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Dive into the research topics where Jeff Trimmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeff Trimmer.


Nature Genetics | 2014

An atlas of genetic influences on human blood metabolites.

So-Youn Shin; Eric Fauman; Ann-Kristin Petersen; Jan Krumsiek; Rita Santos; Jie Huang; Matthias Arnold; Idil Erte; Vincenzo Forgetta; Tsun-Po Yang; Klaudia Walter; Cristina Menni; Lu Chen; Louella Vasquez; Ana M. Valdes; Craig L. Hyde; Vicky Wang; Daniel Ziemek; Phoebe M. Roberts; Li Xi; Elin Grundberg; Melanie Waldenberger; J. Brent Richards; Robert P. Mohney; Michael V. Milburn; Sally John; Jeff Trimmer; Fabian J. Theis; John P. Overington; Karsten Suhre

Genome-wide association scans with high-throughput metabolic profiling provide unprecedented insights into how genetic variation influences metabolism and complex disease. Here we report the most comprehensive exploration of genetic loci influencing human metabolism thus far, comprising 7,824 adult individuals from 2 European population studies. We report genome-wide significant associations at 145 metabolic loci and their biochemical connectivity with more than 400 metabolites in human blood. We extensively characterize the resulting in vivo blueprint of metabolism in human blood by integrating it with information on gene expression, heritability and overlap with known loci for complex disorders, inborn errors of metabolism and pharmacological targets. We further developed a database and web-based resources for data mining and results visualization. Our findings provide new insights into the role of inherited variation in blood metabolic diversity and identify potential new opportunities for drug development and for understanding disease.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Loss-of-function mutations in SLC30A8 protect against type 2 diabetes

Jason Flannick; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Nicola L. Beer; Suzanne B.R. Jacobs; Niels Grarup; Noël P. Burtt; Anubha Mahajan; Christian Fuchsberger; Gil Atzmon; Rafn Benediktsson; John Blangero; Bowden Dw; Ivan Brandslund; Julia Brosnan; Frank Burslem; John Chambers; Yoon Shin Cho; Cramer Christensen; Desiree Douglas; Ravindranath Duggirala; Zachary Dymek; Yossi Farjoun; Timothy Fennell; Pierre Fontanillas; Tom Forsén; Stacey Gabriel; Benjamin Glaser; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Craig L. Hanis; Torben Hansen

Loss-of-function mutations protective against human disease provide in vivo validation of therapeutic targets, but none have yet been described for type 2 diabetes (T2D). Through sequencing or genotyping of ∼150,000 individuals across 5 ancestry groups, we identified 12 rare protein-truncating variants in SLC30A8, which encodes an islet zinc transporter (ZnT8) and harbors a common variant (p.Trp325Arg) associated with T2D risk and glucose and proinsulin levels. Collectively, carriers of protein-truncating variants had 65% reduced T2D risk (P = 1.7 × 10−6), and non-diabetic Icelandic carriers of a frameshift variant (p.Lys34Serfs*50) demonstrated reduced glucose levels (−0.17 s.d., P = 4.6 × 10−4). The two most common protein-truncating variants (p.Arg138* and p.Lys34Serfs*50) individually associate with T2D protection and encode unstable ZnT8 proteins. Previous functional study of SLC30A8 suggested that reduced zinc transport increases T2D risk, and phenotypic heterogeneity was observed in mouse Slc30a8 knockouts. In contrast, loss-of-function mutations in humans provide strong evidence that SLC30A8 haploinsufficiency protects against T2D, suggesting ZnT8 inhibition as a therapeutic strategy in T2D prevention.


Diabetes | 2013

Biomarkers for Type 2 Diabetes and Impaired Fasting Glucose Using a Nontargeted Metabolomics Approach

Cristina Menni; Eric Fauman; Idil Erte; John Perry; Gabi Kastenmüller; So-Youn Shin; Ann-Kristin Petersen; Craig L. Hyde; Maria Psatha; Kirsten Ward; Wei Yuan; Mike Milburn; Colin N. A. Palmer; Timothy M. Frayling; Jeff Trimmer; Jordana T. Bell; Christian Gieger; Rob P. Mohney; Mary Julia Brosnan; Karsten Suhre; Nicole Soranzo; Tim D. Spector

Using a nontargeted metabolomics approach of 447 fasting plasma metabolites, we searched for novel molecular markers that arise before and after hyperglycemia in a large population-based cohort of 2,204 females (115 type 2 diabetic [T2D] case subjects, 192 individuals with impaired fasting glucose [IFG], and 1,897 control subjects) from TwinsUK. Forty-two metabolites from three major fuel sources (carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins) were found to significantly correlate with T2D after adjusting for multiple testing; of these, 22 were previously reported as associated with T2D or insulin resistance. Fourteen metabolites were found to be associated with IFG. Among the metabolites identified, the branched-chain keto-acid metabolite 3-methyl-2-oxovalerate was the strongest predictive biomarker for IFG after glucose (odds ratio [OR] 1.65 [95% CI 1.39–1.95], P = 8.46 × 10−9) and was moderately heritable (h2 = 0.20). The association was replicated in an independent population (n = 720, OR 1.68 [ 1.34–2.11], P = 6.52 × 10−6) and validated in 189 twins with urine metabolomics taken at the same time as plasma (OR 1.87 [1.27–2.75], P = 1 × 10−3). Results confirm an important role for catabolism of branched-chain amino acids in T2D and IFG. In conclusion, this T2D-IFG biomarker study has surveyed the broadest panel of nontargeted metabolites to date, revealing both novel and known associated metabolites and providing potential novel targets for clinical prediction and a deeper understanding of causal mechanisms.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Assessing the phenotypic effects in the general population of rare variants in genes for a dominant Mendelian form of diabetes.

Jason Flannick; Nicola L. Beer; Alexander G. Bick; Vineeta Agarwala; Janne Molnes; Namrata Gupta; Noël P. Burtt; Jose C. Florez; James B. Meigs; Herman A. Taylor; Valeriya Lyssenko; Henrik Irgens; Ervin R. Fox; Frank Burslem; Stefan Johansson; M. Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Tiinamaija Tuomi; James G. Wilson; Christopher J. O'Donnell; Sekar Kathiresan; Joel N. Hirschhorn; Pål R. Njølstad; Tim Rolph; Jonathan G. Seidman; Stacey B. Gabriel; D. R. Cox; Christine E. Seidman; Leif Groop

Genome sequencing can identify individuals in the general population who harbor rare coding variants in genes for Mendelian disorders and who may consequently have increased disease risk. Previous studies of rare variants in phenotypically extreme individuals display ascertainment bias and may demonstrate inflated effect-size estimates. We sequenced seven genes for maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) in well-phenotyped population samples (n = 4,003). We filtered rare variants according to two prediction criteria for disease-causing mutations: reported previously in MODY or satisfying stringent de novo thresholds (rare, conserved and protein damaging). Approximately 1.5% and 0.5% of randomly selected individuals from the Framingham and Jackson Heart Studies, respectively, carry variants from these two classes. However, the vast majority of carriers remain euglycemic through middle age. Accurate estimates of variant effect sizes from population-based sequencing are needed to avoid falsely predicting a substantial fraction of individuals as being at risk for MODY or other Mendelian diseases.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Isocitrate-to-SENP1 signaling amplifies insulin secretion and rescues dysfunctional β cells

Mourad Ferdaoussi; Xiao-Qing Dai; Mette V. Jensen; Runsheng Wang; Brett S. Peterson; Chao Huang; Olga Ilkayeva; Nancy Smith; Nathanael Miller; Catherine Hajmrle; Aliya F. Spigelman; Robert C. Wright; Gregory Plummer; Kunimasa Suzuki; James P. Mackay; Martijn van de Bunt; Anna L. Gloyn; Terence E. Ryan; Lisa D. Norquay; M. Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Timothy P. Rolph; Richard G. Kibbey; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; William F. Colmers; Orian S. Shirihai; P. Darrell Neufer; Edward T.H. Yeh; Christopher B. Newgard; Patrick E. MacDonald

Insulin secretion from β cells of the pancreatic islets of Langerhans controls metabolic homeostasis and is impaired in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Increases in blood glucose trigger insulin release by closing ATP-sensitive K+ channels, depolarizing β cells, and opening voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels to elicit insulin exocytosis. However, one or more additional pathway(s) amplify the secretory response, likely at the distal exocytotic site. The mitochondrial export of isocitrate and engagement with cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDc) may be one key pathway, but the mechanism linking this to insulin secretion and its role in T2D have not been defined. Here, we show that the ICDc-dependent generation of NADPH and subsequent glutathione (GSH) reduction contribute to the amplification of insulin exocytosis via sentrin/SUMO-specific protease-1 (SENP1). In human T2D and an in vitro model of human islet dysfunction, the glucose-dependent amplification of exocytosis was impaired and could be rescued by introduction of signaling intermediates from this pathway. Moreover, islet-specific Senp1 deletion in mice caused impaired glucose tolerance by reducing the amplification of insulin exocytosis. Together, our results identify a pathway that links glucose metabolism to the amplification of insulin secretion and demonstrate that restoration of this axis rescues β cell function in T2D.


Molecular metabolism | 2016

Branched-chain amino acid restriction in Zucker-fatty rats improves muscle insulin sensitivity by enhancing efficiency of fatty acid oxidation and acyl-glycine export

Phillip J. White; Amanda Lee Lapworth; Liping Wang; Robert W. McGarrah; Robert D. Stevens; Olga Ilkayeva; Tabitha George; Michael J. Muehlbauer; James R. Bain; Jeff Trimmer; M. Julia Brosnan; Timothy P. Rolph; Christopher B. Newgard

Objective A branched-chain amino acid (BCAA)-related metabolic signature is strongly associated with insulin resistance and predictive of incident diabetes and intervention outcomes. To better understand the role that this metabolite cluster plays in obesity-related metabolic dysfunction, we studied the impact of BCAA restriction in a rodent model of obesity in which BCAA metabolism is perturbed in ways that mirror the human condition. Methods Zucker-lean rats (ZLR) and Zucker-fatty rats (ZFR) were fed either a custom control, low fat (LF) diet, or an isonitrogenous, isocaloric LF diet in which all three BCAA (Leu, Ile, Val) were reduced by 45% (LF-RES). We performed comprehensive metabolic and physiologic profiling to characterize the effects of BCAA restriction on energy balance, insulin sensitivity, and glucose, lipid and amino acid metabolism. Results LF-fed ZFR had higher levels of circulating BCAA and lower levels of glycine compared to LF-fed ZLR. Feeding ZFR with the LF-RES diet lowered circulating BCAA to levels found in LF-fed ZLR. Activity of the rate limiting enzyme in the BCAA catabolic pathway, branched chain keto acid dehydrogenase (BCKDH), was lower in liver but higher in skeletal muscle of ZFR compared to ZLR and was not responsive to diet in either tissue. BCAA restriction had very little impact on metabolites studied in liver of ZFR where BCAA content was low, and BCKDH activity was suppressed. However, in skeletal muscle of LF-fed ZFR compared to LF-fed ZLR, where BCAA content and BCKDH activity were increased, accumulation of fatty acyl CoAs was completely normalized by dietary BCAA restriction. BCAA restriction also normalized skeletal muscle glycine content and increased urinary acetyl glycine excretion in ZFR. These effects were accompanied by lower RER and improved skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity in LF-RES fed ZFR as measured by hyperinsulinemic-isoglycemic clamp. Conclusions Our data are consistent with a model wherein elevated circulating BCAA contribute to development of obesity-related insulin resistance by interfering with lipid oxidation in skeletal muscle. BCAA-dependent lowering of the skeletal muscle glycine pool appears to contribute to this effect by slowing acyl-glycine export to the urine.


Hypertension | 2015

Metabolomic Identification of a Novel Pathway of Blood Pressure Regulation Involving Hexadecanedioate

Cristina Menni; Delyth Graham; Gabi Kastenmüller; Nora H J Alharbi; Safaa Mohammed M. Alsanosi; Martin W. McBride; Massimo Mangino; Philip Titcombe; So-Youn Shin; Maria Psatha; Thomas Geisendorfer; Anja Huber; Annette Peters; Rui Wang-Sattler; Tao Xu; Mary Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Christian Reichel; Robert P. Mohney; Nicole Soranzo; Mark H. Edwards; C Cooper; Alistair Colin Church; Karsten Suhre; Christian Gieger; Anna F. Dominiczak; Tim D. Spector; Sandosh Padmanabhan; Ana M. Valdes

High blood pressure is a major contributor to the global burden of disease and discovering novel causal pathways of blood pressure regulation has been challenging. We tested blood pressure associations with 280 fasting blood metabolites in 3980 TwinsUK females. Survival analysis for all-cause mortality was performed on significant independent metabolites (P<8.9×10−5). Replication was conducted in 2 independent cohorts KORA (n=1494) and Hertfordshire (n=1515). Three independent animal experiments were performed to establish causality: (1) blood pressure change after increasing circulating metabolite levels in Wistar–Kyoto rats; (2) circulating metabolite change after salt-induced blood pressure elevation in spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats; and (3) mesenteric artery response to noradrenaline and carbachol in metabolite treated and control rats. Of the15 metabolites that showed an independent significant association with blood pressure, only hexadecanedioate, a dicarboxylic acid, showed concordant association with blood pressure (systolic BP: &bgr; [95% confidence interval], 1.31 [0.83–1.78], P=6.81×10−8; diastolic BP: 0.81 [0.5–1.11], P=2.96×10−7) and mortality (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval], 1.49 [1.08–2.05]; P=0.02) in TwinsUK. The blood pressure association was replicated in KORA and Hertfordshire. In the animal experiments, we showed that oral hexadecanedioate increased both circulating hexadecanedioate and blood pressure in Wistar–Kyoto rats, whereas blood pressure elevation with oral sodium chloride in hypertensive rats did not affect hexadecanedioate levels. Vascular reactivity to noradrenaline was significantly increased in mesenteric resistance arteries from hexadecanedioate-treated rats compared with controls, indicated by the shift to the left of the concentration–response curve (P=0.013). Relaxation to carbachol did not show any difference. Our findings indicate that hexadecanedioate is causally associated with blood pressure regulation through a novel pathway that merits further investigation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The Hepatoselective Glucokinase Activator PF-04991532 Ameliorates Hyperglycemia without Causing Hepatic Steatosis in Diabetic Rats

Derek M. Erion; Amanda Lee Lapworth; Paul Amor; Guoyun Bai; Nicholas B. Vera; Ronald W. Clark; Qingyun Yan; Yimin Zhu; Trenton T. Ross; Julie Purkal; Matthew Gorgoglione; Guodong Zhang; Vinicius Bonato; Levenia Baker; Nicole Barucci; Theresa D’Aquila; Alan Robertson; Robert J. Aiello; Jiangli Yan; Jeff Trimmer; Timothy P. Rolph; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn

Hyperglycemia resulting from type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is the main cause of diabetic complications such as retinopathy and neuropathy. A reduction in hyperglycemia has been shown to prevent these associated complications supporting the importance of glucose control. Glucokinase converts glucose to glucose-6-phosphate and determines glucose flux into the β-cells and hepatocytes. Since activation of glucokinase in β-cells is associated with increased risk of hypoglycemia, we hypothesized that selectively activating hepatic glucokinase would reduce fasting and postprandial glucose with minimal risk of hypoglycemia. Previous studies have shown that hepatic glucokinase overexpression is able to restore glucose homeostasis in diabetic models; however, these overexpression experiments have also revealed that excessive increases in hepatic glucokinase activity may also cause hepatosteatosis. Herein we sought to evaluate whether liver specific pharmacological activation of hepatic glucokinase is an effective strategy to reduce hyperglycemia without causing adverse hepatic lipids changes. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated a hepatoselective glucokinase activator, PF-04991532, in Goto-Kakizaki rats. In these studies, PF-04991532 reduced plasma glucose concentrations independent of changes in insulin concentrations in a dose-dependent manner both acutely and after 28 days of sub-chronic treatment. During a hyperglycemic clamp in Goto-Kakizaki rats, the glucose infusion rate was increased approximately 5-fold with PF-04991532. This increase in glucose infusion can be partially attributed to the 60% reduction in endogenous glucose production. While PF-04991532 induced dose-dependent increases in plasma triglyceride concentrations it had no effect on hepatic triglyceride concentrations in Goto-Kakizaki rats. Interestingly, PF-04991532 decreased intracellular AMP concentrations and increased hepatic futile cycling. These data suggest that hepatoselective glucokinase activation may offer glycemic control without inducing hepatic steatosis supporting the evaluation of tissue specific activators in clinical trials.


Journal of Hypertension | 2015

Metabolomic study of carotid-femoral pulse-wave velocity in women.

Cristina Menni; Massimo Mangino; Marina Cecelja; Maria Psatha; Mary Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Robert P. Mohney; Phil Chowienczyk; Sandosh Padmanabhan; Tim D. Spector; Ana M. Valdes

Objective: Carotid–femoral pulse-wave velocity (PWV) is a measure of aortic stiffness that is strongly associated with increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The aim of the current study was to identify the molecular markers and the pathways involved in differences in PWV in women, in order to further understand the regulation of arterial stiffening. Methods: A total of 280 known metabolites were measured in 1797 female twins (age range: 18–84 years) not on any antihypertensive medication. Metabolites associated with PWV (after adjustment for age, BMI, metabolite batch, and family relatedness) were entered into a backward linear regression. Transcriptomic analyses were further performed on the top compounds identified. Results: Twelve metabolites were associated with PWV (P < 1.8 × 10−4). One of the most strongly associated metabolites was uridine, which was not associated with blood pressure (BP) and traditional risk factors but correlated significantly with the gene-expression levels of the purinergic receptor P2RY2 (Beta = −0.010, SE = 0.003, P = 0.007), suggesting that it may play a role in regulating endothelial nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation. On the other hand, phenylacetylglutamine was strongly associated with both PWV and BP. Conclusion: Circulating levels of uridine, phenylacetylglutamine, and serine appear strongly correlated with PWV in women.


Diabetologia | 2015

Impact of combined resistance and aerobic exercise training on branched-chain amino acid turnover, glycine metabolism and insulin sensitivity in overweight humans.

Erin L. Glynn; Lucy W. Piner; Kim M. Huffman; Cris A. Slentz; Lorraine Elliot-Penry; Hiba AbouAssi; Phillip J. White; James R. Bain; Michael J. Muehlbauer; Olga Ilkayeva; Robert D. Stevens; Kathryn N. Porter Starr; Connie W. Bales; Elena Volpi; M. Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Timothy P. Rolph; Christopher B. Newgard; William E. Kraus

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Ana M. Valdes

University of Nottingham

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