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Dive into the research topics where Yves Mugabo is active.

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Featured researches published by Yves Mugabo.


Cell Metabolism | 2014

α/β-Hydrolase Domain-6-Accessible Monoacylglycerol Controls Glucose-Stimulated Insulin Secretion

Shangang Zhao; Yves Mugabo; Jose Iglesias; Li Xie; Viviane Delghingaro-Augusto; Roxane Lussier; Marie Line Peyot; Erik Joly; Bouchra Taïb; Matthew A. Davis; J. Mark Brown; Abdelkarim Abousalham; Herbert Y. Gaisano; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Marc Prentki

Glucose metabolism in pancreatic β cells stimulates insulin granule exocytosis, and this process requires generation of a lipid signal. However, the signals involved in lipid amplification of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) are unknown. Here we show that in β cells, glucose stimulates production of lipolysis-derived long-chain saturated monoacylglycerols, which further increase upon inhibition of the membrane-bound monoacylglycerol lipase α/β-Hydrolase Domain-6 (ABHD6). ABHD6 expression in β cells is inversely proportional to GSIS. Exogenous monoacylglycerols stimulate β cell insulin secretion and restore GSIS suppressed by the pan-lipase inhibitor orlistat. Whole-body and β-cell-specific ABHD6-KO mice exhibit enhanced GSIS, and their islets show elevated monoacylglycerol production and insulin secretion in response to glucose. Inhibition of ABHD6 in diabetic mice restores GSIS and improves glucose tolerance. Monoacylglycerol binds and activates the vesicle priming protein Munc13-1, thereby inducing insulin exocytosis. We propose saturated monoacylglycerol as a signal for GSIS and ABHD6 as a negative modulator of insulin secretion.


Current Diabetes Reviews | 2010

The Connection Between C-Reactive Protein (CRP) and Diabetic Vasculopathy. Focus on Preclinical Findings

Yves Mugabo; Ling Li; Geneviève Renier

Current evidence supports a central role of inflammation in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and diabetes. Type 2 diabetes is an inflammatory atherothrombotic condition associated with a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease. In patients with type 2 diabetes, low grade inflammation is reflected by increased plasma levels of several biomarkers of inflammation such as C-reactive protein (CRP). Small increases in CRP predict the likelihood of developing cardiovascular events both in diabetic and nondiabetic populations. In addition, in apparently healthy subjects, increased levels of CRP predict the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. There is some evidence that CRP, besides its predictive role in determining cardiovascular risk, may represent an active participant in atherogenesis. CRP is expressed in human atherosclerotic plaques and both vascular cells and monocytes/macrophages appear to represent a significant source of CRP in the inflammatory vessel wall. By activating the main cell types present in the atherosclerotic lesions, CRP generated within the coronary plaques may contribute to the development and progression of atherosclerosis. Data on vascular CRP regulation are scarce. Current evidence suggests that inflammatory and metabolic factors associated with diabetes, such as high glucose, adipokines, modified lipoproteins and free fatty acids may trigger CRP production by endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells and monocytes/macrophages. These data suggest that local CRP concentration in diabetic atherosclerotic plaques could be higher than in nondiabetic ones. Given the possible correlation between local CRP production and the degree of severity of coronary artery disease or the nature of the lesion, such alteration may contribute to the accelerated development of vascular disease in patients with type 2 diabetes.


Cell Metabolism | 2014

Metabolic Inflexibility Impairs Insulin Secretion and Results In MODY-like Diabetes in Triple FoxO-Deficient Mice

Ja Young Kim-Muller; Shangang Zhao; Shekhar Srivastava; Yves Mugabo; Hye-Lim Noh; YoungJung R. Kim; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Anthony W. Ferrante; Edward Y. Skolnik; Marc Prentki; Domenico Accili

Pancreatic β cell failure in type 2 diabetes is associated with functional abnormalities of insulin secretion and deficits of β cell mass. Its unclear how one begets the other. We have shown that loss of β cell mass can be ascribed to impaired FoxO1 function in different models of diabetes. Here we show that ablation of the three FoxO genes (1, 3a, and 4) in mature β cells results in early-onset, maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY)-like diabetes, with abnormalities of the MODY networks Hnf4α, Hnf1α, and Pdx1. FoxO-deficient β cells are metabolically inflexible, i.e., they preferentially utilize lipids rather than carbohydrates as an energy source. This results in impaired ATP generation and reduced Ca(2+)-dependent insulin secretion. The present findings demonstrate a secretory defect caused by impaired FoxO activity that antedates dedifferentiation. We propose that defects in both pancreatic β cell function and mass arise through FoxO-dependent mechanisms during diabetes progression.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2011

Palmitate induces C-reactive protein expression in human aortic endothelial cells. Relevance to fatty acid-induced endothelial dysfunction.

Yves Mugabo; Yvette Mukaneza; Geneviève Renier

Circulating levels of free fatty acids are commonly elevated in patients with the metabolic syndrome and exert, through activating proinflammatory pathways, harmful effects of the vascular endothelium. In this study, we examined the effect of palmitate (PA) on endothelial C-reactive protein (CRP) expression and the role of CRP in PA-induced nitric oxide (NO) inhibition. Palmitate increased, in a dose-dependent manner, CRP protein expression and production in human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs). Induction of CRP protein was mimicked by ceramide, whereas bromopalmitate and other common free fatty acids such as oleate or linoleate were ineffective. Palmitate also elicited reactive oxygen species production in HAECs, an effect prevented by protein kinase C (PKC) inhibition and adenosine monophosphate-activated kinase (AMPK) activation. Palmitate-treated HAECs showed increased CRP messenger RNA expression and nuclear factor (NF)-κB activation. Induction of CRP expression by PA was prevented by antioxidants and normalized by PKC and mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors. Disrupting NF-κB and Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription pathways or inducing AMPK activation also suppressed the stimulatory effect of PA on CRP messenger RNA expression. Finally, in HAECs, PA reduced NO release, an effect reversed by anti-CRP antibody. These data demonstrate that PA-induced endothelial CRP expression involves PKC-driven oxidative stress, possibly through AMPK inhibition, and activation of downstream redox-sensitive signaling pathways, including NF-κB. They further support a role for endothelial cell-derived CRP as mediator of the suppressive effect of PA on NO production.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Identification of a mammalian glycerol-3-phosphate phosphatase: Role in metabolism and signaling in pancreatic β-cells and hepatocytes

Yves Mugabo; Shangang Zhao; Annegrit Seifried; Sari Gezzar; Anfal Al-Mass; Dongwei Zhang; Julien Lamontagne; Camille Attané; Pegah Poursharifi; Jose Iglesias; Erik Joly; Marie-Line Peyot; Antje Gohla; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Marc Prentki

Significance Glycerol-3-phosphate (Gro3P) lies at the crossroads of glucose, lipid, and energy metabolism in mammalian cells and is thought to participate in glycolysis or in gluconeogenesis, lipid synthesis, and Gro3P electron transfer shuttle to mitochondria. We now report a previously unidentified pathway of Gro3P metabolism in mammalian cells with the identification of Gro3P phosphatase (G3PP) that can directly hydrolyze Gro3P to glycerol. We observed that G3PP expression level controls glycolysis, lipogenesis, lipolysis, fatty acid oxidation, cellular redox, and mitochondrial energy metabolism in β-cells and hepatocytes, as well as glucose-induced insulin secretion and the response to metabolic stress in β-cells, and in gluconeogenesis in hepatocytes. G3PP is a previously unknown player in metabolic regulation and signaling and offers a potential target for cardiometabolic disorders. Obesity, and the associated disturbed glycerolipid/fatty acid (GL/FA) cycle, contribute to insulin resistance, islet β-cell failure, and type 2 diabetes. Flux through the GL/FA cycle is regulated by the availability of glycerol-3-phosphate (Gro3P) and fatty acyl-CoA. We describe here a mammalian Gro3P phosphatase (G3PP), which was not known to exist in mammalian cells, that can directly hydrolyze Gro3P to glycerol. We identified that mammalian phosphoglycolate phosphatase, with an uncertain function, acts in fact as a G3PP. We found that G3PP, by controlling Gro3P levels, regulates glycolysis and glucose oxidation, cellular redox and ATP production, gluconeogenesis, glycerolipid synthesis, and fatty acid oxidation in pancreatic islet β-cells and hepatocytes, and that glucose stimulated insulin secretion and the response to metabolic stress, e.g., glucolipotoxicity, in β-cells. In vivo overexpression of G3PP in rat liver lowers body weight gain and hepatic glucose production from glycerol and elevates plasma HDL levels. G3PP is expressed at various levels in different tissues, and its expression varies according to the nutritional state in some tissues. As Gro3P lies at the crossroads of glucose, lipid, and energy metabolism, control of its availability by G3PP adds a key level of metabolic regulation in mammalian cells, and G3PP offers a potential target for type 2 diabetes and cardiometabolic disorders.


Molecular metabolism | 2015

α/β-Hydrolase domain-6 and saturated long chain monoacylglycerol regulate insulin secretion promoted by both fuel and non-fuel stimuli

Shangang Zhao; Pegah Poursharifi; Yves Mugabo; Emily J. Levens; Kevin Vivot; Camille Attané; Jose Iglesias; Marie-Line Peyot; Erik Joly; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Marc Prentki

Objective α/β-Hydrolase domain-6 (ABHD6) is a newly identified monoacylglycerol (MAG) lipase. We recently reported that it negatively regulates glucose stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in the β cells by hydrolyzing lipolysis-derived MAG that acts as a metabolic coupling factor and signaling molecule via exocytotic regulator Munc13-1. Whether ABHD6 and MAG play a role in response to all classes of insulin secretagogues, in particular various fuel and non-fuel stimuli, is unknown. Methods Insulin secretion in response to various classes of secretagogues, exogenous MAG and pharmacological agents was measured in islets of mice deficient in ABHD6 specifically in the β cell (BKO). Islet perifusion experiments and determinations of glucose and fatty acid metabolism, cytosolic Ca2+ and MAG species levels were carried out. Results Deletion of ABHD6 potentiated insulin secretion in response to the fuels glutamine plus leucine and α-ketoisocaproate and to the non-fuel stimuli glucagon-like peptide 1, carbamylcholine and elevated KCl. Fatty acids amplified GSIS in control and BKO mice to the same extent. Exogenous 1-MAG amplified insulin secretion in response to fuel and non-fuel stimuli. MAG hydrolysis activity was greatly reduced in BKO islets without changes in total diacylglycerol and triacylglycerol lipase activity. ABHD6 deletion induced insulin secretion independently from KATP channels and did not alter the glucose induced rise in intracellular Ca2+. Perifusion studies showed elevated insulin secretion during second phase of GSIS in BKO islets that was not due to altered cytosolic Ca2+ signaling or because of changes in glucose and fatty acid metabolism. Glucose increased islet saturated long chain 1-MAG species and ABHD6 deletion caused accumulation of these 1-MAG species at both low and elevated glucose. Conclusion ABHD6 regulates insulin secretion in response to fuel stimuli at large and some non-fuel stimuli by controlling long chain saturated 1-MAG levels that synergize with other signaling pathways for secretion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Metabolic fate of glucose and candidate signaling and excess-fuel detoxification pathways in pancreatic β-cells

Yves Mugabo; Shangang Zhao; Julien Lamontagne; Anfal Al-Mass; Marie-Line Peyot; Barbara E. Corkey; Erik Joly; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Marc Prentki

Glucose metabolism promotes insulin secretion in β-cells via metabolic coupling factors that are incompletely defined. Moreover, chronically elevated glucose causes β-cell dysfunction, but little is known about how cells handle excess fuels to avoid toxicity. Here we sought to determine which among the candidate pathways and coupling factors best correlates with glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), define the fate of glucose in the β-cell, and identify pathways possibly involved in excess-fuel detoxification. We exposed isolated rat islets for 1 h to increasing glucose concentrations and measured various pathways and metabolites. Glucose oxidation, oxygen consumption, and ATP production correlated well with GSIS and saturated at 16 mm glucose. However, glucose utilization, glycerol release, triglyceride and glycogen contents, free fatty acid (FFA) content and release, and cholesterol and cholesterol esters increased linearly up to 25 mm glucose. Besides being oxidized, glucose was mainly metabolized via glycerol production and release and lipid synthesis (particularly FFA, triglycerides, and cholesterol), whereas glycogen production was comparatively low. Using targeted metabolomics in INS-1(832/13) cells, we found that several metabolites correlated well with GSIS, in particular some Krebs cycle intermediates, malonyl-CoA, and lower ADP levels. Glucose dose-dependently increased the dihydroxyacetone phosphate/glycerol 3-phosphate ratio in INS-1(832/13) cells, indicating a more oxidized state of NAD in the cytosol upon glucose stimulation. Overall, the data support a role for accelerated oxidative mitochondrial metabolism, anaplerosis, and malonyl-CoA/lipid signaling in β-cell metabolic signaling and suggest that a decrease in ADP levels is important in GSIS. The results also suggest that excess-fuel detoxification pathways in β-cells possibly comprise glycerol and FFA formation and release extracellularly and the diversion of glucose carbons to triglycerides and cholesterol esters.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

Elucidation of the 14-3-3ζ interactome reveals critical roles of RNA splicing factors during adipogenesis

Yves Mugabo; Mina Sadeghi; Nancy N. Fang; Thibault Mayor; Gareth E. Lim

Adipogenesis involves a complex signaling network requiring strict temporal and spatial organization of effector molecules. Molecular scaffolds, such as 14-3-3 proteins, facilitate such organization, and we have previously identified 14-3-3ζ as an essential scaffold in adipocyte differentiation. The interactome of 14-3-3ζ is large and diverse, and it is possible that novel adipogenic factors may be present within it, but this possibility has not yet been tested. Herein, we generated mouse embryonic fibroblasts from mice overexpressing a tandem affinity purification (TAP) epitope–tagged 14-3-3ζ molecule. After inducing adipogenesis, TAP–14-3-3ζ complexes were purified, followed by MS analysis to determine the 14-3-3ζ interactome. We observed more than 100 proteins that were unique to adipocyte differentiation, 56 of which were novel interacting partners. Among these, we were able to identify previously established regulators of adipogenesis (i.e. Ptrf/Cavin1) within the 14-3-3ζ interactome, confirming the utility of this approach to detect adipogenic factors. We found that proteins related to RNA metabolism, processing, and splicing were enriched in the interactome. Analysis of transcriptomic data revealed that 14-3-3ζ depletion in 3T3-L1 cells affected alternative splicing of mRNA during adipocyte differentiation. siRNA-mediated depletion of RNA-splicing factors within the 14-3-3ζ interactome, that is, of Hnrpf, Hnrpk, Ddx6, and Sfpq, revealed that they have essential roles in adipogenesis and in the alternative splicing of Pparg and the adipogenesis-associated gene Lpin1. In summary, we have identified novel adipogenic factors within the 14-3-3ζ interactome. Further characterization of additional proteins within the 14-3-3ζ interactome may help identify novel targets to block obesity-associated expansion of adipose tissues.


Endocrinology | 2018

Scaffold Proteins: From Coordinating Signaling Pathways to Metabolic Regulation

Yves Mugabo; Gareth E. Lim

Among their pleiotropic functions, scaffold proteins are required for the accurate coordination of signaling pathways. It has only been within the past 10 years that their roles in glucose homeostasis and metabolism have emerged. It is well appreciated that changes in the expression or function of signaling effectors, such as receptors or kinases, can influence the development of chronic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. However, little is known regarding whether scaffolds have similar roles in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases. In general, scaffolds are often underappreciated in the context of metabolism or metabolic diseases. In the present review, we discuss various scaffold proteins and their involvement in signaling pathways related to metabolism and metabolic diseases. The aims of the present review were to highlight the importance of scaffold proteins and to raise awareness of their physiological contributions. A thorough understanding of how scaffolds influence metabolism could aid in the discovery of novel therapeutic approaches to treat chronic conditions, such as diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease, for which the incidence of all continue to increase at alarming rates.


Cell Reports | 2016

α/β-Hydrolase Domain 6 Deletion Induces Adipose Browning and Prevents Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes

Shangang Zhao; Yves Mugabo; Gwynne Ballentine; Camille Attané; Jose Iglesias; Pegah Poursharifi; Dongwei Zhang; Thuy Anne Nguyen; Heidi Erb; Raphael Prentki; Marie Line Peyot; Erik Joly; Stephanie Tobin; Stephanie Fulton; J. Mark Brown; S. R. Murthy Madiraju; Marc Prentki

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Marc Prentki

Université de Montréal

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Shangang Zhao

Université de Montréal

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Erik Joly

Université de Montréal

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Gareth E. Lim

University of British Columbia

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Jose Iglesias

Université de Montréal

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