👤 Sulav Shrestha

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Articles
15
Name variants
Also published as: Aakar Shrestha, Elina Shrestha, Him K Shrestha, Nirajan Shrestha, Pragyi Shrestha, Prakash Shrestha, Rajan Shrestha, Rajani Shrestha, Ram Lal Swagat Shrestha, Sadeep Shrestha, Samita Shrestha, Sudichhya Shrestha, Timila Shrestha, Yogendra B Shrestha
articles
Mengqi Chu, Ju Wang, Jay M Yarbro +20 more · 2026 · bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology · added 2026-04-24
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by amyloid plaques that form complex microenvironments in the brain. However, the molecular composition of these plaques and their temporal regulation are not Show more
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by amyloid plaques that form complex microenvironments in the brain. However, the molecular composition of these plaques and their temporal regulation are not well defined. Here, we developed a sensitive workflow for quantitative proteomic profiling of single plaques using refined laser capture microdissection and data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry (LCM-DIA-MS). From >200 plaques and control regions in AD mouse models (5xFAD and APP-KI) and human brains, we quantified >7,000 proteins, revealing stage-dependent, cell-type-related remodeling of the amyloid proteome (amyloidome). Temporal profiling uncovered early immune and lysosomal activation followed by engagement of RNA processing and synaptic pathways. Cross-model and cross-species analyses determined a conserved amyloidome including APOE, MDK, PTN, and HTRA1, validated by co-localization in imaging analysis. Network analysis highlighted modules in lipid transport, vesicle organization, and autophagy. These findings establish amyloid plaques as conserved, dynamic multicellular hubs that link amyloid accumulation to downstream cellular events. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.64898/2026.02.02.703320
APOE
Ram Lal Swagat Shrestha, Ashika Tamang, Sandeep Poudel Chhetri +9 more · 2025 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) is recognized as an oncogene that fosters tumor development, playing a vital role in cancer progression. This has established it as a promising target for c Show more
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) is recognized as an oncogene that fosters tumor development, playing a vital role in cancer progression. This has established it as a promising target for cancer drug development. However, existing FGFR1 inhibitors are often limited by drug resistance and lack of specificity, emphasizing the need for more selective and potent alternatives. To address this challenge, the present study employed an AI-driven virtual screening approach, integrating molecular docking (MD) and molecular dynamics simulations (MDS) to discover novel FGFR1 inhibitors. A voting classifier integrating three machine learning classifiers was utilized to screen 10 million compounds from the eMolecules database, leading to 44 promising candidates with a prediction probability exceeding 80%. MD identified compound with PubChem Compound Identifier (CID) 165426608 (-10.8 kcal/mol) as the highest-scoring ligand, while compounds with CID 145940129 (-9.8 kcal/mol), CID 131910163 (-9.4 kcal/mol), CID 155915988 (-9.2 kcal/mol), and CID 132423733 (-9.1 kcal/mol), exhibited binding affinities comparable to or slightly lower than that of the native ligand (-10.4 kcal/mol). MDS further revealed that all these compounds, except CID 131910163, maintained structural stability with time. Thermodynamic stability assessment confirmed the spontaneity and feasibility of their complex formation reactions with negative ΔGBFE values ranging from -21.87 to -12.76 kcal/mol. Decomposition of binding free energy change further provided key stabilizing residues. The heatmaps and histograms of the interaction over the full 200 ns simulation period highlighted the prominent interaction profiles. Structural similarity analysis of the four MDS-stable compounds displayed the dice similarity scores of 0.200000 to 0.452830 with known FGFR1 inhibitors. Additionally, the pIC50 prediction using a voting regressor indicated promising pIC50 values (7.07 to 7.47), highlighting their potential as hit candidates for further structural optimization and therapeutic development. Further, this study underscores the efficiency of machine learning-based virtual screening and in silico analysis as a cost-effective and reliable strategy for accelerating hit drug discovery from large datasets, even with limited resources and time. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0331837
FGFR1
Nirajan Shrestha, Simone L Sleep, Olivia J Holland +6 more · 2024 · International journal of molecular sciences · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Linoleic acid (LA), an n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), is essential for fetal growth and development. A maternal high LA (HLA) diet alters cardiovascular development in adolescent rats and hepa Show more
Linoleic acid (LA), an n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), is essential for fetal growth and development. A maternal high LA (HLA) diet alters cardiovascular development in adolescent rats and hepatic function in adult rats in a sex-specific manner. We investigated the effects of an HLA diet on adolescent offspring hepatic lipids and hepatic lipid metabolism gene expression, and the ability of the postnatal diet to alter these effects. Female Wistar Kyoto rats were fed low LA (LLA; 1.44% energy from LA) or high LA (HLA; 6.21% energy from LA) diets during pregnancy and gestation/lactation. Offspring, weaned at postnatal day (PN) 25, were fed LLA or HLA and euthanised at PN40 ( Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ijms25021129
LPL
Sulav Shrestha, Karin Orsel, Herman W Barkema +3 more · 2024 · Journal of dairy science · added 2026-04-24
The objective was to evaluate the effects of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) infection, as determined by BLV seropositivity and proviral load, on 305-d milk, fat, and protein production of dairy cows. A c Show more
The objective was to evaluate the effects of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) infection, as determined by BLV seropositivity and proviral load, on 305-d milk, fat, and protein production of dairy cows. A cross-sectional study was conducted among 1,712 cows from 9 dairy herds in Alberta, Canada. The BLV status was assessed using an antibody ELISA, whereas BLV proviral load in BLV-seropositive cattle was determined with quantitative PCR. Dairy Herd Improvement 305-d milk, fat, and protein production data were obtained for all enrolled cattle. Differences in these milk end points were assessed in 2 ways: first, by categorizing cows based on BLV serostatus (i.e., BLV positive or negative), and second, by categorizing based on BLV proviral load (i.e., BLV negative, low proviral load [LPL] BLV positive, and high proviral load [HPL] BLV positive). A mixed-effect multivariable linear regression model was used to assess differences in milk parameters. We found that BLV positivity, adjusted for parity and natural log-transformed somatic cell count (SCC), was not associated with reduction in 305-d milk, fat, or protein production. However, significant reductions in 305-d milk, fat, and protein yield occurred in HPL cows, but not in LPL cows, compared with BLV-negative cows, when adjusted for parity number and natural log-transformed SCC. In summary, BLV proviral load may predict effects of BLV infection on milk, fat, and protein production. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3168/jds.2023-23695
LPL
Charandeep Singh, Byungchang Jin, Nirajan Shrestha +19 more · 2024 · Cell metabolism · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Common genetic variants in glucokinase regulator (GCKR), which encodes GKRP, a regulator of hepatic glucokinase (GCK), influence multiple metabolic traits in genome-wide association studies (GWASs), m Show more
Common genetic variants in glucokinase regulator (GCKR), which encodes GKRP, a regulator of hepatic glucokinase (GCK), influence multiple metabolic traits in genome-wide association studies (GWASs), making GCKR one of the most pleiotropic GWAS loci in the genome. It is unclear why. Prior work has demonstrated that GCKR influences the hepatic cytosolic NADH/NAD Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2023.11.010
MLXIPL
Xian-Yang Qin, Yutaka Furutani, Kento Yonezawa +21 more · 2023 · Cell death & disease · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Transglutaminase 2 (TG2) is a multifunctional protein that promotes or suppresses tumorigenesis, depending on intracellular location and conformational structure. Acyclic retinoid (ACR) is an orally a Show more
Transglutaminase 2 (TG2) is a multifunctional protein that promotes or suppresses tumorigenesis, depending on intracellular location and conformational structure. Acyclic retinoid (ACR) is an orally administered vitamin A derivative that prevents hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence by targeting liver cancer stem cells (CSCs). In this study, we examined the subcellular location-dependent effects of ACR on TG2 activity at a structural level and characterized the functional role of TG2 and its downstream molecular mechanism in the selective depletion of liver CSCs. A binding assay with high-performance magnetic nanobeads and structural dynamic analysis with native gel electrophoresis and size-exclusion chromatography-coupled multi-angle light scattering or small-angle X-ray scattering showed that ACR binds directly to TG2, induces oligomer formation of TG2, and inhibits the transamidase activity of cytoplasmic TG2 in HCC cells. The loss-of-function of TG2 suppressed the expression of stemness-related genes, spheroid proliferation and selectively induced cell death in an EpCAM+ liver CSC subpopulation in HCC cells. Proteome analysis revealed that TG2 inhibition suppressed the gene and protein expression of exostosin glycosyltransferase 1 (EXT1) and heparan sulfate biosynthesis in HCC cells. In contrast, high levels of ACR increased intracellular Ca Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41419-023-05847-4
EXT1
Pragyi Shrestha, Saritha Adepu, Romain R Vivès +8 more · 2021 · Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN · added 2026-04-24
Dyslipidemia is an important risk factor in CKD. The liver clears triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL) Uninephrectomy- and aging-induced CKD in normotensive Wistar rats and hypertensive Munich-Wistar- Show more
Dyslipidemia is an important risk factor in CKD. The liver clears triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL) Uninephrectomy- and aging-induced CKD in normotensive Wistar rats and hypertensive Munich-Wistar-Frömter (MWF) rats. Compared with 22-week-old sex- and strain-matched rats, 48-week-old uninephrectomized Wistar-CKD and MWF-CKD rats showed proteinuria, increased plasma creatinine, and hypercholesterolemia (all Progressive CKD induces hepatic HS elongation, leading to increased interaction with PCSK9. This might reduce hepatic lipoprotein uptake and thereby induce dyslipidemia in CKD. Therefore, PCSK9/HS may be a novel target to control dyslipidemia. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2020091376
EXT1
Shobha Regmi, Pawan Kumar Raut, Shiva Pathak +3 more · 2021 · Autophagy · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have received attention as promising therapeutic agents for the treatment of various diseases. However, poor post-transplantation viability is a major hurdle in MSC-ba Show more
Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have received attention as promising therapeutic agents for the treatment of various diseases. However, poor post-transplantation viability is a major hurdle in MSC-based therapy, despite encouraging results in many inflammatory disorders. Recently, three dimensional (3D)-cultured MSCs (MSC Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2020.1850608
PIK3C3
Nirajan Shrestha, Olivia J Holland, Nykola L Kent +4 more · 2020 · Nutrients · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Fetal development is modulated by maternal nutrition during pregnancy. The dietary intake of linoleic acid (LA), an essential dietary n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), has increased. We previousl Show more
Fetal development is modulated by maternal nutrition during pregnancy. The dietary intake of linoleic acid (LA), an essential dietary n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), has increased. We previously published that increased LA consumption during pregnancy does not alter offspring or placental weight but fetal plasma fatty acid composition; the developing fetus obtains their required PUFA from the maternal circulation. However, it is unknown if increased maternal linoleic acid alters placental fatty acid storage, metabolism, transport, and general placental function. Female Wistar-Kyoto rats were fed either a low LA diet (LLA; 1.44% of energy from LA) or high LA diet (HLA; 6.21% of energy from LA) for 10 weeks before pregnancy and during gestation. Rats were sacrificed at embryonic day 20 (E20, term = 22 days) and placentae collected. The labyrinth of placentae from one male and one female fetus from each litter were analyzed. High maternal LA consumption increased placental total n-6 and LA concentrations, and decreased total n-3 PUFA, alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). Fatty acid desaturase 1 ( Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/nu12082183
ANGPTL4

G

Min Chen, Eric A Wilson, Zhenzhong Cui +8 more · 2019 · Molecular metabolism · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
G We created mice (DMHGsKO) with G DMHGsKO mice developed severe, early-onset obesity associated with hyperphagia and reduced energy expenditure and locomotor activity, along with impaired brown adipo Show more
G We created mice (DMHGsKO) with G DMHGsKO mice developed severe, early-onset obesity associated with hyperphagia and reduced energy expenditure and locomotor activity, along with impaired brown adipose tissue thermogenesis. Studies in mice with loss of MC4R in the DMH suggest that defective DMH MC4R/G DMH G Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2019.04.005
MC4R
Timon Seeger, Rajani Shrestha, Chi Keung Lam +16 more · 2019 · Circulation · added 2026-04-24
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is frequently caused by mutations in myosin-binding protein C3 ( MYBPC3) resulting in a premature termination codon (PTC). The underlying mechanisms of how PTC mutati Show more
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is frequently caused by mutations in myosin-binding protein C3 ( MYBPC3) resulting in a premature termination codon (PTC). The underlying mechanisms of how PTC mutations in MYBPC3 lead to the onset and progression of HCM are poorly understood. This study's aim was to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of HCM associated with MYBPC3 PTC mutations by utilizing human isogenic induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs). Isogenic iPSC lines were generated from HCM patients harboring MYBPC3 PTC mutations (p.R943x; p.R1073P_Fsx4) using genome editing. Comprehensive phenotypic and transcriptome analyses were performed in the iPSC-CMs. We observed aberrant calcium handling properties with prolonged decay kinetics and elevated diastolic calcium levels in the absence of structural abnormalities or contracile dysfunction in HCM iPSC-CMs as compared to isogenic controls. The mRNA expression levels of MYBPC3 were significantly reduced in mutant iPSC-CMs, but the protein levels were comparable among isogenic iPSC-CMs, suggesting that haploinsufficiency of MYBPC3 does not contribute to the pathogenesis of HCM in vitro. Furthermore, truncated MYBPC3 peptides were not detected. At the molecular level, the nonsense-mediated decay pathway was activated, and a set of genes involved in major cardiac signaling pathways was dysregulated in HCM iPSC-CMs, indicating an HCM gene signature in vitro. Specific inhibition of the nonsense-mediated decay pathway in mutant iPSC-CMs resulted in reversal of the molecular phenotype and normalization of calcium-handling abnormalities. iPSC-CMs carrying MYBPC3 PTC mutations displayed aberrant calcium signaling and molecular dysregulations in the absence of significant haploinsufficiency of MYBPC3 protein. Here we provided the first evidence of the direct connection between the chronically activated nonsense-mediated decay pathway and HCM disease development. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.118.034624
MYBPC3
Natalia Becares, Matthew C Gage, Maud Voisin +17 more · 2019 · Cell reports · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a very common indication for liver transplantation. How fat-rich diets promote progression from fatty liver to more damaging inflammatory and fibrotic stag Show more
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a very common indication for liver transplantation. How fat-rich diets promote progression from fatty liver to more damaging inflammatory and fibrotic stages is poorly understood. Here, we show that disrupting phosphorylation at Ser196 (S196A) in the liver X receptor alpha (LXRα, NR1H3) retards NAFLD progression in mice on a high-fat-high-cholesterol diet. Mechanistically, this is explained by key histone acetylation (H3K27) and transcriptional changes in pro-fibrotic and pro-inflammatory genes. Furthermore, S196A-LXRα expression reveals the regulation of novel diet-specific LXRα-responsive genes, including the induction of Ces1f, implicated in the breakdown of hepatic lipids. This involves induced H3K27 acetylation and altered LXR and TBLR1 cofactor occupancy at the Ces1f gene in S196A fatty livers. Overall, impaired Ser196-LXRα phosphorylation acts as a novel nutritional molecular sensor that profoundly alters the hepatic H3K27 acetylome and transcriptome during NAFLD progression placing LXRα phosphorylation as an alternative anti-inflammatory or anti-fibrotic therapeutic target. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.12.094
NR1H3
Sudichhya Shrestha, Ben J Wu, Liam Guiney +2 more · 2018 · Journal of lipid research · added 2026-04-24
Most of the cholesterol in plasma is in an esterified form that is generated in potentially cardioprotective HDLs. Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) mediates bidirectional transfers of cholest Show more
Most of the cholesterol in plasma is in an esterified form that is generated in potentially cardioprotective HDLs. Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) mediates bidirectional transfers of cholesteryl esters (CEs) and triglycerides (TGs) between plasma lipoproteins. Because CE originates in HDLs and TG enters the plasma as a component of VLDLs, activity of CETP results in a net mass transfer of CE from HDLs to VLDLs and LDLs, and of TG from VLDLs to LDLs and HDLs. As inhibition of CETP activity increases the concentration of HDL-cholesterol and decreases the concentration of VLDL- and LDL-cholesterol, it has the potential to reduce atherosclerotic CVD. This has led to the development of anti-CETP neutralizing monoclonal antibodies, vaccines, and antisense oligonucleotides. Small molecule inhibitors of CETP have also been developed and four of them have been studied in large scale cardiovascular clinical outcome trials. This review describes the structure of CETP and its mechanism of action. Details of its regulation and nonlipid transporting functions are discussed, and the results of the large scale clinical outcome trials of small molecule CETP inhibitors are summarized. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1194/jlr.R082735
CETP
Ning Ma, Joe Z Zhang, Ilanit Itzhaki +11 more · 2018 · Circulation · added 2026-04-24
The progression toward low-cost and rapid next-generation sequencing has uncovered a multitude of variants of uncertain significance (VUS) in both patients and asymptomatic "healthy" individuals. A VU Show more
The progression toward low-cost and rapid next-generation sequencing has uncovered a multitude of variants of uncertain significance (VUS) in both patients and asymptomatic "healthy" individuals. A VUS is a rare or novel variant for which disease pathogenicity has not been conclusively demonstrated or excluded, and thus cannot be definitively annotated. VUS, therefore, pose critical clinical interpretation and risk-assessment challenges, and new methods are urgently needed to better characterize their pathogenicity. To address this challenge and showcase the uncertainty surrounding genomic variant interpretation, we recruited a "healthy" asymptomatic individual, lacking cardiac-disease clinical history, carrying a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)-associated genetic variant (NM₀₀₀₂₅₈.2:c.170C>A, NP₀₀₀₂₄₉.1:p.Ala57Asp) in the sarcomeric gene MYL3, reported by the ClinVar database to be "likely pathogenic." Human-induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were derived from the heterozygous VUS MYL3 The heterozygous VUS MYL3 Our study illustrates the ability of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/Cas9 genome-editing of carrier-specific iPSCs to elucidate both benign and pathogenic HCM functional phenotypes in a carrier-specific manner in a dish. As such, this platform represents a promising VUS risk-assessment tool that can be used for assessing HCM-associated VUS specifically, and VUS in general, and thus significantly contribute to the arsenal of precision medicine tools available in this emerging field. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.032273
MYBPC3
Ben J Wu, Yue Li, Kwok L Ong +6 more · 2017 · Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology · added 2026-04-24
Angioplasty and stent implantation, the most common treatment for atherosclerotic lesions, have a significant failure rate because of restenosis. This study asks whether increasing plasma high-density Show more
Angioplasty and stent implantation, the most common treatment for atherosclerotic lesions, have a significant failure rate because of restenosis. This study asks whether increasing plasma high-density lipoprotein (HDL) levels by inhibiting cholesteryl ester transfer protein activity with the anacetrapib analog, des-fluoro-anacetrapib, prevents stent-induced neointimal hyperplasia. New Zealand White rabbits received normal chow or chow supplemented with 0.14% (wt/wt) des-fluoro-anacetrapib for 6 weeks. Iliac artery endothelial denudation and bare metal steel stent deployment were performed after 2 weeks of des-fluoro-anacetrapib treatment. The animals were euthanized 4 weeks poststent deployment. Relative to control, dietary supplementation with des-fluoro-anacetrapib reduced plasma cholesteryl ester transfer protein activity and increased plasma apolipoprotein A-I and HDL cholesterol levels by 53±6.3% and 120±19%, respectively. Non-HDL cholesterol levels were unaffected. Des-fluoro-anacetrapib treatment reduced the intimal area of the stented arteries by 43±5.6% ( Inhibiting cholesteryl ester transfer protein activity in New Zealand White rabbits with iliac artery balloon injury and stent deployment increases HDL levels, inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, and reduces neointimal hyperplasia in an scavenger receptor-B1, PDZ domain-containing protein 1- and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase/Akt-dependent manner. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.117.310051
CETP
Aditi Shendre, Howard W Wiener, Marguerite R Irvin +15 more · 2017 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a major comorbidity among HIV-infected individuals. Common carotid artery intima-media thickness (cCIMT) is a valid and reliable subclinical measure of atherosclerosis Show more
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a major comorbidity among HIV-infected individuals. Common carotid artery intima-media thickness (cCIMT) is a valid and reliable subclinical measure of atherosclerosis and is known to predict CVD. We performed genome-wide association (GWA) and admixture analysis among 682 HIV-positive and 288 HIV-negative Black, non-Hispanic women from the Women's Interagency HIV study (WIHS) cohort using a combined and stratified analysis approach. We found some suggestive associations but none of the SNPs reached genome-wide statistical significance in our GWAS analysis. The top GWAS SNPs were rs2280828 in the region intergenic to mediator complex subunit 30 and exostosin glycosyltransferase 1 (MED30 | EXT1) among all women, rs2907092 in the catenin delta 2 (CTNND2) gene among HIV-positive women, and rs7529733 in the region intergenic to family with sequence similarity 5, member C and regulator of G-protein signaling 18 (FAM5C | RGS18) genes among HIV-negative women. The most significant local European ancestry associations were in the region intergenic to the zinc finger and SCAN domain containing 5D gene and NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex assembly factor 1 (ZSCAN5D | NDUF1) pseudogene on chromosome 19 among all women, in the region intergenic to vomeronasal 1 receptor 6 pseudogene and zinc finger protein 845 (VN1R6P | ZNF845) gene on chromosome 19 among HIV-positive women, and in the region intergenic to the SEC23-interacting protein and phosphatidic acid phosphatase type 2 domain containing 1A (SEC23IP | PPAPDC1A) genes located on chromosome 10 among HIV-negative women. A number of previously identified SNP associations with cCIMT were also observed and included rs2572204 in the ryanodine receptor 3 (RYR3) and an admixture region in the secretion-regulating guanine nucleotide exchange factor (SERGEF) gene. We report several SNPs and gene regions in the GWAS and admixture analysis, some of which are common across HIV-positive and HIV-negative women as demonstrated using meta-analysis, and also across the two analytic approaches (i.e., GWA and admixture). These findings suggest that local European ancestry plays an important role in genetic associations of cCIMT among black women from WIHS along with other environmental factors that are related to CVD and may also be triggered by HIV. These findings warrant confirmation in independent samples. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188725
EXT1
Chaowei Wu, Maryem A Hussein, Elina Shrestha +9 more · 2015 · Molecular and cellular biology · added 2026-04-24
In mouse models of atherosclerosis, normalization of hyperlipidemia promotes macrophage emigration and regression of atherosclerotic plaques in part by liver X receptor (LXR)-mediated induction of the Show more
In mouse models of atherosclerosis, normalization of hyperlipidemia promotes macrophage emigration and regression of atherosclerotic plaques in part by liver X receptor (LXR)-mediated induction of the chemokine receptor CCR7. Here we report that LXRα serine 198 (S198) phosphorylation modulates CCR7 expression. Low levels of S198 phosphorylation are observed in plaque macrophages in the regression environment where high levels of CCR7 expression are observed. Consistent with these findings, CCR7 gene expression in human and mouse macrophages cell lines is induced when LXRα at S198 is nonphosphorylated. In bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs), we also observed induction of CCR7 by ligands that promote nonphosphorylated LXRα S198, and this was lost in LXR-deficient BMDMs. LXRα occupancy at the CCR7 promoter is enhanced and histone modifications associated with gene repression are reduced in RAW264.7 cells expressing nonphosphorylated LXRα (RAW-LXRα S198A) compared to RAW264.7 cells expressing wild-type (WT) phosphorylated LXRα (RAW-LXRα WT). Expression profiling of ligand-treated RAW-LXRα S198A cells compared to RAW-LXRα WT cells revealed induction of cell migratory and anti-inflammatory genes and repression of proinflammatory genes. Modeling of LXRα S198 in the nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated states identified phosphorylation-dependent conformational changes in the hinge region commensurate with the presence of sites for protein interaction. Therefore, gene transcription is regulated by LXRα S198 phosphorylation, including that of antiatherogenic genes such as CCR7. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00985-14
NR1H3