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Dive into the research topics where Cynthia D. Guy is active.

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Featured researches published by Cynthia D. Guy.


Hepatology | 2010

Increased fructose consumption is associated with fibrosis severity in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Manal F. Abdelmalek; Ayako Suzuki; Cynthia D. Guy; Aynur Unalp-Arida; Ryan Colvin; Richard J. Johnson; Anna Mae Diehl

The rising incidence of obesity and diabetes coincides with a marked increase in fructose consumption. Fructose consumption is higher in individuals with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) than in age‐matched and body mass index (BMI)‐matched controls. Because fructose elicits metabolic perturbations that may be hepatotoxic, we investigated the relationship between fructose consumption and disease severity in NAFLD. We studied 427 adults enrolled in the NASH Clinical Research Network for whom Block food questionnaire data were collected within 3 months of a liver biopsy. Fructose consumption was estimated based on reporting (frequency × amount) of Kool‐aid, fruit juices, and nondietary soda intake, expressed as servings per week, and classified into none, minimum to moderate (<7 servings/week), and daily (≥7 servings/week). The association of fructose intake with metabolic and histological features of NAFLD was analyzed using multiple linear and ordinal logistic regression analyses with and without controlling for other confounding factors. Increased fructose consumption was univariately associated with decreased age (P < 0.0001), male sex (P < 0.0001), hypertriglyceridemia (P < 0.04), low high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (<0.0001), decreased serum glucose (P < 0.001), increased calorie intake (P < 0.0001), and hyperuricemia (P < 0.0001). After controlling for age, sex, BMI, and total calorie intake, daily fructose consumption was associated with lower steatosis grade and higher fibrosis stage (P < 0.05 for each). In older adults (age ≥ 48 years), daily fructose consumption was associated with increased hepatic inflammation (P < 0.05) and hepatocyte ballooning (P = 0.05). Conclusion: In patients with NAFLD, daily fructose ingestion is associated with reduced hepatic steatosis but increased fibrosis. These results identify a readily modifiable environmental risk factor that may ameliorate disease progression in patients with NAFLD. HEPATOLOGY 2010


Journal of Hepatology | 2011

Noninvasive evaluation of hepatic fibrosis using acoustic radiation force-based shear stiffness in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Mark L. Palmeri; Michael H. Wang; Ned C. Rouze; Manal F. Abdelmalek; Cynthia D. Guy; Barry K. Moser; Anna Mae Diehl; Kathryn R. Nightingale

BACKGROUND & AIMS Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the most common form of chronic liver disease in developed countries, may progress to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in a minority of people. Those with NASH are at increased risk for cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The potential risk and economic burden of utilizing liver biopsy to stage NAFLD in an overwhelmingly large at-risk population are enormous; thus, the discovery of sensitive, inexpensive, and reliable noninvasive diagnostic modalities is essential for population-based screening. METHODS Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI) shear wave imaging, a noninvasive method of assessing tissue stiffness, was used to evaluate liver fibrosis in 172 patients diagnosed with NAFLD. Liver shear stiffness measures in three different imaging locations were reconstructed and compared to the histologic features of NAFLD and AST-to-platelet ratio indices (APRI). RESULTS Reconstructed shear stiffnesses were not associated with ballooned hepatocytes (p=0.11), inflammation (p=0.69), nor imaging location (p=0.11). Using a predictive shear stiffness threshold of 4.24kPa, shear stiffness distinguished low (fibrosis stage 0-2) from high (fibrosis stage 3-4) fibrosis stages with a sensitivity of 90% and a specificity of 90% (AUC of 0.90). Shear stiffness had a mild correlation with APRI (R(2)=0.22). BMI>40kg/m(2) was not a limiting factor for ARFI imaging, and no correlation was noted between BMI and shear stiffness (R(2)=0.05). CONCLUSIONS ARFI imaging is a promising imaging modality for assessing the presence or absence of advanced fibrosis in patients with obesity-related liver disease.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Hedgehog-Mediated Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition and Fibrogenic Repair in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Wing Kin Syn; Youngmi Jung; Alessia Omenetti; Manal F. Abdelmalek; Cynthia D. Guy; Liu Yang; Jiangbo Wang; Rafal P. Witek; Caitlin M. Fearing; Thiago A. Pereira; Vanessa Teaberry; Steve S. Choi; J. Conde–Vancells; Gamze Karaca; Anna Mae Diehl

BACKGROUND & AIMS Repair responses define the ultimate outcomes of liver disease. This study evaluated the hypothesis that fibrogenic repair in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is mediated by Hedgehog (Hh) pathway activation and consequent induction of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transitions (EMT) in ductular-type progenitors. METHODS Immature ductular cells were exposed to Sonic hedgehog (Shh) in the presence or absence of the Hh inhibitor cyclopamine to determine whether Hh-pathway activation directly modulates EMT in liver progenitors. Potential biologic correlates of progenitor cell EMT were assessed using mice fed methionine-choline-deficient + ethionine (MCDE) diets with or without cyclopamine. The effects of increased Hh signaling on EMT and fibrogenic repair during diet-induced NAFLD were also compared in wild-type (WT) and Patched haplo-insufficient (Ptc(+/-)) mice. Finally, evidence of Hh-pathway activation and EMT was examined in liver sections from patients with NAFLD. RESULTS In cultured progenitors, Shh repressed expression of epithelial genes and EMT inhibitors but induced genes that are expressed by myofibroblasts. Cyclopamine reversed these effects. In mouse NAFLD models, Hh-pathway activation, EMT, expansion of myofibroblastic populations, and liver fibrosis occurred. Cyclopamine inhibited Hh-pathway activation and induction of EMT. Ptc(+/-) mice, which have an overactive Hh pathway, exhibited sustained overinduction of Hh target genes and more EMT, myofibroblast accumulation, and fibrosis than WT mice. Numbers of Shh-producing cells and Hh-responsive ductular cells that expressed EMT markers increased in parallel with liver fibrosis in patients with NAFLD. CONCLUSIONS Hh-mediated EMT in ductular cells contributes to the pathogenesis of cirrhosis in NAFLD.


Hepatology | 2016

The severity of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is associated with gut dysbiosis and shift in the metabolic function of the gut microbiota

Jérôme Boursier; Olaf Mueller; Matthieu Barret; Mariana Verdelho Machado; Lionel Fizanne; Felix Araujo-Perez; Cynthia D. Guy; Patrick C. Seed; John F. Rawls; Lawrence A. David; Gilles Hunault; Frédéric Oberti; Paul Calès; Anna Mae Diehl

Several animal studies have emphasized the role of gut microbiota in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). However, data about gut dysbiosis in human NAFLD remain scarce in the literature, especially studies including the whole spectrum of NAFLD lesions. We aimed to evaluate the association between gut dysbiosis and severe NAFLD lesions, that is, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and fibrosis, in a well‐characterized population of adult NAFLD. Fifty‐seven patients with biopsy‐proven NAFLD were enrolled. Taxonomic composition of gut microbiota was determined using 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing of stool samples. Thirty patients had F0/F1 fibrosis stage at liver biopsy (10 with NASH), and 27 patients had significant F≥2 fibrosis (25 with NASH). Bacteroides abundance was significantly increased in NASH and F≥2 patients, whereas Prevotella abundance was decreased. Ruminococcus abundance was significantly higher in F≥2 patients. By multivariate analysis, Bacteroides abundance was independently associated with NASH and Ruminococcus with F≥2 fibrosis. Stratification according to the abundance of these two bacteria generated three patient subgroups with increasing severity of NAFLD lesions. Based on imputed metagenomic profiles, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathways significantly related to NASH and fibrosis F≥2 were mostly related to carbohydrate, lipid, and amino acid metabolism. Conclusion: NAFLD severity associates with gut dysbiosis and a shift in metabolic function of the gut microbiota. We identified Bacteroides as independently associated with NASH and Ruminococcus with significant fibrosis. Thus, gut microbiota analysis adds information to classical predictors of NAFLD severity and suggests novel metabolic targets for pre‐/probiotics therapies. (Hepatology 2016;63:764–775)


Hepatology | 2009

Pan‐caspase inhibitor VX‐166 reduces fibrosis in an animal model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

Rafal P. Witek; W. Carl Stone; F. Gamze Karaca; Wing-Kin Syn; Thiago A. Pereira; Kolade M. Agboola; Alessia Omenetti; Youngmi Jung; Vanessa Teaberry; Steve S. Choi; Cynthia D. Guy; John Pollard; Peter Charlton; Anna Mae Diehl

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a potentially progressive liver disease that culminates in cirrhosis. Cirrhosis occurs more often in individuals with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) than in those with steatosis (nonalcoholic fatty liver [NAFL]). The difference between NAFL and NASH is the extent of hepatocyte apoptosis, which is more extensive in NASH. Because phagocytosis of apoptotic cells activates hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), we examined the hypothesis that a pan‐caspase inhibitor, VX‐166, would reduce progression of fibrosis in a mouse model of NASH. Male db/db mice were fed methionine/choline‐deficient (MCD) diets to induce NASH and liver fibrosis. Mice were gavaged once daily with either the pan‐caspase inhibitor VX‐166 (6 mg/kg/d; Vertex, Abingdon, UK) or vehicle only and sacrificed at 4 or 8 weeks. Treatment with an MCD diet increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT), caspase‐3 activity, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase–mediated dUTP nick‐end labeling (TUNEL)‐positive cells, NASH, and fibrosis. Treatment of MCD‐fed mice with VX‐166 decreased active caspase‐3, TUNEL‐positive cells, and triglyceride content (P < 0.05). However, ALT levels were similar in VX‐166–treated mice and vehicle‐treated controls. Histological findings also confirmed that both groups had comparable liver injury (NAFLD activity score ≥6). Nevertheless, VX‐166–treated MCD‐fed mice demonstrated decreased α‐smooth muscle actin expression (4 weeks, P < 0.05; 8 weeks, P < 0.005) and had reduced hepatic levels of collagen 1α1 messenger RNA (8 weeks, P < 0.05). Hydroxyproline content and Sirius red staining of VX‐166–treated livers confirmed decreases in fibrosis. Conclusion: Inhibiting hepatic apoptosis suppresses the development of fibrosis in mice with NASH. Beneficial effects on liver fibrosis were associated with reductions in hepatic steatosis, but occurred without obvious improvement in liver injury. These findings are consistent with evidence that apoptosis triggers HSC activation and liver fibrosis and suggest that caspase inhibitors may be useful as an antifibrotic NASH therapy. (HEPATOLOGY 2009.)


Hepatology | 2010

Accumulation of natural killer T cells in progressive nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Wing-Kin Syn; Ye Htun Oo; Thiago A. Pereira; Gamze Karaca; Youngmi Jung; Alessia Omenetti; Rafal P. Witek; Steve S. Choi; Cynthia D. Guy; Caitlin M. Fearing; Vanessa Teaberry; Fausto E.L. Pereira; David H. Adams; Anna Mae Diehl

Liver inflammation is greater in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) than steatosis, suggesting that immune responses contribute to nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) progression. Livers normally contain many natural killer T (NKT) cells that produce factors that modulate inflammatory and fibrogenic responses. Such cells are relatively depleted in steatosis, but their status in more advanced NAFLD is uncertain. We hypothesized that NKT cells accumulate and promote fibrosis progression in NASH. We aimed to determine if livers become enriched with NKT cells during NASH‐related fibrosis; identify responsible mechanisms; and assess if NKT cells stimulate fibrogenesis. NKT cells were analyzed in wildtype mice and Patched‐deficient (Ptc+/−) mice with an overly active Hedgehog (Hh) pathway, before and after feeding methionine choline‐deficient (MCD) diets to induce NASH‐related fibrosis. Effects of NKT cell‐derived factors on hepatic stellate cells (HSC) were examined and fibrogenesis was evaluated in CD1d‐deficient mice that lack NKT cells. NKT cells were quantified in human cirrhotic and nondiseased livers. During NASH‐related fibrogenesis in wildtype mice, Hh pathway activation occurred, leading to induction of factors that promoted NKT cell recruitment, retention, and viability, plus liver enrichment with NKT cells. Ptc+/− mice accumulated more NKT cells and developed worse liver fibrosis; CD1d‐deficient mice that lack NKT cells were protected from fibrosis. NKT cell‐conditioned medium stimulated HSC to become myofibroblastic. Liver explants were 2‐fold enriched with NKT cells in patients with non‐NASH cirrhosis, and 4‐fold enriched in patients with NASH cirrhosis. Conclusion: Hh pathway activation leads to hepatic enrichment with NKT cells that contribute to fibrosis progression in NASH. (HEPATOLOGY 2010;)


Hepatology | 2011

Osteopontin is induced by hedgehog pathway activation and promotes fibrosis progression in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

Wing Kin Syn; Steve S. Choi; Evaggelia Liaskou; Gamze Karaca; Kolade M. Agboola; Ye Htun Oo; Zhiyong Mi; Thiago A. Pereira; Marzena Zdanowicz; Padmini Malladi; Yuping Chen; Cynthia A. Moylan; Youngmi Jung; Syamal D. Bhattacharya; Vanessa Teaberry; Alessia Omenetti; Manal F. Abdelmalek; Cynthia D. Guy; David H. Adams; Paul C. Kuo; Gregory A. Michelotti; Peter F. Whitington; Anna Mae Diehl

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a leading cause of cirrhosis. Recently, we showed that NASH‐related cirrhosis is associated with Hedgehog (Hh) pathway activation. The gene encoding osteopontin (OPN), a profibrogenic extracellular matrix protein and cytokine, is a direct transcriptional target of the Hh pathway. Thus, we hypothesize that Hh signaling induces OPN to promote liver fibrosis in NASH. Hepatic OPN expression and liver fibrosis were analyzed in wild‐type (WT) mice, Patched‐deficient (Ptc+/−) (overly active Hh signaling) mice, and OPN‐deficient mice before and after feeding methionine and choline–deficient (MCD) diets to induce NASH‐related fibrosis. Hepatic OPN was also quantified in human NASH and nondiseased livers. Hh signaling was manipulated in cultured liver cells to assess direct effects on OPN expression, and hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) were cultured in medium with different OPN activities to determine effects on HSC phenotype. When fed MCD diets, Ptc+/− mice expressed more OPN and developed worse liver fibrosis (P < 0.05) than WT mice, whereas OPN‐deficient mice exhibited reduced fibrosis (P < 0.05). In NASH patients, OPN was significantly up‐regulated and correlated with Hh pathway activity and fibrosis stage. During NASH, ductular cells strongly expressed OPN. In cultured HSCs, SAG (an Hh agonist) up‐regulated, whereas cyclopamine (an Hh antagonist) repressed OPN expression (P < 0.005). Cholangiocyte‐derived OPN and recombinant OPN promoted fibrogenic responses in HSCs (P < 0.05); neutralizing OPN with RNA aptamers attenuated this (P < 0.05). Conclusion: OPN is Hh‐regulated and directly promotes profibrogenic responses. OPN induction correlates with Hh pathway activity and fibrosis stage. Therefore, OPN inhibition may be beneficial in NASH (HEPATOLOGY 2011)


Gut | 2012

NKT-associated hedgehog and osteopontin drive fibrogenesis in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Wing-Kin Syn; Kolade M. Agboola; Marzena Swiderska; Gregory A. Michelotti; Evaggelia Liaskou; Herbert Pang; Guanhua Xie; George Philips; Isaac S. Chan; Gamze Karaca; Thiago A. Pereira; Yuping Chen; Zhiyong Mi; Paul C. Kuo; Steve S. Choi; Cynthia D. Guy; Manal F. Abdelmalek; Anna Mae Diehl

Objective Immune responses are important in dictating non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) outcome. We previously reported that upregulation of hedgehog (Hh) and osteopontin (OPN) occurs in NASH, that Hh-regulated accumulation of natural killer T (NKT) cells promotes hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation, and that cirrhotic livers harbour large numbers of NKT cells. Design The hypothesis that activated NKT cells drive fibrogenesis during NASH was evaluated by assessing if NKT depletion protects against NASH fibrosis; identifying the NKT-associated fibrogenic factors; and correlating plasma levels of the NKT cell-associated factor OPN with fibrosis severity in mice and humans. Results When fed methionine-choline-deficient (MCD) diets for 8 weeks, wild type (WT) mice exhibited Hh pathway activation, enhanced OPN expression, and NASH-fibrosis. Ja18‒/‒ and CD1d‒/‒ mice which lack NKT cells had significantly attenuated Hh and OPN expression and dramatically less fibrosis. Liver mononuclear cells (LMNCs) from MCD diet fed WT mice contained activated NKT cells, generated Hh and OPN, and stimulated HSCs to become myofibroblasts; neutralising these factors abrogated the fibrogenic actions of WT LMNCs. LMNCs from NKT-cell-deficient mice were deficient in fibrogenic factors, failing to activate collagen gene expression in HSCs. Human NASH livers with advanced fibrosis contained more OPN and Hh protein than those with early fibrosis. Plasma levels of OPN mirrored hepatic OPN expression and correlated with fibrosis severity. Conclusion Hepatic NKT cells drive production of OPN and Hh ligands that promote fibrogenesis during NASH. Associated increases in plasma levels of OPN may provide a biomarker of NASH fibrosis.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Hedgehog Signaling Antagonist Promotes Regression of Both Liver Fibrosis and Hepatocellular Carcinoma in a Murine Model of Primary Liver Cancer

George Philips; Isaac S. Chan; Marzena Swiderska; Vanessa T. Schroder; Cynthia D. Guy; Gamze Karaca; Cynthia A. Moylan; Talaignair N. Venkatraman; Sebastian Feuerlein; Wing-Kin Syn; Youngmi Jung; Rafal P. Witek; Steve S. Choi; Gregory A. Michelotti; Fatima A. Rangwala; Elmar M. Merkle; Christopher D. Lascola; Anna Mae Diehl

Objective Chronic fibrosing liver injury is a major risk factor for hepatocarcinogenesis in humans. Mice with targeted deletion of Mdr2 (the murine ortholog of MDR3) develop chronic fibrosing liver injury. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) emerges spontaneously in such mice by 50–60 weeks of age, providing a model of fibrosis-associated hepatocarcinogenesis. We used Mdr2−/− mice to investigate the hypothesis that activation of the hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway promotes development of both liver fibrosis and HCC. Methods Hepatic injury and fibrosis, Hh pathway activation, and liver progenitor populations were compared in Mdr2−/− mice and age-matched wild type controls. A dose finding experiment with the Hh signaling antagonist GDC-0449 was performed to optimize Hh pathway inhibition. Mice were then treated with GDC-0449 or vehicle for 9 days, and effects on liver fibrosis and tumor burden were assessed by immunohistochemistry, qRT-PCR, Western blot, and magnetic resonance imaging. Results Unlike controls, Mdr2−/− mice consistently expressed Hh ligands and progressively accumulated Hh-responsive liver myofibroblasts and progenitors with age. Treatment of aged Mdr2-deficient mice with GDC-0449 significantly inhibited hepatic Hh activity, decreased liver myofibroblasts and progenitors, reduced liver fibrosis, promoted regression of intra-hepatic HCCs, and decreased the number of metastatic HCC without increasing mortality. Conclusions Hh pathway activation promotes liver fibrosis and hepatocarcinogenesis, and inhibiting Hh signaling safely reverses both processes even when fibrosis and HCC are advanced.


Gut | 2010

Signals from Dying Hepatocytes Trigger Growth of Liver Progenitors

Youngmi Jung; Rafal P. Witek; Wing-Kin Syn; Steve S. Choi; Alessia Omenetti; Richard T. Premont; Cynthia D. Guy; Anna Mae Diehl

Objective The death rate of mature hepatocytes is chronically increased in various liver diseases, triggering responses that prevent liver atrophy, but often cause fibrosis. Mice with targeted disruption of inhibitor kappa B kinase (Ikk) in hepatocytes (∆HEP mice) provide a model to investigate this process because inhibiting Ikk–nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signalling in hepatocytes increases their apoptosis. Methods Cell proliferation, apoptosis, progenitors, fibrosis and production of Hedgehog (Hh) ligands (progenitor and myofibroblast growth factors) were compared in ∆HEP and control mice before and after feeding methionine choline-deficient ethionine-supplemented (MCDE) diets. Ikkβ was deleted from primary hepatocytes to determine the effects on Hh ligand production; Hh signalling was inhibited directly in progenitors to determine the effects on viability. Liver sections from patients were examined to assess relationships between hepatocyte production of Hh ligands, accumulation of myofibroblastic cells and liver fibrosis. Results Disrupting the Ikk–NF-κB pathway in hepatocytes inhibited their proliferation but induced their production of Hh ligands. The latter provided viability signals for progenitors and myofibroblasts, enhancing accumulation of these cell types and causing fibrogenesis. Findings in the mouse models were recapitulated in diseased human livers. Conclusion Dying mature hepatocytes produce Hh ligands which promote the compensatory outgrowth of progenitors and myofibroblasts. These results help to explain why diseases that chronically increase hepatocyte death promote cirrhosis.

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