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Linsey Stiles

Linsey Stiles

Verified

University of California, Los Angeles · Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences

Active 2005–2024

h-index27
Citations6.3k
Papers10673 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Computer Science
  • Cell biology
  • Medicine
  • Biochemistry
  • Genetics
  • Library science
  • Internal medicine
  • Gerontology
  • Ecology
  • Endocrinology
  • Medical education

Selected publications

  • Mitochondrial morphology controls fatty acid utilization by changing <scp>CPT1</scp> sensitivity to <scp>malonyl‐CoA</scp>

    The EMBO Journal · 2023 · 165 citations

    • Biology
    • Cell biology
    • Biochemistry

    Changes in mitochondrial morphology are associated with nutrient utilization, but the precise causalities and the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Here, using cellular models representing a wide variety of mitochondrial shapes, we show a strong linear correlation between mitochondrial fragmentation and increased fatty acid oxidation (FAO) rates. Forced mitochondrial elongation following MFN2 over-expression or DRP1 depletion diminishes FAO, while forced fragmentation upon knockdown or knockout of MFN2 augments FAO as evident from respirometry and metabolic tracing. Remarkably, the genetic induction of fragmentation phenocopies distinct cell type-specific biological functions of enhanced FAO. These include stimulation of gluconeogenesis in hepatocytes, induction of insulin secretion in islet β-cells exposed to fatty acids, and survival of FAO-dependent lymphoma subtypes. We find that fragmentation increases long-chain but not short-chain FAO, identifying carnitine O-palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1) as the downstream effector of mitochondrial morphology in regulation of FAO. Mechanistically, we determined that fragmentation reduces malonyl-CoA inhibition of CPT1, while elongation increases CPT1 sensitivity to malonyl-CoA inhibition. Overall, these findings underscore a physiologic role for fragmentation as a mechanism whereby cellular fuel preference and FAO capacity are determined.

  • A novel approach to measure mitochondrial respiration in frozen biological samples

    The EMBO Journal · 2020 · 219 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Biology
    • Gerontology

    Respirometry is the gold standard measurement of mitochondrial oxidative function, as it reflects the activity of the electron transport chain complexes working together. However, the requirement for freshly isolated mitochondria hinders the feasibility of respirometry in multi-site clinical studies and retrospective studies. Here, we describe a novel respirometry approach suited for frozen samples by restoring electron transfer components lost during freeze/thaw and correcting for variable permeabilization of mitochondrial membranes. This approach preserves 90-95% of the maximal respiratory capacity in frozen samples and can be applied to isolated mitochondria, permeabilized cells, and tissue homogenates with high sensitivity. We find that primary changes in mitochondrial function, detected in fresh tissue, are preserved in frozen samples years after collection. This approach will enable analysis of the integrated function of mitochondrial Complexes I to IV in one measurement, collected at remote sites or retrospectively in samples residing in tissue biobanks.

  • Mitochondrial Dysfunction Is an Early Consequence of Partial or Complete Dystrophin Loss in mdx Mice

    Frontiers in Physiology · 2020 · 98 citations

    • Biology
    • Internal medicine
    • Endocrinology

    mouse.

Frequent coauthors

  • Orian S. Shirihai

    63 shared
  • Marc Liesa

    Institut de Biologia Molecular de Barcelona

    38 shared
  • Ajit S. Divakaruni

    University of California, Los Angeles

    18 shared
  • Barbara E. Corkey

    Boston University

    16 shared
  • Jakob D. Wikström

    Karolinska Institutet

    16 shared
  • Anthony J.A. Molina

    University of California, San Diego

    15 shared
  • Rebeca Acín‐Pérez

    University of California, Los Angeles

    15 shared
  • Mark Hannink

    University of Missouri

    14 shared
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