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Dive into the research topics where Katherine J. Kelly is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine J. Kelly.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

Intercellular adhesion molecule-1-deficient mice are protected against ischemic renal injury.

Katherine J. Kelly; Winfred W. Williams; Robert B. Colvin; Shane M. Meehan; Timothy A. Springer; Jose Carlos Gutierrez-Ramos; Joseph V. Bonventre

Studies in the rat have pointed to a role for intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) in the pathogenesis of acute tubular necrosis. These studies used antibodies, which may have nonspecific effects. We report that renal ICAM-1 mRNA levels and systemic levels of the cytokines IL-1 and TNF-alpha increase 1 h after ischemia/ reperfusion in the mouse. We sought direct proof for a critical role for ICAM-1 in the pathophysiology of ischemic renal failure using mutant mice genetically deficient in ICAM-1. ICAM-1 is undetectable in mutant mice in contrast with normal mice, in which ICAM-1 is prominent in the endothelium of the vasa recta. Mutant mice are protected from acute renal ischemic injury as judged by serum creatinine, renal histology, and animal survival . Renal leukocyte infiltration, quantitated morphologically and by measuring tissue myeloperoxidase, was markedly less in ICAM-1-deficient than control mice. To evaluate whether prevention of neutrophil infiltration could be responsible for the protection observed in the mutant mice, we treated normal mice with antineutrophil serum to reduce absolute neutrophil counts to < 100 cells/mm3. These neutrophil-depleted animals were protected against ischemic renal failure. Anti-1CAm-1 antibody protected normal mice against renal ischemic injury but did not provide additional protection to neutrophil-depleted animals. Thus, ICAM-1 is a key mediator of ischemic acute renal failure likely acting via potentiation of neutrophilendothelial interactions.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Distant Effects of Experimental Renal Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Katherine J. Kelly

Acute renal failure results in significant morbidity and mortality, yet renal failure is not the usual cause of death in the clinical situation. We have previously reported systemic increases in the inflammatory mediators tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) after renal ischemia in the mouse. In the present study, an animal model of bilateral renal ischemia was used to test the hypothesis that cytokines released with renal ischemia have effects on other organ systems. Increased levels of immunoreactive TNF-alpha and IL-1 and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 mRNA were found in the heart after renal ischemia in the rat. This was accompanied by increases in myeloperoxidase activity, an index of tissue leukocyte infiltration, in the heart as well as the liver and lung. Functional changes in the heart 48 h after renal ischemia included increases in left ventricular end diastolic diameter, left ventricular end systolic diameter, and decreased fractional shortening by echocardiography. Evidence of apoptosis of cardiac cells was also found 48 h after an abbreviated period of renal ischemia insufficient to induce azotemia but not bilateral nephrectomy (which resulted in significant renal failure), suggesting that renal ischemia but not uremia is necessary for the apoptosis observed. It was also found that blocking the action of TNF-alpha limited cardiac apoptosis. Renal ischemia results in distant effects and the alterations observed in the heart may be important in the morbidity and mortality observed clinically.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

P53 Mediates the Apoptotic Response to GTP Depletion after Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion: Protective Role of a p53 Inhibitor

Katherine J. Kelly; Zoya Plotkin; Stacey L. Vulgamott; Pierre C. Dagher

Ischemic injury to the kidney is characterized in part by nucleotide depletion and tubular cell death in the form of necrosis or apoptosis. GTP depletion was recently identified as an important inducer of apoptosis during chemical anoxia in vitro and ischemic injury in vivo. It has also been shown that GTP salvage with guanosine prevented apoptosis and protected function. This study investigates the role of p53 in mediating the apoptotic response to GTP depletion. Male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent bilateral renal artery clamp for 30 min followed by reperfusion. p53 protein levels increased significantly in the medulla over 24 h post-ischemia. The provision of guanosine inhibited the increase in p53. Pifithrin-alpha, a specific inhibitor of p53, mimicked the effects of guanosine. It had no effect on necrosis, yet it prevented apoptosis and protected renal function. Pifithrin-alpha was protective when given up to 14 h after the ischemic insult. The effects of pifithrin-alpha on p53 included inhibition of transcriptional activation of downstream p53 targets like p21 and Bax and inhibition of p53 translocation to the mitochondria. Similar results were obtained in cultured renal tubular cells. It is concluded that p53 is an important mediator of apoptosis during states of GTP depletion. Inhibitors of p53 should be considered in the treatment of ischemic renal injury.


Diabetes | 1986

Rubella Virus–Induced Diabetes in the Hamster

E J Rayfield; Katherine J. Kelly; J W Yoon

The congenital rubella syndrome provides the best documentation in humans that a viral infection is associated with the subsequent development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. We have developed an animal model in neonatal golden Syrian hamsters infected with rubella virus passaged in β-cells that closely parallels the diabetes observed with congenital rubella. The hamsters develop hyperglycemia and hypoinsulinemia, which are sustained throughout the 15-wk study period. A mononuclear infiltration of the islets, isolation of rubella virus from whole pancreas, the presence of viral antigen in β-cells by immunofluorescent localization, and cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies (40%) are demonstrated. These data suggest that an autoimmune process and diabetes develop after rubella virus infection in neonatal hamsters. This model may uncover the precise mechanism by which rubella virus induces similar disease in humans.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

LOX-1 and inflammation: a new mechanism for renal injury in obesity and diabetes

Katherine J. Kelly; Pengfei Wu; Carolyn E. Patterson; Constance J. Temm; Jesus H. Dominguez

The early nephropathy in obese, diabetic, dyslipidemic (ZS) rats is characterized by tubular lipid accumulation and pervasive inflammation, two critically interrelated events. We now tested the hypothesis that proximal tubules from ZS obese diabetic rats in vivo, and proximal tubule cells (NRK52E) exposed to oxidized LDL (oxLDL) in vitro, change their normally quiescent epithelial phenotype into a proinflammatory phenotype. Urine of obese diabetic rats contained more lipid peroxides, and LOX-1, a membrane receptor that internalizes oxidized lipids, was mobilized to luminal sites. Levels of ICAM-1 and focal adhesion kinase, which participate in leukocyte migration and epithelial dedifferentiation, respectively, were also upregulated in tubules. NRK52E cells exposed to oxLDL showed similar modifications, plus suppression of anti-inflammatory transcription factor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-delta. In addition, oxLDL impaired epithelial barrier function. These alterations were prevented by an anti-LOX-1 antibody. The data support the concept that tubular LOX-1 activation driven by lipid oxidants in the preurine fluid is critical in the inflammatory changes. We suggest that luminal lipid oxidants and abnormal tubular permeability may be partly responsible for the renal tubulointerstitial injury of obesity, diabetes, and dyslipidemia.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2009

Postischemic inflammatory syndrome: a critical mechanism of progression in diabetic nephropathy

Katherine J. Kelly; James L. Burford; Jesus H. Dominguez

Diabetes is a major epidemic, and diabetic nephropathy is the most common cause of end-stage renal disease. Two critical components of diabetic nephropathy are persistent inflammation and chronic renal ischemia from widespread vasculopathy. Moreover, acute ischemic renal injury is common in diabetes, potentially causing chronic kidney disease or end-stage renal disease. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that acute renal ischemia accelerates nephropathy in diabetes by activating proinflammatory pathways. Lean and obese-diabetic ZS rats (F(1) hybrids of spontaneously hypertensive heart failure and Zucker fatty diabetic rats) were subjected to bilateral renal ischemia or sham surgery before the onset of proteinuria. The postischemic state in rats with obesity-diabetes was characterized by progressive chronic renal failure, increased proteinuria, and renal expression of proinflammatory mediators. Leukocyte number in obese-diabetic rat kidney was markedly increased for months after ischemia. Intrarenal blood flow velocity was decreased after ischemia in lean control and obese-diabetic rats, although it recovered in lean rats. At 2 mo after ischemia, blood flow velocity decreased further in sham-surgery and postischemia obese-diabetic rats, so that RBC flow velocity was only 39% of control in the obese-diabetic rats after ischemia. In addition, microvascular density remained depressed at 2 mo in kidneys of obese-diabetic rats after ischemia. Abnormal microvascular permeability and increases in interstitial fibrosis and apoptotic renal cell death were also more pronounced after ischemia in obese-diabetic rats. These data support the hypothesis that acute renal ischemia in obesity-diabetes severely aggravates chronic inflammation and vasculopathy, creating a self-perpetuating postischemia inflammatory syndrome, which accelerates renal failure.


Contributions To Nephrology | 2005

Heat Shock (Stress Response) Proteins and Renal Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Katherine J. Kelly

Acute renal failure occurs frequently, may be increasing, carries an unacceptably high mortality, yet there is no specific treatment. The induction of stress response (heat shock) proteins (HSPs) is a highly conserved response that protects many cell types from diverse physiological and environmental stressors. HSP families of different sizes function as molecular chaperones that facilitate the folding of enzymes and other proteins into functional conformations. After injury, HSPs are believed to facilitate the restoration of normal function by assisting in the refolding of denatured proteins and degradation of irreparably damaged proteins and toxic metabolites, limitation of aggregation of damaged peptides and aiding appropriate folding of newly synthesized essential polypeptides. HSPs may also regulate apoptosis and immune functions. We have demonstrated protection from the functional deficits and histological evidence of experimental ischemic renal injury with heat stress 6 but not 48 h prior to ischemia. Limitation of the induction of HSPs (either with a short period of hyperthermia or pharmacologically) attenuated the protection observed. Other investigators have demonstrated a correlation between the levels of HSP25 and renal ischemic preconditioning in the mouse. Several pharmacological agents have been shown to increase HSP expression. Enhancement of these endogenous protective mechanisms has potential benefit in human disease.


American Journal of Nephrology | 2010

Rapid Progression of Diabetic Nephropathy Is Linked to Inflammation and Episodes of Acute Renal Failure

Katherine J. Kelly; Jesus H. Dominguez

Background/Aims: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) from diabetic nephropathy is characterized by progressive loss of renal function. The renal decline has been viewed as a linear fall, presumably dependent on metabolic, hemodynamic and dietary stresses. However, renal injury in diabetic nephropathy can be rapidly aggravated by unpredictable external and internal factors, a state of affairs inconsistent with a linear loss of function. Acute renal injury and subsequent inflammation are potential factors, and we investigated their presence in renal biopsies from patients with nephropathy. Methods: In a protocol approved by the Indiana University School of Medicine Institutional Review Board, renal biopsy specimens, estimated GFR, proteinuria and renal survival were examined in patients with diabetic nephropathy. Results: Prominent clusters of inflammatory cells, particularly macrophages, were detected in the renal biopsy specimens. CKD progressed rapidly but not linearly, in that CKD was characterized by a succession of seemingly random episodes of self-limited acute renal failure. Episodes of acute kidney injury were associated with progression to end-stage renal disease. Conclusions: We propose that diabetic nephropathy is complicated by unpredictable and possibly random episodes of usually self-limited acute renal failure, and by subsequent renal inflammation, which appear to accelerate progression and eventual kidney loss.


American Journal of Nephrology | 2015

Renal C3 Complement Component: Feed Forward to Diabetic Kidney Disease

Katherine J. Kelly; Yunlong Liu; Jizhong Zhang; Jesus H. Dominguez

Background: Diabetic nephropathy is the main cause of end-stage renal disease and has reached epidemic proportions. Methods: Comprehensive genomic profiling (RNAseq) was employed in the ZS (F1 hybrids of Zucker and spontaneously hypertensive heart failure) model of diabetic nephropathy. Controls were lean littermates. Results: Diabetic nephropathy in obese, diabetic ZS was accelerated by a single episode of renal ischemia (DI). This rapid renal decline was accompanied by the activation of the renal complement system in DI, and to a lesser extent in sham-operated diabetic rats (DS). In DI there were significant increases in renal mRNA encoding C3, C4, C5, C6, C8, and C9 over sham-operated lean normal controls (LS). Moreover, mRNAs encoding the receptors for the anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a were also significantly increased in DI compared to LS. The classic complement pathway was activated in diabetic kidneys with significant increases of C1qa, C1qb, and C1qc mRNAs in DI over LS. In addition, critical regulators of complement activation were significantly attenuated in DI and DS. These included mRNAs encoding CD55, decay accelerating factor, and CD59, which inhibit the membrane attack complex. C3, C4, and C9 proteins were demonstrated in renal tubules and glomeruli. The complement RNAseq data were incorporated into a gene network showing interactions among C3-generating renal tubular cells and other immune competent migratory cells. Conclusions: We conclude that local activation of the complement system mediates renal injury in diabetic nephropathy.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2010

Intravenous cell therapy for acute renal failure with serum amyloid A protein-reprogrammed cells

Katherine J. Kelly; Barbara Kluve-Beckerman; Jizhong Zhang; Jesus H. Dominguez

Serum amyloid A protein (SAA), a prominent component of the acute-phase response, is strongly expressed in developing and repairing kidneys and promotes tubulogenesis. Accordingly, we reprogrammed relatively undifferentiated NRK52E cells with the mouse SAA1.1 gene and transplanted SAA-positive and -negative cells into rats with acute renal failure. We found that SAA-positive cells accelerated renal recovery in three models of acute renal failure: gentamicin nephrotoxicity, cisplatin-mediated renal injury, and ischemia-reperfusion renal injury. The dramatic improvement of renal failure was demonstrable within 2 days, consistent with an early paracrine effect. However, abundant donor cells were also found integrated in the healing tubular architecture after 7 days. We conclude that infusions of SAA-positive cells promote renal recovery after acute renal failure and offer a potentially powerful and novel therapy of renal failure.

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Joseph V. Bonventre

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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