Publications (19) View all
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Article: Dysregulation of multiple facets of glycogen metabolism in a murine model of pompe disease.
Kristin M Taylor, Elizabeth Meyers, Michael Phipps, Priya S Kishnani, Seng H Cheng, Ronald K Scheule, Rodney J Moreland[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Pompe disease, also known as glycogen storage disease (GSD) type II, is caused by deficiency of lysosomal acid α-glucosidase (GAA). The resulting glycogen accumulation causes a spectrum of disease severity ranging from a rapidly progressive course that is typically fatal by 1 to 2 years of age to a slower progressive course that causes significant morbidity and early mortality in children and adults. The aim of this study is to better understand the biochemical consequences of glycogen accumulation in the Pompe mouse. We evaluated glycogen metabolism in heart, triceps, quadriceps, and liver from wild type and several strains of GAA mice. Unexpectedly, we observed that lysosomal glycogen storage correlated with a robust increase in factors that normally promote glycogen biosynthesis. The GAA mouse strains were found to have elevated glycogen synthase (GS), glycogenin, hexokinase, and glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P, the allosteric activator of GS). Treating GAA mice with recombinant human GAA (rhGAA) led to a dramatic reduction in the levels of glycogen, GS, glycogenin, and G-6-P. Lysosomal glycogen storage also correlated with a dysregulation of phosphorylase, which normally breaks down cytoplasmic glycogen. Analysis of phosphorylase activity confirmed a previous report that, although phosphorylase protein levels are identical in muscle lysates from wild type and GAA mice, phosphorylase activity is suppressed in the GAA mice in the absence of AMP. This reduction in phosphorylase activity likely exacerbates lysosomal glycogen accumulation. If the dysregulation in glycogen metabolism observed in the mouse model of Pompe disease also occurs in Pompe patients, it may contribute to the observed broad spectrum of disease severity.PLoS ONE 01/2013; 8(2):e56181. · 4.09 Impact Factor -
Article: Adeno-associated virus-mediated expression of acid sphingomyelinase decreases atherosclerotic lesion formation in apolipoprotein E(-/-) mice.
Andrew J Leger, Leocadia M Mosquea, Lingyun Li, Weilien Chuang, Joshua Pacheco, Kristin Taylor, Zhengyu Luo, Peter Piepenhagen, Robin Ziegler, Rod Moreland, Akihiro Urabe, Canwen Jiang, Seng H Cheng, Nelson S Yew[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The secretory form of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) is postulated to play a key role in the retention and aggregation of lipoproteins in the subendothelial space of the arterial wall by converting sphingomyelin in lipoproteins into ceramide. The present study aimed to determine whether the level of circulating ASM activity affects lesion development in mouse model of atherosclerosis. Apolipoprotein E deficient (ApoE(-/-) ) mice were injected intravenously with a recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV8-ASM) that constitutively expressed high levels of human ASM in liver and plasma. Plasma sphingomyelin levels were reduced at early but not later time points after the administration of AAV8-ASM despite persistently elevated circulating ASM. No change in serum lipoprotein levels was observed. Thirteen or 17 weeks after the administration of AAV8-ASM, the amount of plaque formation in the aortic sinus was comparable to that of mice treated with a control AAV. Unexpectedly, the lesion area of the entire aorta was reduced significantly in the AAV8-ASM virus-treated group. Hepatic expression and secretion of ASM into the circulation did not accelerate or exacerbate, but rather decreased, lesion formation in ApoE(-/-) mice. Thus, plasma ASM activity does not appear to be rate limiting for plaque formation during atherogenesis.The Journal of Gene Medicine 06/2011; 13(6):324-32. · 2.48 Impact Factor -
Article: Species-specific differences in the processing of acid α-glucosidase are due to the amino acid identity at position 201.
Rodney J Moreland, Sheri Higgins, AnQiang Zhou, Peter VanStraten, Robert D Cauthron, Michael Brem, Beverly J McLarty, Mariko Kudo, William M Canfield[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Acid α-glucosidase (GAA) is a lysosomal enzyme that hydrolyzes glycogen to glucose. Deficiency of GAA causes Pompe disease. Mammalian GAA is synthesized as a precursor of ~110,000 Da that is N-glycosylated and targeted to the lysosome via the M6P receptors. In the lysosome, human GAA is sequentially processed by proteases to polypeptides of 76-, 19.4-, and 3.9-kDa that remain associated. Further cleavage between R(200) and A(204) inefficiently converts the 76-kDa polypeptide to the mature 70-kDa form with an additional 10.4-kDa polypeptide. GAA maturation increases its affinity for glycogen by 7-10 fold. In contrast to human GAA, processing of bovine and hamster GAA to the 70-kDa form is more rapid. A comparison of sequences surrounding the cleavage site revealed human GAA contains histidine at 201 while other species contain hydrophobic amino acids at position 201 in the otherwise conserved sequence. Recombinant human GAA (rhGAA) containing the H201L substitution was expressed in 293 T cells by transfection. Pulse chase experiments in 293 T cells expressing rhGAA with or without the H201L substitution revealed rapid processing of rhGAA(H201L) but not rhGAA(WT) to the 70-kDa form. Similarly, when GAA precursor was endocytosed by human Pompe fibroblasts rhGAA(H201L) but not rhGAA(WT) was rapidly converted to the 70-kDa mature GAA. These studies indicate that the amino acid at position 201 influences the rate of conversion of 76-kDa GAA to 70-kDa GAA. The GAA sequence rather than the lysosomal protease environment explains the predominance of the 76-kDa form in human tissues.Gene 09/2011; 491(1):25-30. · 2.34 Impact Factor -
Article: Induction of immune tolerance to a therapeutic protein by intrathymic gene delivery.
Qiuming Chu, Rodney J Moreland, Lan Gao, Kristin M Taylor, Elizabeth Meyers, Seng H Cheng, Ronald K Scheule[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The efficacy of recombinant enzyme therapy for genetic diseases is limited in some patients by the generation of a humoral immune response to the therapeutic protein. Inducing immune tolerance to the protein prior to treatment has the potential to increase therapeutic efficacy. Using an AAV8 vector encoding human acid α-glucosidase (hGAA), we have evaluated direct intrathymic injection for inducing tolerance. We have also compared the final tolerogenic states achieved by intrathymic and intravenous injection. Intrathymic vector delivery induced tolerance equivalent to that generated by intravenous delivery, but at a 25-fold lower dose, the thymic hGAA expression level was 10,000-fold lower than the liver expression necessary for systemic tolerance induction. Splenic regulatory T cells (Tregs) were apparent after delivery by both routes, but with different phenotypes. Intrathymic delivery resulted in Tregs with higher FoxP3, TGFβ, and IL-10 mRNA levels. These differences may account for the differences noted in splenic T cells, where only intravenous delivery appeared to inhibit their activation. Our results imply that different mechanisms may be operating to generate immune tolerance by intrathymic and intravenous delivery of an AAV vector, and suggest that the intrathymic route may hold promise for decreasing the humoral immune response to therapeutic proteins in genetic disease indications.Molecular Therapy 12/2010; 18(12):2146-54. · 6.87 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: Rodney Moreland
Article: Inhibition of glycogen biosynthesis via mTORC1 suppression as an adjunct therapy for Pompe disease.
Karen M Ashe, Kristin M Taylor, Qiuming Chu, Elizabeth Meyers, Allen Ellis, Varvara Jingozyan, Katherine Klinger, Patrick F Finn, Christopher G F Cooper, Wei-Lien Chuang, John Marshall, John M McPherson, Robert J Mattaliano, Seng H Cheng, Ronald K Scheule, Rodney J Moreland[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Pompe disease, also known as glycogen storage disease (GSD) type II, is caused by deficiency of lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA). The resulting glycogen accumulation causes a spectrum of disease severity ranging from a rapidly progressive course that is typically fatal by 1-2years of age to a more slowly progressive course that causes significant morbidity and early mortality in children and adults. Recombinant human GAA (rhGAA) improves clinical outcomes with variable results. Adjunct therapy that increases the effectiveness of rhGAA may benefit some Pompe patients. Co-administration of the mTORC1 inhibitor rapamycin with rhGAA in a GAA knockout mouse reduced muscle glycogen content more than rhGAA or rapamycin alone. These results suggest mTORC1 inhibition may benefit GSDs that involve glycogen accumulation in muscle.Molecular Genetics and Metabolism 08/2010; 100(4):309-15. · 3.19 Impact Factor