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Dive into the research topics where Erin V. McGillick is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin V. McGillick.


Journal of Pregnancy | 2012

Antenatal Steroids and the IUGR Fetus: Are Exposure and Physiological Effects on the Lung and Cardiovascular System the Same as in Normally Grown Fetuses?

Janna L. Morrison; Kimberley J. Botting; Poh Seng Soo; Erin V. McGillick; Jennifer Hiscock; Song Zhang; I. Caroline McMillen; Sandra Orgeig

Glucocorticoids are administered to pregnant women at risk of preterm labour to promote fetal lung surfactant maturation. Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is associated with an increased risk of preterm labour. Hence, IUGR babies may be exposed to antenatal glucocorticoids. The ability of the placenta or blood brain barrier to remove glucocorticoids from the fetal compartment or the brain is compromised in the IUGR fetus, which may have implications for lung, brain, and heart development. There is conflicting evidence on the effect of exogenous glucocorticoids on surfactant protein expression in different animal models of IUGR. Furthermore, the IUGR fetus undergoes significant cardiovascular adaptations, including altered blood pressure regulation, which is in conflict with glucocorticoid-induced alterations in blood pressure and flow. Hence, antenatal glucocorticoid therapy in the IUGR fetus may compromise regulation of cardiovascular development. The role of cortisol in cardiomyocyte development is not clear with conflicting evidence in different species and models of IUGR. Further studies are required to study the effects of antenatal glucocorticoids on lung, brain, and heart development in the IUGR fetus. Of specific interest are the aetiology of IUGR and the resultant degree, duration, and severity of hypoxemia.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2013

Regulation of fetal lung development in response to maternal overnutrition.

Mitchell C. Lock; Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; I. Caroline McMillen; Janna L. Morrison

With the worldwide obesity epidemic, the proportion of women entering pregnancy overweight or obese has increased significantly in recent years. Babies born to obese women are at an increased risk of respiratory complications at birth and in childhood. In addition to maternal diabetes, there are a number of metabolic changes that the fetus of an overnourished mother experiences in utero that may modulate lung development and represent the mechanisms underlying the increased risk of respiratory complications. Herein we highlight a series of factors associated with the intrauterine environment of an overnourished mother that may impact on fetal lung development and lead to an increased risk of complications at birth or in postnatal life.


Physiological Reports | 2013

The fetal sheep lung does not respond to cortisol infusion during the late canalicular phase of development

Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; I. Caroline McMillen; Janna L. Morrison

The prepartum surge in plasma cortisol concentrations in humans and sheep promotes fetal lung and surfactant system maturation in the support of air breathing after birth. This physiological process has been used to enhance lung maturation in the preterm fetus using maternal administration of betamethasone in the clinical setting in fetuses as young as 24 weeks gestation (term = 40 weeks). Here, we have investigated the impact of fetal intravenous cortisol infusion during the canalicular phase of lung development (from 109‐ to 116‐days gestation, term = 150 ± 3 days) on the expression of genes regulating glucocorticoid (GC) activity, lung liquid reabsorption, and surfactant maturation in the very preterm sheep fetus and compared this to their expression near term. Cortisol infusion had no impact on mRNA expression of the corticosteroid receptors (GC receptor and mineralocorticoid receptor) or HSD11B‐2, however, there was increased expression of HSD11B‐1 in the fetal lung. Despite this, cortisol infusion had no effect on the expression of genes involved in lung sodium (epithelial sodium channel ‐α, ‐β, or ‐γ subunits and sodium–potassium ATPase‐β1 subunit) or water (aquaporin 1, 3, and 5) reabsorption when compared to the level of expression during exposure to the normal prepartum cortisol surge. Furthermore, in comparison to late gestation, cortisol infusion does not increase mRNA expression of surfactant proteins (SFTP‐A, ‐B, and ‐C) or the number of SFTP‐B‐positive cells present in the alveolar epithelium, the cells that produce pulmonary surfactant. These data suggest that there may be an age before which the lung is unable to respond biochemically to an increase in fetal plasma cortisol concentrations.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2014

Intrafetal glucose infusion alters glucocorticoid signaling and reduces surfactant protein mRNA expression in the lung of the late-gestation sheep fetus

Erin V. McGillick; Janna L. Morrison; I. Caroline McMillen; Sandra Orgeig

Increased circulating fetal glucose and insulin concentrations are potential inhibitors of fetal lung maturation and may contribute to the pathogenesis of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in infants of diabetic mothers. In this study, we examined the effect of intrafetal glucose infusion on mRNA expression of glucose transporters, insulin-like growth factor signaling, glucocorticoid regulatory genes, and surfactant proteins in the lung of the late-gestation sheep fetus. The numerical density of the cells responsible for producing surfactant was determined using immunohistochemistry. Glucose infusion for 10 days did not affect mRNA expression of glucose transporters or IGFs but did decrease IGF-1R expression. There was reduced mRNA expression of the glucocorticoid-converting enzyme HSD11B-1 and the glucocorticoid receptor, potentially reducing glucocorticoid responsiveness in the fetal lung. Furthermore, surfactant protein (SFTP) mRNA expression was reduced in the lung following glucose infusion, while the number of SFTP-B-positive cells remained unchanged. These findings suggest the presence of a glucocorticoid-mediated mechanism regulating delayed maturation of the surfactant system in the sheep fetus following glucose infusion and provide evidence for the link between abnormal glycemic control during pregnancy and the increased risk of RDS in infants of uncontrolled diabetic mothers.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2015

Increased lung prolyl hydroxylase and decreased glucocorticoid receptor are related to decreased surfactant protein in the growth-restricted sheep fetus

Sandra Orgeig; Erin V. McGillick; Kimberley J. Botting; Song Zhang; I. Caroline McMillen; Janna L. Morrison

Experimental placental restriction (PR) by carunclectomy in fetal sheep results in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), chronic hypoxemia, increased plasma cortisol, and decreased lung surfactant protein (SP) expression. The mechanisms responsible for decreased SP expression are unknown but may involve decreased glucocorticoid (GC) action or changes in hypoxia signaling. Endometrial caruncles were removed from nonpregnant ewes to induce PR. Lungs were collected from control and PR fetuses at 130-135 (n = 19) and 139-145 (n = 28) days of gestation. qRT-PCR and Western blotting were used to quantify lung mRNA and protein expression, respectively, of molecular regulators and downstream targets of the GC and hypoxia-signaling pathways. We confirmed a decrease in SP-A, -B, and -C, but not SP-D, mRNA expression in PR fetuses at both ages. There was a net downregulation of GC signaling with a reduction in GC receptor (GR)-α and -β protein expression and a decrease in the cofactor, GATA-6. GC-responsive genes including transforming growth factor-β1, IL-1β, and β2-adrenergic receptor were not stimulated. Prolyl hydroxylase domain (PHD)2 mRNA and protein and PHD3 mRNA expression increased with a concomitant increase in hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and HIF-1β mRNA expression. There was an increase in mRNA expression of several, but not all, hypoxia-responsive genes. Hence, both GC and hypoxia signaling may contribute to reduced SP expression. Although acute hypoxia normally inactivates PHDs, chronic hypoxemia in the PR fetus increased PHD abundance, which normally prevents HIF signaling. This may represent a mechanism by which chronic hypoxemia contributes to the decrease in SP production in the IUGR fetal lung.


Paediatric Respiratory Reviews | 2017

Chronic hypoxaemia as a molecular regulator of fetal lung development: implications for risk of respiratory complications at birth.

Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; Dino A. Giussani; Janna L. Morrison

Exposure to altered intrauterine conditions during pregnancy influences both fetal growth and organ development. Chronic fetal hypoxaemia is a common pregnancy complication associated with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) that may influence the risk of infants experiencing respiratory complications at birth. There are a variety of signalling pathways that contribute to normal fetal lung development at the molecular level. The specific molecular effects of chronic hypoxaemia associated with IUGR on lung development are likely to be dependent on the specific aetiology (maternal, placental and/or fetal factors) that can alter hormone concentrations, oxygen and nutrient transport to the fetus. This review discusses molecular pathways that may contribute to altered fetal lung maturation following exposure to chronic hypoxaemia. Importantly, these studies highlight that the heterogeneity in respiratory outcomes at birth in this obstetric subpopulation are likely determined by the timing, severity and duration of chronic hypoxaemia encountered by the fetus during pregnancy.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

Structural and molecular regulation of lung maturation by intratracheal vascular endothelial growth factor administration in the normally grown and placentally restricted fetus

Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; Janna L. Morrison

Ablation of hypoxia signalling leads to respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Administering vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protects from RDS. Reduced surfactant maturation in the chronically hypoxaemic placentally restricted (PR) fetus is associated with altered regulation of hypoxia signalling and may predispose to RDS. We determined the effect of intratracheal VEGF administration on the expression of genes regulating vascularization, alveolarization, proliferation, inflammation, surfactant maturation and structural markers of lung maturation in the normally grown and PR fetus. Although there were relatively few effects of VEGF on gene expression, there were positive effects on structural maturation in the normally grown and PR lung. There was no effect on fetal blood pressure or fetal breathing movements. We have provided evidence that VEGF promotes structural fetal lung maturation and may result in synergistic effects if combined with current therapeutic treatments aiming to induce surfactant maturation and reduce the risk of RDS.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2016

Regulation of lung maturation by prolyl hydroxylase domain inhibition in the lung of the normally grown and placentally restricted fetus in late gestation

Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; Janna L. Morrison

Intrauterine growth restriction induced by placental restriction (PR) in sheep leads to chronic hypoxemia and reduced surfactant maturation. The underlying molecular mechanism involves altered regulation of hypoxia signaling by increased prolyl hydroxylase domain (PHD) expression. Here, we evaluated the effect of intratracheal administration of the PHD inhibitor dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG) on functional, molecular, and structural determinants of lung maturation in the control and PR sheep fetus. There was no effect of DMOG on fetal blood pressure or fetal breathing movements. DMOG reduced lung expression of genes regulating hypoxia signaling (HIF-3α, ACE1), antioxidant defense (CAT), lung liquid reabsorption (SCNN1-A, ATP1-A1, AQP-1, AQP-5), and surfactant maturation (SFTP-A, SFTP-B, SFTP-C, PCYT1A, LPCAT, ABCA3, LAMP3) in control fetuses. There were very few effects of DMOG on gene expression in the PR fetal lung (reduced lung expression of angiogenic factor ADM, water channel AQP-5, and increased expression of glucose transporter SLC2A1). DMOG administration in controls reduced total lung lavage phosphatidylcholine to the same degree as in PR fetuses. These changes appear to be regulated at the molecular level as there was no effect of DMOG on the percent tissue, air space, or numerical density of SFTP-B positive cells in the control and PR lung. Hence, DMOG administration mimics the effects of PR in reducing surfactant maturation in the lung of control fetuses. The limited responsiveness of the PR fetal lung suggests a potential biochemical limit or reduced plasticity to respond to changes in regulation of hypoxia signaling following exposure to chronic hypoxemia in utero.


The Journal of Physiology | 2015

Structural and molecular regulation of lung maturation by intratracheal VEGF administration in the normally grown and placentally restricted fetus

Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; Janna L. Morrison

Ablation of hypoxia signalling leads to respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Administering vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protects from RDS. Reduced surfactant maturation in the chronically hypoxaemic placentally restricted (PR) fetus is associated with altered regulation of hypoxia signalling and may predispose to RDS. We determined the effect of intratracheal VEGF administration on the expression of genes regulating vascularization, alveolarization, proliferation, inflammation, surfactant maturation and structural markers of lung maturation in the normally grown and PR fetus. Although there were relatively few effects of VEGF on gene expression, there were positive effects on structural maturation in the normally grown and PR lung. There was no effect on fetal blood pressure or fetal breathing movements. We have provided evidence that VEGF promotes structural fetal lung maturation and may result in synergistic effects if combined with current therapeutic treatments aiming to induce surfactant maturation and reduce the risk of RDS.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2015

Mature Surfactant Protein-B Expression by Immunohistochemistry as a Marker for Surfactant System Development in the Fetal Sheep Lung

Mitchell C. Lock; Erin V. McGillick; Sandra Orgeig; Song Zhang; I. Caroline McMillen; Janna L. Morrison

Evaluation of the number of type II alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) is an important measure of the lung’s ability to produce surfactant. Immunohistochemical staining of these cells in lung tissue commonly uses antibodies directed against mature surfactant protein (SP)-C, which is regarded as a reliable SP marker of type II AECs in rodents. There has been no study demonstrating reliable markers for surfactant system maturation by immunohistochemistry in the fetal sheep lung despite being widely used as a model to study lung development. Here we examine staining of a panel of surfactant pro-proteins (pro–SP-B and pro–SP-C) and mature proteins (SP-B and SP-C) in the fetal sheep lung during late gestation in the saccular/alveolar phase of development (120, 130, and 140 days), with term being 150 ± 3 days, to identify the most reliable marker of surfactant producing cells in this species. Results from this study indicate that during late gestation, use of anti-SP-B antibodies in the sheep lung yields significantly higher cell counts in the alveolar epithelium than SP-C antibodies. Furthermore, this study highlights that mature SP-B antibodies are more reliable markers than SP-C antibodies to evaluate surfactant maturation in the fetal sheep lung by immunohistochemistry.

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Janna L. Morrison

University of South Australia

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Sandra Orgeig

University of South Australia

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I. Caroline McMillen

University of South Australia

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Song Zhang

University of South Australia

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Mitchell C. Lock

University of South Australia

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Jennifer Hiscock

University of South Australia

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Jia Yin Soo

University of South Australia

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