Publications by authors named "Jessica M Ellis"

Objective: Abnormal lipid metabolism in mammalian tissues can be highly deleterious, leading to organ failure. Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2) deficiency is an inherited metabolic disorder affecting the liver, heart, and skeletal muscle due to impaired mitochondrial oxidation of long-chain fatty acids (mLCFAO) for energy production.

Methods: However, the basis of tissue damage in mLCFAO disorders is not fully understood.

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The retina is light-sensitive neuronal tissue in the back of the eye. The phospholipid composition of the retina is unique and highly enriched in polyunsaturated fatty acids, including docosahexaenoic fatty acid (DHA). While it is generally accepted that a high DHA content is important for vision, surprisingly little is known about the mechanisms of DHA enrichment in the retina.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how α1-adrenergic receptors (α1A-ARs) regulate mitochondrial function in heart cells and their potential protective role against chronic β-adrenergic receptor (β-AR) activation.
  • Researchers employed various techniques, including respirometry and electron microscopy, to analyze mitochondrial performance in both healthy and damaged heart tissue from different mouse models.
  • Findings indicate that α1A-ARs enhance fatty acid metabolism and mitochondrial function, providing protection against oxidative stress and cardiac dysfunction, especially after injury like myocardial infarction.
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Targeting mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) to treat cancer has been hampered due to serious side-effects potentially arising from the inability to discriminate between non-cancerous and cancerous mitochondria. Herein, comprehensive mitochondrial phenotyping was leveraged to define both the composition and function of OXPHOS across various murine cancers and compared to both matched normal tissues and other organs. When compared to both matched normal tissues, as well as high OXPHOS reliant organs like heart, intrinsic expression of the OXPHOS complexes, as well as OXPHOS flux were discovered to be consistently lower across distinct cancer types.

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Medium-chain fatty acid (MCFA) consumption confers a wide range of health benefits that are highly distinct from long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs). A major difference between the metabolism of LCFAs compared with MCFAs is that mitochondrial LCFA oxidation depends on the carnitine shuttle, whereas MCFA mitochondrial oxidation is not. Although MCFAs are said to range from 6 to 14 carbons long based on physicochemical properties in vitro, the biological cut-off length of acyl chains that can bypass the carnitine shuttle in different mammalian tissues is unknown.

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Dietary lipids, particularly omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, are speculated to impact behaviors linked to the dopaminergic system, such as movement and control of circadian rhythms. However, the ability to draw a direct link between dopaminergic omega-3 fatty acid metabolism and behavioral outcomes has been limited to the use of diet-based approaches, which are confounded by systemic effects. Here, neuronal lipid metabolism was targeted in a diet-independent manner by manipulation of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 6 (ACSL6) expression.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the impact of a deficiency in mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO) on heart function, utilizing a knockout mouse model to investigate cardiac abnormalities.
  • Researchers found that this FAO deficiency leads to changes in amino acid metabolism and activates the integrated stress response (ISR) in the heart, indicating a complex interplay between energy metabolism and stress signaling.
  • The findings suggest that the consequences of FAO defects affect not only energy supply but also amino acid availability and metabolic signaling pathways, which could be crucial for understanding heart disease linked to genetic defects in FAO.
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Objective: Skeletal muscle is a heterogeneous and dynamic tissue that adapts to functional demands and substrate availability by modulating muscle fiber size and type. The concept of muscle fiber type relates to its contractile (slow or fast) and metabolic (glycolytic or oxidative) properties. Here, we tested whether disruptions in muscle oxidative catabolism are sufficient to prompt parallel adaptations in energetics and contractile protein composition.

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Aim: To compare the molecular and metabolic effects of a single exercise bout in the skeletal muscle between lean and overweight/obese (Ov/Ob) individuals.

Materials And Methods: Participants recruited were men, aged 19-30 years, who were either lean (body mass index [BMI] < 25, 18.5-24.

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The omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) inversely relates to neurological impairments with aging; however, limited nondietary models manipulating brain DHA have hindered a direct linkage. We discovered that loss of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 6 in mice (Acsl6-/-) depletes brain membrane phospholipid DHA levels, independent of diet. Here, Acsl6-/- brains contained lower DHA compared with controls across the life span.

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Mouse models of cardiac disease have become essential tools in the study of pathological mechanisms, but the small size of rodents makes it challenging to quantify heart function with noninvasive imaging. Building off recent developments in high-frequency four-dimensional ultrasound (4DUS) imaging, we have applied this technology to study cardiac dysfunction progression in a murine model of metabolic cardiomyopathy. Cardiac knockout of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 () in mice hinders cardiomyocyte bioenergetic metabolism of long-chain fatty acids, and leads to progressive cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure.

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Dietary lipid composition has been shown to impact brain morphology, brain development, and neurologic function. However, how diet uniquely regulates brain lipid homeostasis compared with lipid homeostasis in peripheral tissues remains largely uncharacterized. To evaluate the lipid response to dietary changes in the brain, we assessed actively translating mRNAs in astrocytes and neurons across multiple diets.

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Long-chain fatty acid oxidation is frequently impaired in primary and systemic metabolic diseases affecting the heart; thus, therapeutically increasing reliance on normally minor energetic substrates, such as ketones and medium-chain fatty acids, could benefit cardiac health. However, the molecular fundamentals of this therapy are not fully known. Here, we explored the ability of octanoate, an eight-carbon medium-chain fatty acid known as an unregulated mitochondrial energetic substrate, to ameliorate cardiac hypertrophy in long-chain fatty acid oxidation-deficient hearts because of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 deletion (Cpt2).

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers created a model of muscle acylcarnitine accumulation by deleting the CPT2 enzyme in skeletal muscle, leading to a 22-fold increase in long-chain acylcarnitines compared to controls.
  • Cpt2 mice showed resistance to weight gain and related metabolic issues like glucose intolerance and insulin resistance, potentially due to enhanced lipid excretion and increased energy expenditure.
  • Supplementing with L-carnitine decreased acylcarnitines and improved insulin sensitivity, suggesting that loss of muscle CPT2 can protect against obesity and insulin resistance despite high levels of acylcarnitines.
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Each individual cell-type is defined by its distinct morphology, phenotype, molecular and lipidomic profile. The importance of maintaining cell-specific lipidomic profiles is exemplified by the numerous diseases, disorders, and dysfunctional outcomes that occur as a direct result of altered lipidome. Therefore, the mechanisms regulating cellular lipidome diversity play a role in maintaining essential biological functions.

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Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is an ω-3 dietary-derived polyunsaturated fatty acid of marine origin enriched in testes and necessary for normal fertility, yet the mechanisms regulating the enrichment of DHA in the testes remain unclear. Long-chain ACSL6 (acyl-CoA synthetase isoform 6) activates fatty acids for cellular anabolic and catabolic metabolism by ligating a CoA to a fatty acid, is highly expressed in testes, and has high preference for DHA. Here, we investigated the role of ACSL6 for DHA enrichment in the testes and its requirement for male fertility.

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Alterations to branched-chain keto acid (BCKA) oxidation have been implicated in a wide variety of human diseases, ranging from diabetes to cancer. Although global shifts in BCKA metabolism-evident by gene transcription, metabolite profiling, and flux analyses have been documented across various pathological conditions, the underlying biochemical mechanism(s) within the mitochondrion remain largely unknown. experiments using isolated mitochondria represent a powerful biochemical tool for elucidating the role of the mitochondrion in driving disease.

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Neurons uniquely antagonize fatty acid utilization by hydrolyzing the activated form of fatty acids, long chain acyl-CoAs, via the enzyme acyl-CoA thioesterase 7, Acot7. The loss of Acot7 results in increased fatty acid utilization in neurons and exaggerated stimulus-evoked behavior such as an increased startle response. To understand the contribution of Acot7 to seizure susceptibility, we generated Acot7 knockout (KO) mice and assayed their response to kainate-induced seizures.

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Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is an omega-3 fatty acid that is highly abundant in the brain and confers protection against numerous neurological diseases, yet the fundamental mechanisms regulating the enrichment of DHA in the brain remain unknown. Here, we have discovered that a member of the long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase family, Acsl6, is required for the enrichment of DHA in the brain by generating an Acsl6-deficient mouse (Acsl6). Acsl6 is highly enriched in the brain and lipid profiling of Acsl6 tissues reveals consistent reductions in DHA-containing lipids in tissues highly abundant with Acsl6.

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In vivo imaging has provided a unique framework for studying pathological progression in various mouse models of cardiac disease. Although conventional short-axis motion-mode (SAX MM) ultrasound and cine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are two of the most prevalent strategies used for quantifying cardiac function, there are few notable limitations including imprecision, inaccuracy, and geometric assumptions with ultrasound, or large and costly systems with substantial infrastructure requirements with MRI. Here we present an automated 4-dimensional ultrasound (4DUS) technique that provides comparable information to cine MRI through spatiotemporally synced imaging of cardiac motion.

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Cardiac hypertrophy is closely linked to impaired fatty acid oxidation, but the molecular basis of this link is unclear. Here, we investigated the loss of an obligate enzyme in mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation, carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2), on muscle and heart structure, function, and molecular signatures in a muscle- and heart-specific CPT2-deficient mouse (Cpt2) model. CPT2 loss in heart and muscle reduced complete oxidation of long-chain fatty acids by 87 and 69%, respectively, without altering body weight, energy expenditure, respiratory quotient, or adiposity.

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Article Synopsis
  • ACOT7 is an enzyme that helps convert certain fatty acyl-CoAs into free fatty acids (FFAs) and is increased by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which is linked to inflammation in myeloid cells.
  • Research showed that while ACOT7 plays a significant role in breaking down longer acyl-CoA chains in macrophages, its absence doesn't significantly impact the inflammatory response, such as cytokine production during LPS exposure.
  • Even when ACOT7 levels rise in diabetic mice, removing ACOT7 from hematopoietic cells does not change inflammation or atherosclerosis linked to diabetes in a specific mouse model, indicating its limited role in these inflammatory processes.
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Because hearts with a temporally induced knockout of acyl-CoA synthetase 1 (Acsl1(T-/-)) are virtually unable to oxidize fatty acids, glucose use increases 8-fold to compensate. This metabolic switch activates mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), which initiates growth by increasing protein and RNA synthesis and fatty acid metabolism, while decreasing autophagy. Compared with controls, Acsl1(T-/-) hearts contained 3 times more mitochondria with abnormal structure and displayed a 35-43% lower respiratory function.

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The Wnt coreceptors Lrp5 and Lrp6 are essential for normal postnatal bone accrual and osteoblast function. In this study, we identify a previously unrecognized skeletal function unique to Lrp5 that enables osteoblasts to oxidize fatty acids. Mice lacking the Lrp5 coreceptor specifically in osteoblasts and osteocytes exhibit the expected reductions in postnatal bone mass but also exhibit an increase in body fat with corresponding reductions in energy expenditure.

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