Awesome representation from @uwmadscience.bsky.social at the @asbmb.bsky.social #ASBMB2026 meeting in DC! #ScienceServesUsAll
Posts by Eddie Rashan
Molecular biology on Pluribus. Rate their cloning protocol.
Happy to have contributed to this awesome finding! @slaterc.bsky.social and @thegarrettlab.bsky.social identify a mechanism by which acetoacetate drives anti-tumor immunity in the gut.
Check out the latest pre-print from the lab!
Led by our brilliant postdoc @slaterc.bsky.social
Thanks to all co-authors and collaborators. @jentekle.bsky.social @edreesrashan.bsky.social @mvhlab.bsky.social
Excited to share our study out in @natcellbio.nature.com! Led by @mikelangelipid.bsky.social, we identify the first #LipidDroplet lipid quality control pathway: LD-localized FSP1 protects stored lipids from oxidative damage and prevents LD-initiated #ferroptosis.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Awesome work!! Congratulations!
Excited to share my postdoc work @olzmannlab.bsky.social! We found lipid droplets, the cell’s lipid storage depots, are subject to oxidative damage and are protected by FSP1. Loss of FSP1 triggers droplet peroxidation and cell death, revealing a new layer of lipid quality control!
shorturl.at/B5XYD
Our work detailing the metabolic roles of serum for cancer cell proliferation is now out at JBC, @asbmbjournals.bsky.social!
Congrats to Oliver and Eric and many thanks to the editor and reviewers for a thoughtful and efficient review process.
See here:
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Lipid imaging on the cover of @nature.com! Great times for lipid cell biology indeed. And a fantastic recognition of all the hard work by the team, especially Juan M. Iglesias-Artola and Kristin Böhlig (who made the cover). Link to article: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
I received this award as a second year student, and it was transformative and a big part of the reason I persisted. They are making things harder just for no reason.
I remember the days when we recognized that STEM fields were a worthy national investment 🤦🏾♀️
If you’re looking for some exciting reading to take into the weekend with you, please check out Haley’s first, 1st-author paper published in Science of the Total Environment this week! You won’t want to miss these wildfire smoke induced lipid changes!🔥💨 www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
A pleasure to write this short review on lipid droplets for
@jcb.org together with Will Prinz and amazing artist Emma Reynolds!
We discuss 5 pervasive questions surrounding these remarkable little lipid organelles.
doi.org/10.1083/jcb....
The 4 chemically targeted Laurdan derivatives (for mitochondria, ER, lyso/endosomes, and the Golgi) that we published last year are now available (at a pretty reasonable price) from Avanti Polar Lipids (cat #880194, 880197, 880193, 880196). These have been very popular! pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
Quite a week for #lipidtime: phenomenal study using bifunctional lipid probes to quantify intracellular lipid transport from @nadlerlab.bsky.social and colleagues is now out @nature.com! www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Grrrr. We don't call protein phosphorylation or acteylation epiproteomics. So let's not call RNA modification epitranscriptomics. In fact, realisitically, epigenetics has so many definitions, some of them non-overlapping, that this whole epi-XXXX (genetics/genomics whatever) is just not helping us.
This was a labor of love requiring lots of teamwork over years, repeating in 3 locations! Thanks to all the lab over the years, giving their time generously to this team project, & our wonderful collaborators. The source of fat matters for anti-tumor immunity 🐄🐖🧈🌴🫒🥥
www.nature.com/articles/s42...
1/Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) are used in preclinical testing of cancer therapies, including metabolic therapies. We determined which metabolic properties are retained, and which are lost, when melanomas from patients are implanted and passaged as PDXs in mice.
www.nature.com/articles/s42...
Super excited to share new review on metabolic stress and adaptations in pancreatic cancer to these stresses from @cssheehan.bsky.social
jci.org/articles/vie... 1/6
Super excited for Niemi lab grad student Hannah Pletcher, who placed second in the recent "What's Your Story" Sci-comm writing contest put on by The Scientist! Read more about the contest, as well as Hannah's winning entry, here: www.the-scientist.com/what-s-your-...
#ProudPI
AND IT'S DONE! A 🧵 on our recent article now out in @natsmb.nature.com! Co-led with @abbybartlett.bsky.social, Pagliarini Lab, @judisimcox.bsky.social, we find ACAD10/11 are NOT like other acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and instead catabolize atypical lipids called 4-hydroxy acids 🤯 doi.org/10.1038/s415...
Thank you, CJ! Hope you and your lab are well.
Yes!! WOOHOO!
Very excited to see this work with @edreesrashan.bsky.social published in @natsmb.nature.com ! #metabolism #AmazingACADs 🤩
It was a privilege to work on a project that allow us to span multiple disciplines and reveal new fundamental biology. Thank you to our funding support, incl. from the NIH, @hhmi.org , and institutional support @washumedicine.bsky.social @uwbiochem.bsky.social @morgridgeinstitute.bsky.social
We hope our findings will spur future studies to clarify how these enzymes and the regulation of 4-HAs underlie human health and disease. There is much to learn about how 4-HAs contribute to whole body metabolic flexibility and their tissue- and organelle-specific functions!
Lastly, we wanted to determine how dysfunctional 4-HA catabolism affects physiology and generated ACAD11 KO mice. Disruption of ACAD11 in vivo leads to accumulation in plasma 4-HAs, higher susceptibility to diet-induced fat gain, and dysfunctional adipogenesis. 🧐
If they have similar activities, are ACAD10/11 redundant in cells? Our metabolomics results suggest they are not! ACAD10 is in mitochondrial and ACAD11 is peroxisomal, and we propose that their differential localization enables cells to catabolize a wider range of 4-hydroxy acids.
Second, 4-phosphoacyl-CoA serves as a substrate for the ACAD domains, which convert it into 2-enoyl-CoA using a “redox-neutral” FAD-dependent mechanism. ACAD10/11 are unable to oxidize saturated acyl-CoAs and use a specialized motif to recognize 4-phosphoacyl-CoA.🤯🤯
How do they pull off the job? First, they use N-terminal kinase domains that specifically recognize and phosphorylate 4-hydroxyacyl-CoA. This phosphorylation is crucial for priming the elimination of the “FAO-incompatible” 4-hydroxyl group.
Using rigorous biochemistry/cryo-EM, we demonstrate that ACAD10/11 convert 4-hydroxyacyl-CoAs into 2-enoyl-CoA intermediates that can enter the FAO pathway. They both conduct a multi-step reaction that centers around a key (and 🧊very cool🧊) PHOSPHORYLATED acyl-CoA intermediate.