Eliana Garcia-Vaz
Lund University
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Featured researches published by Eliana Garcia-Vaz.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Nicholas S. Kirkby; Melissa V. Chan; Anne K. Zaiss; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Jing Jiao; Lisa Berglund; Elena F. Verdu; Blerina Ahmetaj-Shala; John L. Wallace; Harvey R. Herschman; Maria F. Gomez; Jane A. Mitchell
Significance Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) work by inhibiting cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) induced at sites of inflammation. They are among the most widely used drugs worldwide, but their cardiovascular side effects are a major concern for patients, regulators, and industry. NSAID side effects are mediated by inhibition of constitutively expressed COX-2 present in discrete regions, including the kidney. However, the pathways driving constitutive COX-2 remain poorly understood. The work presented here defines these pathways and importantly shows constitutive COX-2 expression in the kidney occurs through pathways distinct to those driving COX-2 in inflammation. These data therefore highlight the potential that targeting COX-2 at the transcriptional level may provide a way to dissociate antiinflammatory benefits of NSAIDs from their treatment-limiting cardiovascular side effects. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is an inducible enzyme that drives inflammation and is the therapeutic target for widely used nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). However, COX-2 is also constitutively expressed, in the absence of overt inflammation, with a specific tissue distribution that includes the kidney, gastrointestinal tract, brain, and thymus. Constitutive COX-2 expression is therapeutically important because NSAIDs cause cardiovascular and renal side effects in otherwise healthy individuals. These side effects are now of major concern globally. However, the pathways driving constitutive COX-2 expression remain poorly understood. Here we show that in the kidney and other sites, constitutive COX-2 expression is a sterile response, independent of commensal microorganisms and not associated with activity of the inflammatory transcription factor NF-κB. Instead, COX-2 expression in the kidney but not other regions colocalized with nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) transcription factor activity and was sensitive to inhibition of calcineurin-dependent NFAT activation. However, calcineurin/NFAT regulation did not contribute to constitutive expression elsewhere or to inflammatory COX-2 induction at any site. These data address the mechanisms driving constitutive COX-2 and suggest that by targeting transcription it may be possible to develop antiinflammatory therapies that spare the constitutive expression necessary for normal homeostatic functions, including those important to the cardiovascular-renal system.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Anna V. Zetterqvist; Lisa Berglund; Fabiana Blanco; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Maria Wigren; Pontus Dunér; Anna-Maria Dutius Andersson; Fong To; Peter Spégel; Jan Nilsson; Eva Bengtsson; Maria F. Gomez
Objective of the Study Diabetic patients have a much more widespread and aggressive form of atherosclerosis and therefore, higher risk for myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease and stroke, but the molecular mechanisms leading to accelerated damage are still unclear. Recently, we showed that hyperglycemia activates the transcription factor NFAT in the arterial wall, inducing the expression of the pro-atherosclerotic protein osteopontin. Here we investigate whether NFAT activation may be a link between diabetes and atherogenesis. Methodology and Principal Findings Streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes in apolipoprotein E−/− mice resulted in 2.2 fold increased aortic atherosclerosis and enhanced pro-inflammatory burden, as evidenced by elevated blood monocytes, endothelial activation- and inflammatory markers in aorta, and pro-inflammatory cytokines in plasma. In vivo treatment with the NFAT blocker A-285222 for 4 weeks completely inhibited the diabetes-induced aggravation of atherosclerosis, having no effect in non-diabetic mice. STZ-treated mice exhibited hyperglycemia and higher plasma cholesterol and triglycerides, but these were unaffected by A-285222. NFAT-dependent transcriptional activity was examined in aorta, spleen, thymus, brain, heart, liver and kidney, but only augmented in the aorta of diabetic mice. A-285222 completely blocked this diabetes-driven NFAT activation, but had no impact on the other organs or on splenocyte proliferation or cytokine secretion, ruling out systemic immunosuppression as the mechanism behind reduced atherosclerosis. Instead, NFAT inhibition effectively reduced IL-6, osteopontin, monocyte chemotactic protein 1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1, CD68 and tissue factor expression in the arterial wall and lowered plasma IL-6 in diabetic mice. Conclusions Targeting NFAT signaling may be a novel and attractive approach for the treatment of diabetic macrovascular complications.
Kidney International | 2016
Yang De Marinis; Mengyin Cai; Pradeep Bompada; David Atac; Olga Kotova; Martin Johansson; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Maria F. Gomez; Markku Laakso; Leif Groop
Diabetic kidney disease is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease. Genetic factors have been suggested to contribute to its susceptibility. However, results from genetic studies are disappointing possibly because the role of glucose in diabetic kidney disease predisposed by epigenetic mechanisms has not been taken into account. Since thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP) has been shown to play an important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic kidney disease, we tested whether glucose could induce expression of TXNIP in the kidney by epigenetic mechanisms. In kidneys from diabetic Sur1-E1506K(+/+) mice, hyperglycemia-induced Txnip expression was associated with stimulation of activating histone marks H3K9ac, H3K4me3, and H3K4me1, as well as decrease in the repressive histone mark H3K27me3 at the promoter region of the gene. Glucose also coordinated changes in histone marks and TXNIP gene expression in mouse SV40 MES13 mesangial cells and the normal human mesangial cell line NHMC. The involvement of histone acetylation in glucose-stimulated TXNIP expression was confirmed by reversing or enhancing acetylation using the histone acetyltransferase p300 inhibitor C646 or the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A. Thus, glucose is a potent inducer of histone modifications, which could drive expression of proinflammatory genes and thereby predispose to diabetic kidney disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Tran Thi Hien; Karolina M. Turczyńska; Diana Dahan; Mari Ekman; Mario Grossi; Johan Sjögren; Johan Nilsson; Thomas Braun; Thomas Boettger; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Karin G. Stenkula; Karl Swärd; Maria F. Gomez; Sebastian Albinsson
Both type 1 and type 2 diabetes are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease. This is in part attributed to the effects of hyperglycemia on vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells, but the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. In diabetic animal models, hyperglycemia results in hypercontractility of vascular smooth muscle possibly due to increased activation of Rho-kinase. The aim of the present study was to investigate the regulation of contractile smooth muscle markers by glucose and to determine the signaling pathways that are activated by hyperglycemia in smooth muscle cells. Microarray, quantitative PCR, and Western blot analyses revealed that both mRNA and protein expression of contractile smooth muscle markers were increased in isolated smooth muscle cells cultured under high compared with low glucose conditions. This effect was also observed in hyperglycemic Akita mice and in diabetic patients. Elevated glucose activated the protein kinase C and Rho/Rho-kinase signaling pathways and stimulated actin polymerization. Glucose-induced expression of contractile smooth muscle markers in cultured cells could be partially or completely repressed by inhibitors of advanced glycation end products, L-type calcium channels, protein kinase C, Rho-kinase, actin polymerization, and myocardin-related transcription factors. Furthermore, genetic ablation of the miR-143/145 cluster prevented the effects of glucose on smooth muscle marker expression. In conclusion, these data demonstrate a possible link between hyperglycemia and vascular disease states associated with smooth muscle contractility.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2015
Songen Zhang; Su Zhang; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Heiko Herwald; Maria F. Gomez; Henrik Thorlacius
Streptococcus pyogenes of the M1 serotype can cause STSS, which is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The purpose of the present study was to examine the role of NFAT signaling in M1 protein‐induced lung injury. NFAT‐luc mice were treated with the NFAT inhibitor A‐285222 before administration of the M1 protein. Neutrophil infiltration, edema, and CXC chemokines were quantified in the lung, 4 h after challenge with the M1 protein. Flow cytometry was used to determine Mac‐1 expression. Challenge with the M1 protein increased NFAT‐dependent transcriptional activity in the lung, spleen, and liver in NFAT‐luc mice. Administration of the NFAT inhibitor A‐285222 abolished M1 protein‐evoked NFAT activation in the lung, spleen, and liver. M1 protein challenge induced neutrophil recruitment, edema, and CXC chemokine production in the lung, as well as up‐regulation of Mac‐1 on circulating neutrophils. Inhibition of NFAT activity attenuated M1 protein‐induced neutrophil infiltration by 77% and edema formation by 50% in the lung. Moreover, administration of A‐285222 reduced M1 protein‐evoked pulmonary formation of CXC chemokine >80%. In addition, NFAT inhibition decreased M1 protein‐triggered Mac‐1 up‐regulation on neutrophils. These findings indicate that NFAT signaling controls pulmonary infiltration of neutrophils in response to streptococcal M1 protein via formation of CXC chemokines and neutrophil expression of Mac‐1. Thus, the targeting of NFAT activity might be a useful way to ameliorate lung injury in streptococcal infections.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Andreas Lindqvist; Mikael Ekelund; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Marcus Ståhlman; Stefan Pierzynowski; Maria F. Gomez; Jens F. Rehfeld; Leif Groop; Jan Hedenbro; Nils Wierup; Peter Spégel
Background A growing body of literature on Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB) has generated inconclusive results on the mechanism underlying the beneficial effects on weight loss and glycaemia, partially due to the problems of designing clinical studies with the appropriate controls. Moreover, RYGB is only performed in obese individuals, in whom metabolism is perturbed and not completely understood. Methods In an attempt to isolate the effects of RYGB and its effects on normal metabolism, we investigated the effect of RYGB in lean pigs, using sham-operated pair-fed pigs as controls. Two weeks post-surgery, pigs were subjected to an intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) and circulating metabolites, hormones and lipids measured. Bile acid composition was profiled after extraction from blood, faeces and the gallbladder. Results A similar weight development in both groups of pigs validated our experimental model. Despite similar changes in fasting insulin, RYGB-pigs had lower fasting glucose levels. During an IVGTT RYGB-pigs had higher insulin and lower glucose levels. VLDL and IDL were lower in RYGB- than in sham-pigs. RYGB-pigs had increased levels of most amino acids, including branched-chain amino acids, but these were more efficiently suppressed by glucose. Levels of bile acids in the gallbladder were higher, whereas plasma and faecal bile acid levels were lower in RYGB- than in sham-pigs. Conclusion In a lean model RYGB caused lower plasma lipid and bile acid levels, which were compensated for by increased plasma amino acids, suggesting a switch from lipid to protein metabolism during fasting in the immediate postoperative period.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2018
Tran Thi Hien; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Karin G. Stenkula; Johan Sjögren; Johan Nilsson; Maria F. Gomez; Sebastian Albinsson
Diabetes is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease and this is in part due to the effects of hyperglycemia on vascular smooth muscle cells. Small non‐coding microRNAs are known to control smooth muscle phenotype and arterial contractility and are dysregulated in diabetes. The effect of microRNAs on smooth muscle differentiation is in part mediated by the transcription factor KLF4 but the role of this mechanism in diabetic vascular disease is not fully understood. Herein, we have investigated the importance of hyperglycemia and diabetes for the expression of KLF4 in vascular smooth muscle and the involvement of miRNAs in this regulation. Hyperglycemia down‐regulated KLF4 in vascular smooth muscle cells and similar results were found in arteries of diabetic mice and patients. This correlated with a Foxa2‐dependent up‐regulation of miR‐29c, which targeted KLF4 in vascular smooth muscle cells. Importantly, by preventing downregulation of KLF4, the induction of smooth muscle contractile protein markers by glucose was inhibited. In conclusion, miR‐29 mediated inhibition of KLF4 in hyperglycemic conditions contributes to increased expression of contractile markers in vascular smooth muscle cells. Further studies are warranted to determine the therapeutic implications of miR‐29 inhibition in diabetic vascular disease.
Cell Metabolism | 2014
Ulrika Krus; Ben C. King; Vini Nagaraj; Nikhil R. Gandasi; Jonatan Sjölander; Pawel Buda; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Maria F. Gomez; Emilia Ottosson-Laakso; Petter Storm; Malin Fex; Petter Vikman; Enming Zhang; Sebastian Barg; Anna M. Blom; Erik Renström
Nature Communications | 2017
Bo Zeng; Gui Lan Chen; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Sunil Bhandari; Nikoleta Daskoulidou; Lisa Berglund; Hongni Jiang; Thomas Hallett; Lu-Ping Zhou; Li Huang; Zi Hao Xu; Viji Nair; Robert G. Nelson; Wenjun Ju; Matthias Kretzler; Stephen L. Atkin; Maria F. Gomez; Shang Zhong Xu
Society for Endocrinology BES 2015 | 2015
Alison D. McNeilly; Eliana Garcia-Vaz; Jennifer Gallagher; Rory J. McCrimmon; Maria F. Gomez; Faisel Khan