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Dive into the research topics where Karen L. Hile is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen L. Hile.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2003

The role of estrogen in cardiovascular disease.

Lauren Baker; Meijing Wang; Rajakumar Sankula; Ram Vanam; Azad Raiesdana; Ben Tsai; Karen L. Hile; John W. Brown; Daniel R. Meldrum

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death among women, accounting for nearly 50% of female deaths. Statistics show that women on average develop cardiovascular disease 10 to 15 years later in life than men, and that the risk may increase after menopause. This observation has led to much speculation as to what physiological change(s) associated with menopause is responsible for the higher risk of atherosclerosis. Estrogen, with its potential as a cardioprotective agent and as an immunomodulator of the inflammatory response in atherosclerosis, has received the most attention. Understanding the mechanisms that lead to these differences may allow beneficial therapeutic intervention to enhance this effect in females and evoke this protection in males. This review will do the following: (1) characterize mechanisms of atherosclerosis, (2) explore the role of estrogen-replacement therapy, (3) define the effect of gender on inflammation, (4) compare and contrast the effects of estrogen and testosterone on endothelial functional, and (5) suggest mechanistic based therapeutic opportunities.


Kidney International | 2009

IL-18 neutralization ameliorates obstruction-induced epithelial–mesenchymal transition and renal fibrosis

Ahmad H. Bani-Hani; Jeffery A. Leslie; Hiroshi Asanuma; Charles A. Dinarello; Matthew T. Campbell; Daniel R. Meldrum; Honji Zhang; Karen L. Hile

Ureteral obstruction results in renal fibrosis in part due to inflammatory injury. The role of interleukin-18 (IL-18), an important mediator of inflammation, in the genesis of renal fibrosis was studied using transgenic mice overexpressing human IL-18-binding protein. In addition, HK-2 cells were analyzed following direct exposure to IL-18 compared to control media. Two weeks after ureteral obstruction, the kidneys of wild-type mice had a significant increase in IL-18 production, collagen deposition, alpha-smooth muscle actin and RhoA expression, fibroblast and macrophage accumulation, chemokine expression, and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) production, whereas E-cadherin expression was simultaneously decreased. The transgenic mice with neutralized IL-18 activity exhibited significant reductions in these indicators of obstruction-induced renal fibrosis and epithelial- mesenchymal transition, without demonstrating alterations in TGF-beta1 or TNF-alpha activity. Similarly, the HK-2 cells exhibited increased alpha-smooth muscle actin expression and collagen production, and decreased E-cadherin expression in response to IL-18 stimulation without alterations in TNF-alpha or TGF-beta1 activity. Our study demonstrates that IL-18 is a significant mediator of obstruction-induced renal fibrosis and epithelial- mesenchymal transition independent of downstream TGF-beta1 or TNF-alpha production.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Toll-like receptor 4: A novel signaling pathway during renal fibrogenesis

Matthew T. Campbell; Karen L. Hile; Hongji Zhang; Hiroshi Asanuma; Brian A. VanderBrink; Richard R. Rink

BACKGROUND The toll-like receptor (TLR) family serves an important regulatory role in the innate immune system, and recent evidence has implicated TLR signaling in the pro-inflammatory response of a variety of endogenous and exogenous stimuli within the kidney. The role of TLR signaling in fibrotic renal injury, however, remains unknown. MATERIALS AND METHODS C3H/HeJ TLR4 hyporesponsive mice (TLR4(Lps-d)) or WT controls (C3H/HeOu/J) underwent either sham operation or 1 wk of unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO). The kidneys were harvested and tissues were analyzed for TLR4 expression (Western blot; RTPCR), E-cadherin and alpha smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) expression (Western blot), fibroblast accumulation (fibroblast specific protein (FSP-1+) staining), renal fibrosis (collagen I RTPCR, total collagen assay, Massons trichrome staining), cytokine gene expression (tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-β1) RTPCR), and pSMAD2 and integrin α1 expression (Western blot). RESULTS Mice with intact TLR4 signaling demonstrate a significant increase in TLR4 expression, α-SMA expression, fibroblast accumulation, collagen deposition, and interstitial fibrosis, and a significant decrease in E-cadherin expression in response to UUO. TLR4 deficient mice, however, exhibit a significant reduction in obstruction-induced α-SMA expression, fibroblast accumulation, and renal fibrosis, with preservation of E-cadherin expression. TLR4s influence on fibroblast accumulation and renal fibrosis occurred independent of any alterations in TNF-α, TGF-β1, or pSMAD2 expression, but did involve alterations integrin α1 expression. CONCLUSION TLR4 appears to be a significant mediator of fibrotic renal injury. While TLR4 signaling is recognized as a critical component of the innate immune response, this is the first study to demonstrate a novel role for TLR4 in renal fibroblast accumulation and tubulointerstitial fibrosis.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Arterially Delivered Mesenchymal Stem Cells Prevent Obstruction-Induced Renal Fibrosis

Hiroshi Asanuma; Brian A. VanderBrink; Matthew T. Campbell; Karen L. Hile; Hongji Zhang; Daniel R. Meldrum

BACKGROUND Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) hold promise for the treatment of renal disease. While MSCs have been shown to accelerate recovery and prevent acute renal failure in multiple disease models, the effect of MSC therapy on chronic obstruction-induced renal fibrosis has not previously been evaluated. MATERIALS AND METHODS Male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent renal artery injection of vehicle or fluorescent-labeled human bone marrow-derived MSCs immediately prior to sham operation or induction of left ureteral obstruction (UUO). One or 4 wk later, the kidneys were harvested and the renal cortex analyzed for evidence of stem cell infiltration, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) as evidenced by E-cadherin/α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) expression and fibroblast specific protein (FSP+) staining, renal fibrosis (collagen content, Massons trichrome staining), and cytokine and growth factor activity (ELISA and real time RT-PCR). RESULTS Fluorescent-labeled MSCs were detected in the interstitium of the kidney up to 4 wk post-obstruction. Arterially delivered MSCs significantly reduced obstruction-induced α-SMA expression, FSP+ cell accumulation, total collagen content, and tubulointerstitial fibrosis, while simultaneously preserving E-cadherin expression, suggesting that MSCs prevent obstruction-induced EMT and renal fibrosis. Exogenous MSCs reduced obstruction-induced tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) levels, but did not alter transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), interleukin-10 (IL-10), fibroblast growth factor (FGF), or hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) expression. CONCLUSIONS Human bone marrow-derived MSCs remain viable several weeks after delivery into the kidney and provide protection against obstruction-induced EMT and chronic renal fibrosis. While the mechanism of MSCs-induced renal protection during obstruction remains unclear, our results demonstrate that alterations in TNF-α production may be involved.


The Journal of Urology | 2002

Simulated Ischemia Induces Renal Tubular Cell Apoptosis Through a Nuclear Factor-κB Dependent Mechanism

Kristan K. Meldrum; Karen L. Hile; Daniel R. Meldrum; J.A. Crone; J.P. Gearhart; A.L. Burnett

PURPOSE Ischemia-reperfusion injury is a relatively common cause of renal tubular cell death and acute renal failure. While nuclear factor-kappaB has been implicated in the pathophysiology of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury, the effect of nuclear factor-kappaB inhibition on ischemia induced renal tubular cell death remains unknown. MATERIALS AND METHODS Renal tubular cells (LLC-PK1) were exposed to simulated ischemia in the presence or absence of 10 microM. pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (nuclear factor-kappaB inhibitor). Nuclear factor-kappaB activation (electrophoretic mobility shift assay and immunohistochemistry) and the effect of pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate on nuclear factor-kappaB activation (electrophoretic mobility shift assay) and ischemia induced apoptosis (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end-labeling) were determined. RESULTS Simulated ischemia induced nuclear factor-kappaB activation and renal tubular cell apoptosis versus controls (mean plus or minus standard error of mean 62 +/- 5.2 versus 0.4 +/- 0.3 apoptotic nuclei per high power field, p <0.05). In contrast, previous cellular exposure to pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate effectively inhibited nuclear factor-kappaB activation and prevented ischemia induced apoptosis (mean 14 +/- 6 apoptotic nuclei per high power field). CONCLUSIONS Simulated ischemia induces nuclear factor-kappaB intranuclear translocation and activation in renal tubular cells. Furthermore, nuclear factor-kappaB mediates ischemia induced renal tubular cell apoptosis. Further elucidation of the complex role of nuclear factor-kappaB in inflammatory injury may lead to the development of targeted therapeutic strategies that ameliorate ischemic renal injury.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2011

IL-18 mediates proapoptotic signaling in renal tubular cells through a Fas ligand-dependent mechanism

Hongji Zhang; Karen L. Hile; Hiroshi Asanuma; Brian A. VanderBrink; Ethan I. Franke; Matthew T. Campbell

Renal tubular cell apoptosis is a significant component of obstruction-induced renal injury, and it results in a progressive loss in renal parenchymal mass during renal obstruction. Although IL-18 is an important mediator of inflammatory renal disease and renal fibrosis, its role in obstruction-induced renal tubular cell apoptosis remains unclear. To study this, male C57BL6 wild-type mice and C57BL6 mice transgenic for human IL-18-binding protein (IL-18BP Tg) were subjected to renal obstruction vs. sham operation. The kidneys were harvested after 1 or 2 wk and analyzed for IL-18 production, apoptosis, caspase activity, and Fas/Fas Ligand (FasL) expression. HK-2 cells were similarly analyzed for apoptosis and proapoptotic signaling following 3 days of direct exposure to IL-18 vs. control media. Renal obstruction induced a significant increase in IL-18 production, renal tubular cell apoptosis, caspase activation, and FasL expression. IL-18 neutralization, on the other hand, significantly reduced obstruction-induced apoptosis, caspase-8 and caspase-3 activity, and FasL expression. In vitro experiments similarly demonstrate that IL-18 stimulation induces apoptosis, FasL expression, and increases active caspase-8 and caspase-3 expression in a dose-dependent fashion. siRNA knockdown of FasL gene expression, however, significantly reduced IL-18-induced apoptosis. This study reveals that IL-18 is a significant mediator of obstruction-induced tubular cell apoptosis, and it demonstrates that IL-18 stimulates proapoptotic signaling through a FasL-dependent mechanism.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013

IL-18 induces profibrotic renal tubular cell injury via STAT3 activation

Futoshi Matsui; Audrey Rhee; Karen L. Hile; Hongji Zhang; Kirstan K. Meldrum

IL-18 is an important mediator of obstruction-induced renal fibrosis and renal tubular epithelial cell (TEC) injury. IL-18s proinflammatory properties have been attributed, in part, to NF-κB activation and the stimulation of cytokine gene expression; however, STAT3 has increasingly been shown to mediate renal fibrotic injury. We therefore hypothesized that IL-18 mediates profibrotic TEC injury via STAT3 activation. Male C57BL6 wild-type mice and transgenic mice for human IL-18-binding protein were subjected to unilateral ureteral obstruction or sham operation. The kidneys were harvested 1 or 2 wk afterward and analyzed for active STAT3 (p-STAT3) expression (Western blotting, immunohistochemistry) and suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3) expression. In a separate arm, renal tubular cells (HK-2) were directly stimulated with IL-18 for 2 days with or without the STAT3 inhibitor S3I-201 (50 μM). Cell lysates were then analyzed for p-STAT3 and SOCS3 expression, profibrotic cellular changes (collagen and α-SMA expression), and tubular cell apoptosis. p-STAT3 and SOCS3 expression increased significantly in response to obstruction; however, a significant reduction in p-STAT3 and SOCS3 expression occurred following 1 wk, but not 2 wk, of obstruction in the presence of IL-18 neutralization. In vitro results similarly demonstrate increased p-STAT3, SOCS3, α-SMA, and collagen III expression, and increased collagen production and TEC apoptosis in response to IL-18 stimulation, but the response was significantly diminished in the presence of STAT3 inhibition. These results demonstrate that IL-18-induces profibrotic cellular changes and collagen production in TECs via STAT3 activation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Profibrotic Effect of Interleukin-18 in HK-2 Cells Is Dependent on Stimulation of the Toll-like Receptor 4 (TLR4) Promoter and Increased TLR4 Expression

Hongji Zhang; Karen L. Hile; Lyle L. Moldower; Zizheng Dong; Daniel R. Meldrum

Background: IL-18 induces profibrotic changes in TECs independent of TGF-β1 activity. Results: IL-18 stimulates the TLR4 promoter via AP-1 activation to increase TLR4 expression in TECs and stimulates profibrotic changes in TECs through increased TLR4 expression/signaling. Conclusion: The profibrotic effect of IL-18 in TECs is mediated through stimulation of TLR4 expression via activation of AP-1. Significance: This represents a novel fibrotic signaling pathway in TECs independent of TGF-β1. IL-18 is an important mediator of obstruction-induced renal fibrosis and tubular epithelial cell injury independent of TGF-β1 activity. We sought to determine whether the profibrotic effect of IL-18 is mediated through Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Male C57BL6 wild type and mice transgenic for human IL-18-binding protein were subjected to left unilateral ureteral obstruction versus sham operation. The kidneys were harvested 1 week postoperatively and analyzed for IL-18 production and TLR4 expression. In a separate arm, renal tubular epithelial cells (HK-2) were directly stimulated with IL-18 in the presence or absence of a TLR4 agonist, TLR4 antagonist, or TLR4 siRNA knockdown. Cell lysates were analyzed for TLR4, α-smooth muscle actin, and E-cadherin expression. TLR4 promotor activity, as well as AP-1 activation and the effect of AP-1 knockdown on TLR4 expression, was evaluated in HK-2 cells in response to IL-18 stimulation. The results demonstrate that IL-18 induces TLR4 expression during unilateral ureteral obstruction and induces TLR4 expression in HK-2 cells via AP-1 activation. Inhibition of TLR4 or knockdown of TLR4 gene expression in turn prevents IL-18-induced profibrotic changes in HK-2 cells. These results suggest that IL-18 induces profibrotic changes in tubular epithelial cells via increased TLR4 expression/signaling.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2017

Mesenchymal stem cells protect against obstruction-induced renal fibrosis by decreasing STAT3 activation and STAT3-dependent MMP-9 production.

Futoshi Matsui; Stephen Babitz; Audrey Rhee; Karen L. Hile; Hongji Zhang; Kirstan Kathleen Meldrum

STAT3 is a transcription factor implicated in renal fibrotic injury, but the role of STAT3 in mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)-induced renoprotection during renal fibrosis remains unknown. We hypothesized that MSCs protect against obstruction-induced renal fibrosis by downregulating STAT3 activation and STAT3-induced matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) expression. Male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent renal arterial injection of vehicle or MSCs (1 × 106/rat) immediately before sham operation or induction of unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO). The kidneys were harvested after 4 wk and analyzed for collagen I and III gene expression, collagen deposition (Massons trichrome), fibronectin, α-smooth muscle actin, active STAT3 (p-STAT3), MMP-9, and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases 1 (TIMP-1) expression. In a separate arm, the STAT3 inhibitor S3I-201 (10 mg/kg) vs. vehicle was administered to rats intraperitoneally just after induction of UUO and daily for 14 days thereafter. The kidneys were harvested after 2 wk and analyzed for p-STAT3 and MMP-9 expression, and collagen and fibronectin deposition. Renal obstruction induced a significant increase in collagen, fibronectin, α-SMA, p-STAT3, MMP-9, and TIMP-1 expression while exogenously administered MSCs significantly reduced these indicators of obstruction-induced renal fibrosis. STAT3 inhibition with S3I-201 significantly reduced obstruction-induced MMP-9 expression and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. These results demonstrate that MSCs protect against obstruction-induced renal fibrosis, in part, by decreasing STAT3 activation and STAT3-dependent MMP-9 production.


Psychopharmacology | 2015

Monetary discounting and ventral striatal dopamine receptor availability in nontreatment-seeking alcoholics and social drinkers

Brandon G. Oberlin; Daniel S. Albrecht; Christine M. Herring; James W. Walters; Karen L. Hile; David A. Kareken; Karmen K. Yoder

RationaleDopamine (DA) in the ventral striatum (VST) has long been implicated in addiction pathologies, yet its role in temporal decision-making is not well-understood.ObjectivesTo determine if VST DA D2 receptor availability corresponds with greater impulsive choice in both nontreatment-seeking alcoholics (NTS) and social drinkers (SD).MethodsNTS subjects (n = 10) and SD (n = 13) received PET scans at baseline with the D2/D3 radioligand [11C]raclopride (RAC). Outside the scanner, subjects performed a delay discounting procedure with monetary rewards. RAC binding potential (BPND) was estimated voxelwise, and correlations were performed to test for relationships between VST BPND and delay discounting performance. Self-reported impulsivity was also tested for correlations with BPND.ResultsAcross all subjects, greater impulsive choice for

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Daniel R. Meldrum

Riley Hospital for Children

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Audrey Rhee

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Richard C. Rink

Indiana University Bloomington

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