gerard karsenty

gerard karsenty

Columbia University in the City of New York

H-index: 140

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

Columbia University in the City of New York

Position

Professor of Genetics and Development, Columbia University Medical Center

Citations(all)

86764

Citations(since 2020)

20811

Cited By

74418

hIndex(all)

140

hIndex(since 2020)

76

i10Index(all)

298

i10Index(since 2020)

221

Email

University Profile Page

Columbia University in the City of New York

Top articles of gerard karsenty

Osteocalcin of maternal and embryonic origins synergize to establish homeostasis in offspring

Many physiological osteocalcin-regulated functions are affected in adult offspring of mothers experiencing unhealthy pregnancy. Furthermore, osteocalcin signaling during gestation influences cognition and adrenal steroidogenesis in adult mice. Together these observations suggest that osteocalcin may broadly function during pregnancy to determine organismal homeostasis in adult mammals. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed in unchallenged wildtype and Osteocalcin-deficient, newborn and adult mice of various genotypes and origin maintained on different genetic backgrounds, the functions of osteocalcin in the pancreas, liver and testes and their molecular underpinnings. This analysis revealed that providing mothers are Osteocalcin-deficient, Osteocalcin haploinsufficiency in embryos hampers insulin secretion, liver gluconeogenesis, glucose homeostasis, testes steroidogenesis in adult offspring; inhibits …

Authors

Danilo Correa Pinto Junior,Isabella Canal Delgado,Haiyang Yang,Alisson Clemenceau,André Corvelo,Giuseppe Narzisi,Rajeeva Musunuri,Julian Meyer Berger,Lauren E Hendricks,Kazuya Tokumura,Na Luo,Hongchao Li,Franck Oury,Patricia Ducy,Vijay K Yadav,Xiang Li,Gerard Karsenty

Journal

EMBO reports

Published Date

2024/2/13

PTPN2 Regulates Metabolic Flux to Affect β-Cell Susceptibility to Inflammatory Stress

Protein tyrosine phosphatase N2 (PTPN2) is a type 1 diabetes (T1D) candidate gene identified from human genome-wide association studies. PTPN2 is highly expressed in human and murine islets and becomes elevated upon inflammation and models of T1D, suggesting that PTPN2 may be important for β-cell survival in the context of T1D. To test whether PTPN2 contributed to β-cell dysfunction in an inflammatory environment, we generated a β-cell–specific deletion of Ptpn2 in mice (PTPN2-β knockout [βKO]). Whereas unstressed animals exhibited normal metabolic profiles, low- and high-dose streptozotocin-treated PTPN2-βKO mice displayed hyperglycemia and accelerated death, respectively. Furthermore, cytokine-treated Ptpn2-KO islets resulted in impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, mitochondrial defects, and reduced glucose-induced metabolic flux, suggesting β-cells lacking Ptpn2 …

Authors

Yong Kyung Kim,Youngjung Rachel Kim,Kristen L Wells,Dylan Sarbaugh,Michelle Guney,Chia-Feng Tsai,Tiffany Zee,Gerard Karsenty,Ernesto S Nakayasu,Lori Sussel

Journal

Diabetes

Published Date

2024/3/1

Interleukin-6 signaling in osteoblasts regulates bone remodeling during exercise

Aerobic exercise has many beneficial effects on human health. One of them, is to influence positively bone remodeling through, however, incompletely understood mechanisms. Given its recently demonstrated role as a mediator of the bone to muscle to bone crosstalk during exercise, we hypothesized that interleukin-6 (IL-6) signaling in bone may contribute to the beneficial effect that exercise has on bone homeostasis. In this study, we first show that aerobic exercise increases the expression of Il6r in bones of WT mice. Then, we analyzed a mutant mouse strain that lacks the IL-6 receptor alpha specifically in osteoblasts (Il6rosb−/−). As it has been reported in the case of Il6−/− mice, in sedentary conditions, bone mass and remodeling were normal in adult Il6rosb−/− mice when compared to controls. In contrast, Il6rosb−/− mice that were subjected to aerobic exercise did not show the increase in bone mass and …

Authors

Biagio Palmisano,Mara Riminucci,Gerard Karsenty

Journal

Bone

Published Date

2023/11/1

Osteocalcin: a multifaceted bone-derived hormone

Together, loss- and gain-of-function experiments have identified the bone-derived secreted molecule osteocalcin as a hormone with a broad reach in rodents and primates. Following its binding to one of three receptors, osteocalcin exerts a profound influence on various aspects of energy metabolism as well as steroidogenesis, neurotransmitter biosynthesis and thereby male fertility, electrolyte homeostasis, cognition, the acute stress response, and exercise capacity. Although this review focuses mostly on the regulation of energy metabolism by osteocalcin, it also touches on its other functions. Lastly, it proposes what could be a common theme between the functions of osteocalcin and between these functions and the structural functions of bone.

Authors

Gerard Karsenty

Published Date

2023/8/21

Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B regulates miR-208b-argonaute 2 association and thyroid hormone responsiveness in cardiac hypertrophy

Increased production of reactive oxygen species plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of several diseases, including cardiac hypertrophy. In our search to identify redox-sensitive targets that contribute to redox signaling, we found that protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) was reversibly oxidized and inactivated in hearts undergoing hypertrophy. Cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of PTP1B in mice (PTP1B cKO mice) caused a hypertrophic phenotype that was exacerbated by pressure overload. Furthermore, we showed that argonaute 2 (AGO2), a key component of the RNA-induced silencing complex, was a substrate of PTP1B in cardiomyocytes and in the heart. Our results revealed that phosphorylation at Tyr393 and inactivation of AGO2 in PTP1B cKO mice prevented miR-208b–mediated repression of thyroid hormone receptor–associated protein 1 (THRAP1; also known as MED13) and contributed to …

Authors

Gérald Coulis,Avinash D Londhe,R Sudheer Sagabala,Yanfen Shi,David P Labbé,Alexandre Bergeron,Pramod Sahadevan,Sherin A Nawaito,Fatiha Sahmi,Marie Josse,Valérie Vinette,Marie-Claude Guertin,Gérard Karsenty,Michel L Tremblay,Jean-Claude Tardif,Bruce G Allen,Benoit Boivin

Journal

Science signaling

Published Date

2022/4/19

Meeting report: Aging research and drug discovery

Aging is the single largest risk factor for most chronic diseases, and thus possesses large socioeconomic interest to continuously aging societies. Consequently, the field of aging research is expanding alongside a growing focus from the industry and investors in aging research. This year’s 8th Annual Aging Research and Drug Discovery (ARDD) meeting was organized as a hybrid meeting from August 30th to September 3rd 2021 with more than 130 attendees participating on-site at the Ceremonial Hall at University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and 1800 engaging online. The conference comprised of presentations from 75 speakers focusing on new research in topics including mechanisms of aging and how these can be modulated as well as the use of AI and new standards of practices within aging research. This year, a longevity workshop was included to build stronger connections with the clinical community.

Authors

Esther Meron,Maria Thaysen,Suzanne Angeli,Adam Antebi,Nir Barzilai,Joseph A Baur,Simon Bekker-Jensen,Maria Birkisdottir,Evelyne Bischof,Jens Bruening,Anne Brunet,Abigail Buchwalter,Filipe Cabreiro,Shiqing Cai,Brian H Chen,Maria Ermolaeva,Collin Y Ewald,Luigi Ferrucci,Maria Carolina Florian,Kristen Fortney,Adam Freund,Anastasia Georgievskaya,Vadim N Gladyshev,David Glass,Tyler Golato,Vera Gorbunova,Jan Hoejimakers,Riekelt H Houtkooper,Sibylle Jager,Frank Jaksch,Georges Janssens,Martin Borch Jensen,Matt Kaeberlein,Gerard Karsenty,Peter de Keizer,Brian Kennedy,James L Kirkland,Michael Kjaer,Guido Kroemer,Kai-Fu Lee,Jean-Marc Lemaitre,David Liaskos,Valter D Longo,Yu-Xuan Lu,Michael R MacArthur,Andrea B Maier,Christina Manakanatas,Sarah J Mitchell,Alexey Moskalev,Laura Niedernhofer,Ivan Ozerov,Linda Partridge,Emmanuelle Passegué,Michael A Petr,James Peyer,Dina Radenkovic,Thomas A Rando,Suresh Rattan,Christian G Riedel,Lenhard Rudolph,Ruixue Ai,Manuel Serrano,Björn Schumacher,David A Sinclair,Ryan Smith,Yousin Suh,Pam Taub,Alexandre Trapp,Anne-Ulrike Trendelenburg,Dario Riccardo Valenzano,Kris Verburgh,Eric Verdin,Jan Vijg,Rudi GJ Westendorp,Alessandra Zonari,Daniela Bakula,Alex Zhavoronkov,Morten Scheibye-Knudsen

Journal

Aging (Albany NY)

Published Date

2022/1/1

Methods, compositions and uses thereof for reversing sacropenia

Exemplary methods, compositions and uses thereof can be provided for preventing, reducing and/or treating loss of muscle function. In particular, eg, it is possible to administer to a subject a pharmaceutical composition comprising a therapeutically effective amount of an agent that enhances Interleukin-6 (IL) release during exercise, and optionally a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or excipient.

Published Date

2022/4/7

Osteocalcin and the physiology of danger

Bone biology has long been driven by the question as to what molecules affect cell differentiation or the functions of bone. Exploring this issue has been an extraordinarily powerful way to improve our knowledge of bone development and physiology. More recently, a second question has emerged: does bone have other functions besides making bone? Addressing this conundrum revealed that the bone‐derived hormone osteocalcin affects a surprisingly large number of organs and physiological processes, including acute stress response. This review will focus on this emerging aspect of bone biology taking osteocalcin as a case study and will show how classical and endocrine functions of bone help to define a new functional identity for this tissue.

Authors

Julian Meyer Berger,Gerard Karsenty

Published Date

2022/3

Professor FAQs

What is gerard karsenty's h-index at Columbia University in the City of New York?

The h-index of gerard karsenty has been 76 since 2020 and 140 in total.

What is gerard karsenty's total number of citations?

gerard karsenty has 86,764 citations in total.

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