical dimerizer to the transgenic mice. In contrast to animals administered streptozotocin, the diabetes phenotype and β-cell loss are fully reversible in the PANIC-ATTAC mice, and we find significant β-cell recovery with normalization of glucose levels after 2 months. RESULTS—The rate of recovery can be enhanced by various pharmacological interventions with agents acting on the glucagon-like peptide 1 axis and agonists of peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor-γ. During recovery, we find an increased population of GLUT2+/insulin− cells in the islets of PANIC-ATTAC mice, which may represent a novel pool of potential β-cell precursors. CONCLUSIONS—The PANIC-ATTAC mouse may be used as an animal model of inducible and reversible β-cell ablation and therefore has applications in many areas of diabetes research that include identification of β-cell precursors, evaluation of glucotoxicity effects in diabetes, and examination of pharmacological interventions.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007
Ja Young Kim; Esther Van De Wall; Mathieu Laplante; Anthony Azzara; Maria E. Trujillo; Susanna M. Hofmann; Todd Schraw; Jorge L. Durand; Hua Li; Guangyu Li; Linda A. Jelicks; Mark F. Mehler; David Y. Hui; Yves Deshaies; Gerald I. Shulman; Gary J. Schwartz; Philipp E. Scherer
Diabetes Care | 2007
Miriam Cnop; Josep Vidal; Rebecca L. Hull; Kristina M. Utzschneider; Darcy B. Carr; Todd Schraw; Philipp E. Scherer; Edward J. Boyko; Wilfred Y. Fujimoto; Steven E. Kahn
Clinical Chemistry | 2007
Madhur K. Sinha; Traci Songer; Qiang Xiao; John H Sloan; Jin Wang; Shaoquen Ji; William E. Alborn; Randy A. Davis; Michael M. Swarbrick; Kimber L. Stanhope; Bruce M. Wolfe; Peter J. Havel; Todd Schraw; Robert J. Konrad; Philipp E. Scherer; Jehangir Mistry
Archive | 2009
Adiponectin Halberg; Todd Schraw; Zhao V. Wang; Ja-Young Kim; James Yi; Mark P. Hamilton; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Philipp E. Scherer
Society for Endocrinology BES | 2007
Christine M. Kusminski; Katarina Kos; Todd Schraw; J. P. O'Hare; Rexford S. Ahima; Philipp E. Scherer; S. Kumar; Philip G. McTernan