Erlinda L. Kirkman
University of Southern California
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Featured researches published by Erlinda L. Kirkman.
Diabetes | 2008
Jenny D. Chiu; Joyce M. Richey; L. Nicole Harrison; Edward Zuniga; Cathryn M. Kolka; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Martin Ellmerer; Richard N. Bergman
OBJECTIVE—Intravenous insulin infusion rapidly increases plasma insulin, yet glucose disposal occurs at a much slower rate. This delay in insulins action may be related to the protracted time for insulin to traverse the capillary endothelium. An increased delay may be associated with the development of insulin resistance. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether bypassing the transendothelial insulin transport step and injecting insulin directly into the interstitial space would moderate the delay in glucose uptake observed with intravenous administration of the hormone. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Intramuscular injections of saline (n = 3) or insulin (n = 10) were administered directly into the vastus medialis of anesthetized dogs. Injections of 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 1.0, and 3.0 units insulin were administered hourly during a basal insulin euglycemic glucose clamp (0.2mU · min−1 · kg−1). RESULTS—Unlike the saline group, each incremental insulin injection caused interstitial (lymph) insulin to rise within 10 min, indicating rapid diffusion of the hormone within the interstitial matrix. Delay in insulin action was virtually eliminated, indicated by immediate dose-dependent increments in hindlimb glucose uptake. Additionally, bypassing insulin transport by direct injection into muscle revealed a fourfold greater sensitivity to insulin of in vivo muscle tissue than previously reported from intravenous insulin administration. CONCLUSIONS—Our results indicate that the transport of insulin to skeletal muscle is a rate-limiting step for insulin to activate glucose disposal. Based on these results, we speculate that defects in insulin transport across the endothelial layer of skeletal muscle will contribute to insulin resistance.
Journal of Immunology | 2000
Scott C. Wilcoxen; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Kennichi C. Dowdell; Stephen A. Stohlman
Female SJL mice preferentially mount Th1-immune responses and are susceptible to the active induction of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. By contrast, young adult male SJL are resistant to experimental allergic encephalomyelitis due to an APC-dependent induction of Th2 cells. The basis for this gender-dependent differential T cell induction was examined by analysis of macrophage APC cytokine secretion during T cell activation. APC derived from females secrete IL-12, but not IL-10, during T cell activation. By contrast, APC derived from males secrete IL-10, but not IL-12, during T cell activation. Activation of T cells with APC derived from the opposite sex demonstrated that these cytokines were derived from the respective APC populations. Furthermore, inhibition of IL-10, but not TGF-β, during T cell activation resulted in the secretion of IL-12 by male-derived APC. APC from naive male mice, in which IL-10 was reduced in vivo before isolation, also secrete IL-12, demonstrating altered APC cytokine secretion was due to an environment high in IL-10 before Ag encounter. Finally, APC derived from castrated male mice preferentially secrete IL-12 during T cell activation. These data demonstrate a link between gonadal hormones and APC activity and suggest that these hormones alter the APC, thereby influencing cytokine secretion during initial T cell activation.
Obesity | 2009
Maya Lottati; Cathryn M. Kolka; Darko Stefanovski; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Richard N. Bergman
Visceral adiposity is strongly associated with insulin resistance; however, little evidence directly demonstrates that visceral fat per se impairs insulin action. Here, we examine the effects of the surgical removal of the greater omentum and its occupying visceral fat, an omentectomy (OM), on insulin sensitivity (SI) and β‐cell function in nonobese dogs. Thirteen male mongrel dogs were used in this research study; animals were randomly assigned to surgical treatment with either OM (n = 7), or sham‐surgery (SHAM) (n = 6). OM failed to generate measurable changes in body weight (+2%; P = 0.1), or subcutaneous adiposity (+3%; P = 0.83) as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The removal of the greater omentum did not significantly reduce total visceral adipose volume (−7.3 ± 6.4%; P = 0.29); although primary analysis showed a trend for OM to increase SI when compared to sham operated animals (P = 0.078), further statistical analysis revealed that this minor reduction in visceral fat alleviated insulin resistance by augmenting SI of the periphery (+67.7 ± 35.2%; P = 0.03), as determined by the euglycemic‐hyperinsulinemic clamp. Insulin secretory response during the hyperglycemic step clamp was not directly influenced by omental fat removal (presurgery 6.82 ± 1.4 vs. postsurgery: 6.7 ± 1.2 pmol/l/mg/dl, P = 0.9). These findings provide new evidence for the deleterious role of visceral fat in insulin resistance, and suggest that a greater OM procedure may effectively improve insulin sensitivity.
American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010
Viorica Ionut; Huiwen Liu; Vahe Mooradian; Ana Valeria B. Castro; Morvarid Kabir; Darko Stefanovski; Dan Zheng; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Richard N. Bergman
Human type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is often characterized by obesity-associated insulin resistance (IR) and beta-cell function deficiency. Development of relevant large animal models to study T2DM is important and timely, because most existing models have dramatic reductions in pancreatic function and no associated obesity and IR, features that resemble more T1DM than T2DM. Our goal was to create a canine model of T2DM in which obesity-associated IR occurs first, followed by moderate reduction in beta-cell function, leading to mild diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance. Lean dogs (n = 12) received a high-fat diet that increased visceral (52%, P < 0.001) and subcutaneous (130%, P < 0.001) fat and resulted in a 31% reduction in insulin sensitivity (S(I)) (5.8 +/- 0.7 x 10(-4) to 4.1 +/- 0.5 x 10(-4) microU x ml(-1) x min(-1), P < 0.05). Animals then received a single low dose of streptozotocin (STZ; range 30-15 mg/kg). The decrease in beta-cell function was dose dependent and resulted in three diabetes models: 1) frank hyperglycemia (high STZ dose); 2) mild T2DM with normal or impaired fasting glucose (FG), 2-h glucose >200 mg/dl during OGTT and 77-93% AIR(g) reduction (intermediate dose); and 3) prediabetes with normal FG, normal 2-h glucose during OGTT and 17-74% AIR(g) reduction (low dose). Twelve weeks after STZ, animals without frank diabetes had 58% more body fat, decreased beta-cell function (17-93%), and 40% lower S(I). We conclude that high-fat feeding and variable-dose STZ in dog result in stable models of obesity, insulin resistance, and 1) overt diabetes, 2) mild T2DM, or 3) impaired glucose tolerance. These models open new avenues for studying the mechanism of compensatory changes that occur in T2DM and for evaluating new therapeutic strategies to prevent progression or to treat overt diabetes.
Diabetes | 2006
Martin Ellmerer; Marianthe Hamilton-Wessler; Stella P. Kim; Katrin Huecking; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Jenny D. Chiu; Joyce M. Richey; Richard N. Bergman
Physiological hyperinsulinemia provokes hemodynamic actions and augments access of macromolecules to insulin-sensitive tissues. We investigated whether induction of insulin resistance by a hypercaloric high-fat diet has an effect on the extracellular distribution of macromolecules to insulin-sensitive tissues. Male mongrel dogs were randomly selected into two groups: seven dogs were fed an isocaloric control diet (∼3,900 kcal, 35% from fat), and six dogs were fed a hypercaloric high-fat diet (∼5,300 kcal, 54% from fat) for a period of 12 weeks. During hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps, we determined transport parameters and distribution volumes of [14C]inulin by applying a three-compartment model to the plasma clearance data of intravenously injected [14C]inulin (0.8 μCi/kg). In another study with direct cannulation of the hindlimb skeletal muscle lymphatics, we investigated the effect of physiological hyperinsulinemia on the appearance of intravenously injected [14C]inulin in skeletal muscle interstitial fluid and compared the effect of insulin between control and high-fat diet groups. The hypercaloric high-fat diet resulted in significant weight gain (18%; P < 0.001) associated with marked increases of subcutaneous (140%; P < 0.001) and omental (83%; P < 0.001) fat depots, as well as peripheral insulin resistance, measured as a significant reduction of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during clamps (−35%; P < 0.05). Concomitantly, we observed a significant reduction of the peripheral distribution volume of [14C]inulin (−26%; P < 0.05), whereas the vascular distribution volume and transport and clearance parameters did not change as a cause of the diet. The second study directly confirmed our findings, suggesting a marked reduction of insulin action to stimulate access of macromolecules to insulin-sensitive tissues (control diet 32%, P < 0.01; high-fat diet 18%, NS). The present results indicate that access of macromolecules to insulin-sensitive tissues is impaired during diet-induced insulin resistance and suggest that the ability of insulin itself to stimulate tissue access is diminished. We speculate that the observed diet-induced defects in stimulation of tissue perfusion contribute to the development of peripheral insulin resistance.
Journal of Immunology | 2003
Kennichi C. Dowdell; Daniel J. Cua; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Stephen A. Stohlman
NK cells not only respond rapidly to infection, shaping subsequent adaptive immunity, but also play a role in regulating autoimmune disease. The ability of NK cells to influence adaptive immunity before Ag exposure was examined in a gender-dependent model of preferential Th1 and Th2 activation. The inability of young adult male SJL mice to activate Th1 cells was reversed via depletion of NK1.1+ cells, whereas the presence or the absence of NK1.1+ cells did not alter responses in age-matched females. Consistent with a gender-dependent role in regulating adaptive immunity, significantly more NK1.1+ cells were present in males compared with females, and this difference was reversed by castration. In contrast to NK1.1+ cells derived from C57BL/6 mice, no spontaneous cytokine secretion was detected in NK1.1+ cells derived from either male or female SJL mice, although an increased frequency of IL-10-secreting NK1.1+ cells was observed in males vs females following in vitro stimulation. Direct evidence that NK1.1+ cells in males influence CD4+ T cell activation before Ag exposure was demonstrated via the adoptive transfer of APC from control and NK1.1-depleted males. The absence of a functional NK T cell population in SJL mice suggests that NK cells influence adaptive immunity before Ag exposure via alterations in APC activity.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Amir H. Kashani; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Gabriel Martin; Mark S. Humayun
Diagnosis of retinal vascular diseases depends on ophthalmoscopic findings that most often occur after severe visual loss (as in vein occlusions) or chronic changes that are irreversible (as in diabetic retinopathy). Despite recent advances, diagnostic imaging currently reveals very little about the vascular function and local oxygen delivery. One potentially useful measure of vascular function is measurement of hemoglobin oxygen content. In this paper, we demonstrate a novel method of accurately, rapidly and easily measuring oxygen saturation within retinal vessels using in vivo imaging spectroscopy. This method uses a commercially available fundus camera coupled to two-dimensional diffracting optics that scatter the incident light onto a focal plane array in a calibrated pattern. Computed tomographic algorithms are used to reconstruct the diffracted spectral patterns into wavelength components of the original image. In this paper the spectral components of oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin are analyzed from the vessels within the image. Up to 76 spectral measurements can be made in only a few milliseconds and used to quantify the oxygen saturation within the retinal vessels over a 10–15 degree field. The method described here can acquire 10-fold more spectral data in much less time than conventional oximetry systems (while utilizing the commonly accepted fundus camera platform). Application of this method to animal models of retinal vascular disease and clinical subjects will provide useful and novel information about retinal vascular disease and physiology.
Diabetes | 2010
Cathryn M. Kolka; L. Nicole Harrison; Maya Lottati; Jenny D. Chiu; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Richard N. Bergman
OBJECTIVE Obesity causes insulin resistance, which has been interpreted as reduced downstream insulin signaling. However, changes in access of insulin to sensitive tissues such as skeletal muscle may also play a role. Insulin injected directly into skeletal muscle diffuses rapidly through the interstitial space to cause glucose uptake. When insulin resistance is induced by exogenous lipid infusion, this interstitial diffusion process is curtailed. Thus, the possibility exists that hyperlipidemia, such as that seen during obesity, may inhibit insulin action to muscle cells and exacerbate insulin resistance. Here we asked whether interstitial insulin diffusion is reduced in physiological obesity induced by a high-fat diet (HFD). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Dogs were fed a regular diet (lean) or one supplemented with bacon grease for 9–12 weeks (HFD). Basal insulin (0.2 mU · min−1 · kg−1) euglycemic clamps were performed on fat-fed animals (n = 6). During clamps performed under anesthesia, five sequential doses of insulin were injected into the vastus medialis of one hind limb (INJ); the contralateral limb (NINJ) served as a control. RESULTS INJ lymph insulin showed an increase above NINJ in lean animals, but no change in HFD-fed animals. Muscle glucose uptake observed in lean animals did not occur in HFD-fed animals. CONCLUSIONS Insulin resistance induced by HFD caused a failure of intramuscularly injected insulin to diffuse through the interstitial space and failure to cause glucose uptake, compared with normal animals. High-fat feeding prevents the appearance of injected insulin in the interstitial space, thus reducing binding to skeletal muscle cells and glucose uptake.
Surgery | 1999
Joachim H. Schneider; Jeffrey H. Peters; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Cedric G. Bremner; Tom R. DeMeester
BACKGROUND Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that the loss of esophageal body function in achalasia may be a result of the outflow obstruction of a nonrelaxing, hypertensive lower esophageal sphincter. The reversibility of such abnormalities has implications to the timing of therapeutic interventions. This study was designed to evaluate the evolution and reversibility of motility abnormalities resulting from esophageal outflow obstruction in cats. METHODS Twenty adult cats were divided into 2 groups. Group 1 consisted of 4 cats that underwent laparotomy as a sham procedure. Group 2 consisted of 16 cats that underwent surgical placement of a loose Gore-tex expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (W. L. Gore, Elkton, Md) band calibrated to 110% of the circumference of the gastroesophageal junction. The band was removed from 4 randomly selected cats each at 1, 2, 4, and 6 weeks after placement. Esophageal manometry was performed before placement of the band, at weekly intervals after placement of the band, and after removal of the band. The resting pressure and percent relaxation of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), in addition to amplitude, duration, and propagation of esophageal body contractions, were measured at each interval. Data are expressed as median and interquartile range and compared with use of the Mann-Whitney U test for independent samples. RESULTS The LES resting pressure remained unchanged after placement of the band, but sphincter compliance was reduced, as manifested by a significant reduction in the percent of sphincter relaxation (98% prebanding, 65% postbanding, P < .05). The median amplitude of esophageal contraction decreased significantly after banding. By 6 weeks after banding the esophagus was markedly dilated and exhibited aperistaltic, low-amplitude esophageal motility typical of that seen in clinical achalasia. Importantly, removal of the bands resulted in a prompt return of both peristalsis and amplitude of contraction. CONCLUSIONS Loss of compliance of the lower esophageal sphincter produces outflow obstruction with the resultant loss of esophageal contraction amplitude and peristaltic waveform typical of achalasia in humans. These abnormalities were reversible after relief of obstruction in the feline model and may indicate that early relief of outflow obstruction in clinical achalasia may preserve esophageal function in patients.
Obesity | 2009
Jenny D. Chiu; Cathryn M. Kolka; Joyce M. Richey; Lisa N. Harrison; Edward Zuniga; Erlinda L. Kirkman; Richard N. Bergman
A complex sequence of steps is required for insulin to cause glucose uptake. Impairment of any one of these steps can contribute to insulin resistance. We observed the effect of insulin resistance induced by hyperlipidemia on the dynamics of insulin injected into skeletal muscle. Basal insulin euglycemic clamps (0.2 mU/min/kg) with or without lipid infusions (20% at 1.5 ml/min) were done on anesthetized dogs. Sequential insulin doses were administered by intramuscular injection directly into the vastus medialis of one hindlimb, using the contralateral leg for comparison. Intramuscular insulin injection in normal animals caused a clear dose‐dependent increment in interstitial insulin levels, as well as dose‐dependent increase in leg glucose uptake. In a second group of animals, lipid was infused before and during intramuscular insulin injection to cause systemic increase in free fatty acids (FFAs). In sharp contrast, systemic lipid infusion caused insulin resistance, indicated by reduced glucose infusion required to maintain euglycemia, and prevented injection‐induced increase in lymphatic insulin and leg glucose uptake observed without lipid. The injected insulin was instead detected in the venous outflow from the leg. Lipid infusion caused intramuscular insulin to be diverted from interstitium into the capillary circulation, preventing a rise in intersitial insulin and any increase in local leg glucose uptake. The diversion of insulin from the interstitium under hyperlipidemic conditions may play a role in the insulin resistance observed coincident with elevated nocturnal FFAs as is observed in obesity.