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Featured researches published by Yunying Hu.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Lipoprotein lipase (LpL) on the surface of cardiomyocytes increases lipid uptake and produces a cardiomyopathy

Hiroaki Yagyu; Guangping Chen; Masayoshi Yokoyama; Kumiko Hirata; Ayanna S. Augustus; Yuko Kako; Toru Seo; Yunying Hu; E. Peer Lutz; Martin Merkel; André Bensadoun; Shunichi Homma; Ira J. Goldberg

Lipoprotein lipase is the principal enzyme that hydrolyzes circulating triglycerides and liberates free fatty acids that can be used as energy by cardiac muscle. Although lipoprotein lipase is expressed by and is found on the surface of cardiomyocytes, its transfer to the luminal surface of endothelial cells is thought to be required for lipoprotein lipase actions. To study whether nontransferable lipoprotein lipase has physiological actions, we placed an alpha-myosin heavy-chain promoter upstream of a human lipoprotein lipase minigene construct with a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchoring sequence on the carboxyl terminal region. Hearts of transgenic mice expressed the altered lipoprotein lipase, and the protein localized to the surface of cardiomyocytes. Hearts, but not postheparin plasma, of these mice contained human lipoprotein lipase activity. More lipid accumulated in hearts expressing the transgene; the myocytes were enlarged and exhibited abnormal architecture. Hearts of transgenic mice were dilated, and left ventricular systolic function was impaired. Thus, lipoprotein lipase expressed on the surface of cardiomyocytes can increase lipid uptake and produce cardiomyopathy.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Human aldose reductase expression accelerates diabetic atherosclerosis in transgenic mice

Reeba K. Vikramadithyan; Yunying Hu; Hye-Lim Noh; Chien-Ping Liang; Kellie Hallam; Alan R. Tall; Ravichandran Ramasamy; Ira J. Goldberg

Direct evidence that hyperglycemia, rather than concomitant increases in known risk factors, induces atherosclerosis is lacking. Most diabetic mice do not exhibit a higher degree of atherosclerosis unless the development of diabetes is associated with more severe hyperlipidemia. We hypothesized that normal mice were deficient in a gene that accelerated atherosclerosis with diabetes. The gene encoding aldose reductase (AR), an enzyme that mediates the generation of toxic products from glucose, is expressed at low levels in murine compared with human tissues. Mice in which diabetes was induced through streptozotocin (STZ) treatment, but not nondiabetic mice, expressing human AR (hAR) crossed with LDL receptor-deficient (Ldlr-/-) C57BL/6 male mice had increased aortic atherosclerosis. Diabetic hAR-expressing heterozygous LDL receptor-knockout mice (Ldlr+/-) fed a cholesterol/cholic acid-containing diet also had increased aortic lesion size. Lesion area at the aortic root was increased by STZ treatment alone but was further increased by hAR expression. Macrophages from hAR-transgenic mice expressed more scavenger receptors and had greater accumulation of modified lipoproteins than macrophages from nontransgenic mice. Expression of genes that regulate regeneration of glutathione was reduced in the hAR-expressing aortas. Thus, hAR increases atherosclerosis in diabetic mice. Inhibitors of AR or other enzymes that mediate glucose toxicity could be useful in the treatment of diabetic atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Chylomicron- and VLDL-derived Lipids Enter the Heart through Different Pathways IN VIVO EVIDENCE FOR RECEPTOR- AND NON-RECEPTOR-MEDIATED FATTY ACID UPTAKE

Kalyani G. Bharadwaj; Yaeko Hiyama; Yunying Hu; Lesley Ann Huggins; Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan; Nada A. Abumrad; Gerald I. Shulman; William S. Blaner; Ira J. Goldberg

Lipids circulate in the blood in association with plasma lipoproteins and enter the tissues either after hydrolysis or as non-hydrolyzable lipid esters. We studied cardiac lipids, lipoprotein lipid uptake, and gene expression in heart-specific lipoprotein lipase (LpL) knock-out (hLpL0), CD36 knock-out (Cd36−/−), and double knock-out (hLpL0/Cd36−/−-DKO) mice. Loss of either LpL or CD36 led to a significant reduction in heart total fatty acyl-CoA (control, 99.5 ± 3.8; hLpL0, 36.2 ± 3.5; Cd36−/−, 57.7 ± 5.5 nmol/g, p < 0.05) and an additive effect was observed in the DKO (20.2 ± 1.4 nmol/g, p < 0.05). Myocardial VLDL-triglyceride (TG) uptake was reduced in the hLpL0 (31 ± 6%) and Cd36−/− (47 ± 4%) mice with an additive reduction in the DKO (64 ± 5%) compared with control. However, LpL but not CD36 deficiency decreased VLDL-cholesteryl ester uptake. Endogenously labeled mouse chylomicrons were produced by tamoxifen treatment of β-actin-MerCreMer/LpLflox/flox mice. Induced loss of LpL increased TG levels >10-fold and reduced HDL by >50%. After injection of these labeled chylomicrons in the different mice, chylomicron TG uptake was reduced by ∼70% and retinyl ester by ∼50% in hLpL0 hearts. Loss of CD36 did not alter either chylomicron TG or retinyl ester uptake. LpL loss did not affect uptake of remnant lipoproteins from ApoE knock-out mice. Our data are consistent with two pathways for fatty acid uptake; a CD36 process for VLDL-derived fatty acid and a non-CD36 process for chylomicron-derived fatty acid uptake. In addition, our data show that lipolysis is involved in uptake of core lipids from TG-rich lipoproteins.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2011

DGAT1 deficiency decreases PPAR expression and does not lead to lipotoxicity in cardiac and skeletal muscle

Li Liu; Shuiqing Yu; Raffay Khan; Gene P. Ables; Kalyani G. Bharadwaj; Yunying Hu; Lesley Ann Huggins; Jan W. Eriksson; Linda K. Buckett; Andrew V. Turnbull; Henry N. Ginsberg; William S. Blaner; Li-Shin Huang; Ira J. Goldberg

Diacylglycerol (DAG) acyl transferase 1 (Dgat1) knockout (−/−) mice are resistant to high-fat-induced obesity and insulin resistance, but the reasons are unclear. Dgat1−/− mice had reduced mRNA levels of all three Ppar genes and genes involved in fatty acid oxidation in the myocardium of Dgat1−/− mice. Although DGAT1 converts DAG to triglyceride (TG), tissue levels of DAG were not increased in Dgat1−/− mice. Hearts of chow-diet Dgat1−/− mice were larger than those of wild-type (WT) mice, but cardiac function was normal. Skeletal muscles from Dgat1−/− mice were also larger. Muscle hypertrophy factors phospho-AKT and phospho-mTOR were increased in Dgat1−/− cardiac and skeletal muscle. In contrast to muscle, liver from Dgat1−/− mice had no reduction in mRNA levels of genes mediating fatty acid oxidation. Glucose uptake was increased in cardiac and skeletal muscle in Dgat1−/− mice. Treatment with an inhibitor specific for DGAT1 led to similarly striking reductions in mRNA levels of genes mediating fatty acid oxidation in cardiac and skeletal muscle. These changes were reproduced in cultured myocytes with the DGAT1 inhibitor, which also blocked the increase in mRNA levels of Ppar genes and their targets induced by palmitic acid. Thus, loss of DGAT1 activity in muscles decreases mRNA levels of genes involved in lipid uptake and oxidation.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Cardiomyocyte lipids impair β-adrenergic receptor function via PKC activation.

Konstantinos Drosatos; Kalyani G. Bharadwaj; Anastasios Lymperopoulos; Shota Ikeda; Raffay Khan; Yunying Hu; Rajiv Agarwal; Shuiqing Yu; Hongfeng Jiang; Susan F. Steinberg; William S. Blaner; Walter J. Koch; Ira J. Goldberg

Normal hearts have increased contractility in response to catecholamines. Because several lipids activate PKCs, we hypothesized that excess cellular lipids would inhibit cardiomyocyte responsiveness to adrenergic stimuli. Cardiomyocytes treated with saturated free fatty acids, ceramide, and diacylglycerol had reduced cellular cAMP response to isoproterenol. This was associated with increased PKC activation and reduction of β-adrenergic receptor (β-AR) density. Pharmacological and genetic PKC inhibition prevented both palmitate-induced β-AR insensitivity and the accompanying reduction in cell surface β-ARs. Mice with excess lipid uptake due to either cardiac-specific overexpression of anchored lipoprotein lipase, PPARγ, or acyl-CoA synthetase-1 or high-fat diet showed reduced inotropic responsiveness to dobutamine. This was associated with activation of protein kinase C (PKC)α or PKCδ. Thus, several lipids that are increased in the setting of lipotoxicity can produce abnormalities in β-AR responsiveness. This can be attributed to PKC activation and reduced β-AR levels.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2006

Addition of dietary fat to cholesterol in the diets of LDL receptor knockout mice: effects on plasma insulin, lipoproteins, and atherosclerosis

Lan Wu; Reeba K. Vikramadithyan; Shuiqing Yu; Clara Pau; Yunying Hu; Ira J. Goldberg; Hayes M. Dansky

The factors underlying cardiovascular risk in patients with diabetes have not been clearly elucidated. Efforts to study this in mice have been hindered because the usual atherogenic diets that contain fat and cholesterol also lead to obesity and insulin resistance. We compared plasma glucose, insulin, and atherosclerotic lesion formation in LDL receptor knockout (Ldlr−/−) mice fed diets with varying fat and cholesterol content that induced similar lipoprotein profiles. Ldlr−/− mice fed a high-fat diet developed obesity, mild hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, and hypertriglyceridemia. Quantitative and qualitative assessments of atherosclerosis were unchanged in diabetic Ldlr−/− mice fed a high-fat diet compared with lean nondiabetic control mice after 20 weeks of diet. Although one group of mice fed diets for 40 weeks had larger lesions at the aortic root, this was associated with a more atherogenic lipoprotein profile. The presence of a human aldose reductase transgene had no effect on atherosclerosis in fat-fed Ldlr−/− mice with mild diabetes. Our data suggest that when lipoprotein profiles are similar, addition of fat to a cholesterol-rich diet does not increase atherosclerotic lesion formation in Ldlr−/− mice.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2007

Effects of lipoprotein lipase and statins on cholesterol uptake into heart and skeletal muscle

Masayoshi Yokoyama; Toru Seo; Tae-Sik Park; Hiroaki Yagyu; Yunying Hu; Ni Huiping Son; Ayanna S. Augustus; Reeba K. Vikramadithyan; Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan; Leslie K. Pulawa; Robert H. Eckel; Ira J. Goldberg

Regulation of cholesterol metabolism in cultured cells and in the liver is dependent on actions of the LDL receptor. However, nonhepatic tissues have multiple pathways of cholesterol uptake. One possible pathway is mediated by LPL, an enzyme that primarily hydrolyzes plasma triglyceride into fatty acids. In this study, LDL uptake and tissue cholesterol levels in heart and skeletal muscle of wild-type and transgenic mice with alterations in LPL expression were assessed. Overexpression of a myocyte-anchored form of LPL in heart muscle led to increased uptake of LDL and greater heart cholesterol levels. Loss of LDL receptors did not alter LDL uptake into heart or skeletal muscle. To induce LDL receptors, mice were treated with simvastatin. Statin treatment increased LDL receptor expression and LDL uptake by liver and skeletal muscle but not heart muscle. Plasma creatinine phosphokinase as well as muscle mitochondria, cholesterol, and lipid droplet levels were increased in statin-treated mice overexpressing LPL in skeletal muscle. Thus, pathways affecting cholesterol balance in heart and skeletal muscle differ.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2011

Human Aldose Reductase Expression Accelerates Atherosclerosis in Diabetic Apolipoprotein E−/− Mice

Srinivasan Vedantham; Hye-Lim Noh; Radha Ananthakrishnan; Ni Son; Kellie Hallam; Yunying Hu; Shuiquing Yu; Xiaoping Shen; Rosa Rosario; Yan Lu; Thyyar M. Ravindranath; Konstantinos Drosatos; Lesley Ann Huggins; Ann Marie Schmidt; Ira J. Goldberg; Ravichandran Ramasamy

Objective—There are several pathways that mediate the aberrant metabolism of glucose and that might induce greater vascular damage in the setting of diabetes. The polyol pathway mediated by aldose reductase (AR) has been postulated to be one such pathway. However, it has been reported that AR reduces toxic lipid aldehydes and, under some circumstances, might be antiatherogenic. Methods and Results—Atherosclerosis development was quantified in 2 lines of transgenic mice expressing human AR (hAR) crossed on the apolipoprotein E knockout background. The transgenes were used to increase the normally low levels of this enzyme in wild-type mice. Both generalized hAR overexpression and hAR expression via the Tie 2 promoter increased lesion size in streptozotocin diabetic mice. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of AR reduced lesion size. Conclusion—Although in some settings AR expression might reduce levels of toxic aldehydes, transgenic expression of this enzyme within the artery wall leads to greater atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Cardiomyocyte Specific Deficiency of Serine Palmitoyltransferase Subunit 2 Reduces Ceramide but Leads to Cardiac Dysfunction

Su-Yeon Lee; Jung Ran Kim; Yunying Hu; Raffay Khan; Su-Jung Kim; Kalyani G. Bharadwaj; Mercy M. Davidson; Cheol-Soo Choi; Kyong-Oh Shin; Yong-Moon Lee; Woo-Jin Park; In Sun Park; Xian-Cheng Jiang; Ira J. Goldberg; Tae-Sik Park

Background: The importance of de novo ceramide biosynthesis in maintaining cardiac function is unknown. Results: Deletion of serine palmitoyltransferase subunit Sptlc2 reduced cardiac ceramide and caused cardiac dysfunction associated with activation of ER stress. Conclusion: Reduced ceramide content by Sptlc2 deficiency does not protect against lipid toxicity associated with increased saturated acyl CoAs. Significance: Development of disease by lipotoxicity is caused by a number of changes in lipidome. The role of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) and de novo ceramide biosynthesis in cardiac ceramide and sphingomyelin metabolism is unclear. To determine whether the de novo synthetic pathways, rather than ceramide uptake from circulating lipoproteins, is important for heart ceramide levels, we created cardiomyocyte-specific deficiency of Sptlc2, a subunit of SPT. Heart-specific Sptlc2-deficient (hSptlc2 KO) mice had a >35% reduction in ceramide, which was limited to C18:0 and very long chain ceramides. Sphingomyelinase expression, and levels of sphingomyelin and diacylglycerol were unchanged. But surprisingly phospholipids and acyl CoAs contained increased saturated long chain fatty acids. hSptlc2 KO mice had decreased fractional shortening and thinning of the cardiac wall. While the genes regulating glucose and fatty acid metabolism were not changed, expression of cardiac failure markers and the genes involved in the formation of extracellular matrices were up-regulated in hSptlc2 KO hearts. In addition, ER-stress markers were up-regulated leading to increased apoptosis. These results suggest that Sptlc2-mediated de novo ceramide synthesis is an essential source of C18:0 and very long chain, but not of shorter chain, ceramides in the heart. Changes in heart lipids other than ceramide levels lead to cardiac toxicity.


Diabetes | 2008

Decreased Lipoprotein Clearance Is Responsible for Increased Cholesterol in LDL Receptor Knockout Mice With Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetes

Ira J. Goldberg; Yunying Hu; Hye-Lim Noh; Justin Wei; Lesley Ann Huggins; Marnie G. Rackmill; Hiroko Hamai; Brendan N. Reid; William S. Blaner; Li-Shin Huang

OBJECTIVE—Patients with diabetes often have dyslipidemia and increased postprandial lipidmia. Induction of diabetes in LDL receptor (Ldlr−/−) knockout mice also leads to marked dyslipidemia. The reasons for this are unclear. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We placed Ldlr−/− and heterozygous LDL receptor knockout (Ldlr+/−) mice on a high-cholesterol (0.15%) diet, induced diabetes with streptozotocin (STZ), and assessed reasons for differences in plasma cholesterol. RESULTS—STZ-induced diabetic Ldlr−/− mice had plasma cholesterol levels more than double those of nondiabetic controls. Fast-performance liquid chromatography and ultracentrifugation showed an increase in both VLDL and LDL. Plasma VLDL became more cholesterol enriched, and both VLDL and LDL had a greater content of apolipoprotein (apo)E. In LDL the ratio of apoB48 to apoB100 was increased. ApoB production, assessed using [35S]methionine labeling in Triton WR1339–treated mice, was not increased in fasting STZ-induced diabetic mice. Similarly, postprandial lipoprotein production was not increased. Reduction of cholesterol in the diet to normalize the amount of cholesterol intake by the control and STZ-induced diabetic animals reduced plasma cholesterol levels in STZ-induced diabetic mice, but plasma cholesterol was still markedly elevated compared with nondiabetic controls. LDL from STZ-induced diabetic mice was cleared from the plasma and trapped more rapidly by livers of control mice. STZ treatment reduced liver expression of the proteoglycan sulfation enzyme, heparan sulfate N-deacetylase/N-sulfotrasferase-1, an effect that was reproduced in cultured hepatocytyes by a high glucose–containing medium. CONCLUSIONS—STZ-induced diabetic, cholesterol-fed mice developed hyperlipidemia due to a non-LDL receptor defect in clearance of circulating apoB-containing lipoproteins.

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