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Dive into the research topics where Jane Fearnside is active.

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Featured researches published by Jane Fearnside.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Metabolic profiling reveals a contribution of gut microbiota to fatty liver phenotype in insulin-resistant mice

Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Richard H. Barton; Ayo Toye; Olivier Cloarec; Christine Blancher; Alice R. Rothwell; Jane Fearnside; Roger Tatoud; Veronique Blanc; John C. Lindon; Steve Chappell Mitchell; Elaine Holmes; Mark McCarthy; James Scott; Dominique Gauguier; Jeremy K. Nicholson

Here, we study the intricate relationship between gut microbiota and host cometabolic phenotypes associated with dietary-induced impaired glucose homeostasis and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in a mouse strain (129S6) known to be susceptible to these disease traits, using plasma and urine metabotyping, achieved by 1H NMR spectroscopy. Multivariate statistical modeling of the spectra shows that the genetic predisposition of the 129S6 mouse to impaired glucose homeostasis and NAFLD is associated with disruptions of choline metabolism, i.e., low circulating levels of plasma phosphatidylcholine and high urinary excretion of methylamines (dimethylamine, trimethylamine, and trimethylamine-N-oxide), coprocessed by symbiotic gut microbiota and mammalian enzyme systems. Conversion of choline into methylamines by microbiota in strain 129S6 on a high-fat diet reduces the bioavailability of choline and mimics the effect of choline-deficient diets, causing NAFLD. These data also indicate that gut microbiota may play an active role in the development of insulin resistance.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Direct quantitative trait locus mapping of mammalian metabolic phenotypes in diabetic and normoglycemic rat models

Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Steven P. Wilder; Marie-Thérèse Bihoreau; Richard H. Barton; Jane Fearnside; Karène Argoud; Lisa D'Amato; Robert H. Wallis; Christine Blancher; Hector C. Keun; Dorrit Baunsgaard; James Scott; Ulla G. Sidelmann; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier

Characterizing the relationships between genomic and phenotypic variation is essential to understanding disease etiology. Information-dense data sets derived from pathophysiological, proteomic and transcriptomic profiling have been applied to map quantitative trait loci (QTLs). Metabolic traits, already used in QTL studies in plants, are essential phenotypes in mammalian genetics to define disease biomarkers. Using a complex mammalian system, here we show chromosomal mapping of untargeted plasma metabolic fingerprints derived from NMR spectroscopic analysis in a cross between diabetic and control rats. We propose candidate metabolites for the most significant QTLs. Metabolite profiling in congenic strains provided evidence of QTL replication. Linkage to a gut microbial metabolite (benzoate) can be explained by deletion of a uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase. Mapping metabotypic QTLs provides a practical approach to understanding genome-phenotype relationships in mammals and may uncover deeper biological complexity, as extended genome (microbiome) perturbations that affect disease processes through transgenomic effects may influence QTL detection.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Phylometabonomic Patterns of Adaptation to High Fat Diet Feeding in Inbred Mice

Jane Fearnside; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Alice R. Rothwell; Steven P. Wilder; Olivier Cloarec; Ayo Toye; Christine Blancher; Elaine Holmes; Roger Tatoud; Richard H. Barton; James Scott; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier

Insulin resistance plays a central role in type 2 diabetes and obesity, which develop as a consequence of genetic and environmental factors. Dietary changes including high fat diet (HFD) feeding promotes insulin resistance in rodent models which present useful systems for studying interactions between genetic background and environmental influences contributing to disease susceptibility and progression. We applied a combination of classical physiological, biochemical and hormonal studies and plasma 1H NMR spectroscopy-based metabonomics to characterize the phenotypic and metabotypic consequences of HFD (40%) feeding in inbred mouse strains (C57BL/6, 129S6, BALB/c, DBA/2, C3H) frequently used in genetic studies. We showed the wide range of phenotypic and metabonomic adaptations to HFD across the five strains and the increased nutrigenomic predisposition of 129S6 and C57BL/6 to insulin resistance and obesity relative to the other strains. In contrast mice of the BALB/c and DBA/2 strains showed relative resistance to HFD-induced glucose intolerance and obesity. Hierarchical metabonomic clustering derived from 1H NMR spectral data of the strains provided a phylometabonomic classification of strain-specific metabolic features and differential responses to HFD which closely match SNP-based phylogenetic relationships between strains. Our results support the concept of genomic clustering of functionally related genes and provide important information for defining biological markers predicting spontaneous susceptibility to insulin resistance and pathological adaptations to fat feeding.


Diabetes | 2010

Progression of Diet-Induced Diabetes in C57BL6J Mice Involves Functional Dissociation of Ca2+ Channels From Secretory Vesicles

Stephan C. Collins; Michael B. Hoppa; Jonathan N. Walker; Stefan Amisten; Fernando Abdulkader; Martin Bengtsson; Jane Fearnside; Reshma Ramracheya; Ayo Toye; Quan Zhang; Anne Clark; Dominique Gauguier; Patrik Rorsman

OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to elucidate the cellular mechanism underlying the suppression of glucose-induced insulin secretion in mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 15 weeks. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS C57BL6J mice were fed a HFD or a normal diet (ND) for 3 or 15 weeks. Plasma insulin and glucose levels in vivo were assessed by intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test. Insulin secretion in vitro was studied using static incubations and a perfused pancreas preparation. Membrane currents, electrical activity, and exocytosis were examined by patch-clamp technique measurements. Intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) was measured by microfluorimetry. Total internal reflection fluorescence microscope (TIRFM) was used for optical imaging of exocytosis and submembrane depolarization-evoked [Ca2+]i. The functional data were complemented by analyses of histology and gene transcription. RESULTS After 15 weeks, but not 3 weeks, mice on HFD exhibited hyperglycemia and hypoinsulinemia. Pancreatic islet content and β-cell area increased 2- and 1.5-fold, respectively. These changes correlated with a 20–50% reduction of glucose-induced insulin secretion (normalized to insulin content). The latter effect was not associated with impaired electrical activity or [Ca2+]i signaling. Single-cell capacitance and TIRFM measurements of exocytosis revealed a selective suppression (>70%) of exocytosis elicited by short (50 ms) depolarization, whereas the responses to longer depolarizations were (500 ms) less affected. The loss of rapid exocytosis correlated with dispersion of Ca2+ entry in HFD β-cells. No changes in gene transcription of key exocytotic protein were observed. CONCLUSIONS HFD results in reduced insulin secretion by causing the functional dissociation of voltage-gated Ca2+ entry from exocytosis. These observations suggest a novel explanation to the well-established link between obesity and diabetes.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Nutrigenomics of High Fat Diet Induced Obesity in Mice Suggests Relationships between Susceptibility to Fatty Liver Disease and the Proteasome

Helen Waller-Evans; Christophe Hue; Jane Fearnside; Alice R. Rothwell; Helen Lockstone; S. Calderari; Steven P. Wilder; Jean-Baptiste Cazier; James Scott; Dominique Gauguier

Nutritional factors play important roles in the etiology of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and their complications through genotype x environment interactions. We have characterised molecular adaptation to high fat diet (HFD) feeding in inbred mouse strains widely used in genetic and physiological studies. We carried out physiological tests, plasma lipid assays, obesity measures, liver histology, hepatic lipid measurements and liver genome-wide gene transcription profiling in C57BL/6J and BALB/c mice fed either a control or a high fat diet. The two strains showed marked susceptibility (C57BL/6J) and relative resistance (BALB/c) to HFD-induced insulin resistance and non alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Global gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) of transcriptome data identified consistent patterns of expression of key genes (Srebf1, Stard4, Pnpla2, Ccnd1) and molecular pathways in the two strains, which may underlie homeostatic adaptations to dietary fat. Differential regulation of pathways, including the proteasome, the ubiquitin mediated proteolysis and PPAR signalling in fat fed C57BL/6J and BALB/c suggests that altered expression of underlying diet-responsive genes may be involved in contrasting nutrigenomic predisposition and resistance to insulin resistance and NAFLD in these models. Collectively, these data, which further demonstrate the impact of gene x environment interactions on gene expression regulations, contribute to improved knowledge of natural and pathogenic adaptive genomic regulations and molecular mechanisms associated with genetically determined susceptibility and resistance to metabolic diseases.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Broad-Ranging Natural Metabotype Variation Drives Physiological Plasticity in Healthy Control Inbred Rat Strains

Clément Pontoizeau; Jane Fearnside; Vincent Navratil; Céline Domange; Jean-Baptiste Cazier; Cristina Fernández-Santamaría; Pamela J. Kaisaki; Lyndon Emsley; Pierre Toulhoat; Marie-Thérèse Bihoreau; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas

Maintaining homeostasis in higher organisms involves a complex interplay of multiple ubiquitous and organ-specific molecular mechanisms that can be characterized using functional genomics technologies such as transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabonomics and dissected out through genetic investigations in healthy and diseased individuals. We characterized the genomic, metabolic, and physiological divergence of several inbred rat strains--Brown Norway, Lewis, Wistar Kyoto, Fisher (F344)--frequently used as healthy controls in genetic studies of the cardiometabolic syndrome. Hierarchical clustering of (1)H NMR-based metabolic profiles (n = 20 for urine, n = 16 for plasma) identified metabolic phenotype (metabotype) divergence patterns similar to the phylogenetic variability based on single nucleotide polymorphisms. However, the observed urinary metabotype variation exceeded that explainable by genetic polymorphisms. To understand further this natural variation, we used an integrative, knowledge-based network biology metabolic pathway analysis approach, coined Metabolite-Set Enrichment Analysis (MSEA). MSEA reveals that homeostasis and physiological plasticity can be achieved despite widespread divergences in glucose, lipid, amino acid, and energy metabolism in the host, together with different gut microbiota contributions suggestive of strain-specific transgenomic interactions. This work illustrates the concept of natural metabolomic variation, leading to physiologically stable albeit diverse strategies within the range of normality, all of which are highly relevant to animal model physiology, genetical genomics, and patient stratification in personalized healthcare.


Cell Reports | 2017

Microbial-Host Co-metabolites Are Prodromal Markers Predicting Phenotypic Heterogeneity in Behavior, Obesity, and Impaired Glucose Tolerance

Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Alice R. Rothwell; Lesley Hoyles; Thomas Aranias; Julien Chilloux; S. Calderari; Elisa M. Noll; Noémie Péan; Claire L. Boulangé; Christine Blancher; Richard H. Barton; Quan Gu; Jane Fearnside; Chloé Deshayes; Christophe Hue; James Scott; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier

Summary The influence of the gut microbiome on metabolic and behavioral traits is widely accepted, though the microbiome-derived metabolites involved remain unclear. We carried out untargeted urine 1H-NMR spectroscopy-based metabolic phenotyping in an isogenic C57BL/6J mouse population (n = 50) and show that microbial-host co-metabolites are prodromal (i.e., early) markers predicting future divergence in metabolic (obesity and glucose homeostasis) and behavioral (anxiety and activity) outcomes with 94%–100% accuracy. Some of these metabolites also modulate disease phenotypes, best illustrated by trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), a product of microbial-host co-metabolism predicting future obesity, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and behavior while reducing endoplasmic reticulum stress and lipogenesis in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Chronic in vivo TMAO treatment limits IGT in HFD-fed mice and isolated pancreatic islets by increasing insulin secretion. We highlight the prodromal potential of microbial metabolites to predict disease outcomes and their potential in shaping mammalian phenotypic heterogeneity.


bioRxiv | 2018

Microbiome inhibition of IRAK-4 by trimethylamine mediates metabolic and immune benefits in high-fat-diet-induced insulin resistance

Julien Chilloux; François Brial; Amandine Everard; David Smyth; Liyong Zhang; Hubert Plovier; Antonis Myridakis; Lesley Hoyles; Julian E. Fuchs; Christine Blancher; Selin Gencer; Laura Martinez-Gili; Jane Fearnside; Richard H. Barton; Ana Luísa Neves; Alice R. Rothwell; Christelle Gerard; S. Calderari; Claire L. Boulangé; Saroor Patel; James Scott; Robert C. Glen; Nigel J. Gooderham; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Dominique Gauguier; Peter Liu; Patrice D. Cani; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas

The interaction between high-fat diet (HFD) feeding and the gut microbiome has a strong impact on the onset of insulin resistance (IR)1-3. In particular, bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and dietary fats trigger low-grade inflammation4 through activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), a process called metabolic endotoxemia5. However, little is known about how the microbiome can mitigate this process. Here, we investigate longitudinal physiological and metabotypical responses of C57BL/6 mice to HFD feeding. A series of in vivo experiments with choline supplementation, then blocking trimethylamine (TMA) production and administering TMA, demonstrate that this microbiome-associated metabolite decouples inflammation and IR from obesity in HFD. Through in vitro kinome screens and in silico molecular dynamics studies, we reveal TMA specifically inhibits Interleukin-1 Receptor-associated Kinase 4 (IRAK-4), a central kinase integrating signals from various TLRs and cytokine receptors. Consistent with this, genetic ablation and chemical inhibition of IRAK-4 result in similar metabolic and immune improvements in HFD. In summary, TMA appears as a key microbial effector inhibiting IRAK-4 and mediating metabolic and immune effects with benefits upon HFD. Thereby we highlight the critical contribution of the microbial signalling metabolome in homeostatic regulation of host disease and the emerging role of the kinome6 in microbial–mammalian chemical crosstalk.


Diabetologia | 2007

Subtle metabolic and liver gene transcriptional changes underlie diet-induced fatty liver susceptibility in insulin-resistant mice

Ayo Toye; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas; Christine Blancher; A. R. Rothwell; Jane Fearnside; Steven P. Wilder; M. T. Bihoreau; Olivier Cloarec; I. Azzouzi; S. Young; Richard H. Barton; Elaine Holmes; Mark McCarthy; Roger Tatoud; J. K. Nicholson; James Scott; Dominique Gauguier


Diabetes & Metabolism | 2015

P145 La trimethylamine, métabolite du microbiote intestinal, inhibe la voie inflammatoire des Toll-Like Receptor (TLRs) via une inhibition directe d’une enzyme clé de la transduction du signal

Julien Chilloux; Jane Fearnside; Richard H. Barton; J. Fuchs; Alice R. Rothwell; Lesley Hoyles; C. Gerard; S. Calderari; Claire L. Boulangé; Saroor Patel; James Scott; Robert C. Glen; Dominique Gauguier; Nigel J. Gooderham; Jeremy K. Nicholson; Marc-Emmanuel Dumas

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James Scott

Imperial College London

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Alice R. Rothwell

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Christine Blancher

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Ayo Toye

University of Oxford

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Steven P. Wilder

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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