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Dive into the research topics where Kimberley L. Kaufman is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberley L. Kaufman.


Nature Reviews Neurology | 2011

Clinical and pathological features of alcohol-related brain damage

Natalie M. Zahr; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Clive Harper

One of the sequelae of chronic alcohol abuse is malnutrition. Importantly, a deficiency in thiamine (vitamin B1) can result in the acute, potentially reversible neurological disorder Wernicke encephalopathy (WE). When WE is recognized, thiamine treatment can elicit a rapid clinical recovery. If WE is left untreated, however, patients can develop Korsakoff syndrome (KS), a severe neurological disorder characterized by anterograde amnesia. Alcohol-related brain damage (ARBD) describes the effects of chronic alcohol consumption on human brain structure and function in the absence of more discrete and well-characterized neurological concomitants of alcoholism such as WE and KS. Through knowledge of both the well-described changes in brain structure and function that are evident in alcohol-related disorders such as WE and KS and the clinical outcomes associated with these changes, researchers have begun to gain a better understanding of ARBD. This Review examines ARBD from the perspective of WE and KS, exploring the clinical presentations, postmortem brain pathology, in vivo MRI findings and potential molecular mechanisms associated with these conditions. An awareness of the consequences of chronic alcohol consumption on human behavior and brain structure can enable clinicians to improve detection and treatment of ARBD.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2015

Oligoastrocytomas: throwing the baby out with the bathwater?

Paul Wilcox; Cheryl C. Y. Li; Maggie Lee; Brindha Shivalingam; Jeffrey Brennan; Catherine M. Suter; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Trina Lum; Michael E. Buckland

biology, clinical trial design, and future treatment deci-sions. OA should not be ignored in the proposed new clas-sification guidelines [2].Sahm and colleagues studied 43 cases diagnosed as OA based on histology. But in 30 of these cases, immunostain-ing for IDH1 (R132H) mutation was restricted to oligo-dendroglial areas only. The astrocytic component of these tumours was re-interpreted to be reactive in nature [4], and they were reclassified as oligodendroglioma. We propose that this finding indicates that ‘true’ OAs (i.e. tumours com-posed of two distinct


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2010

An extended antibody microarray for surface profiling metastatic melanoma

Kimberley L. Kaufman; Larissa Belov; Pauline Huang; Swetlana Mactier; Richard A. Scolyer; Graham J. Mann; Richard I. Christopherson

An antibody microarray was developed for profiling the surface proteome of melanoma cells, which may facilitate melanoma sub-classification and provide important prognostic information useful in predicting the clinical behavior of the melanoma (e.g., likely sites of metastatic spread), patient outcome and treatment response. Forty-eight antibodies were selected based on their correlation with melanoma development, progression and/or prognosis and printed on nitrocellulose slides. The immobilised antibodies capture live cells expressing corresponding antigens to produce a cell binding dot pattern representing the surface antigen profile (immunophenotype) of the melanoma. Surface antigen signatures were determined for a normal melanocyte and 6 melanoma cell lines and cell suspensions prepared from 10 surgically excised melanoma lymph node metastases. A procedure for obtaining separate surface antigen profiles for melanoma cells and leukocytes from clinical lymph node samples was also developed using anti-CD45 magnetic beads. The capture of live, bead-bound leukocytes on these antibody microarrays provides a significant enhancement of this microarray technology. The antibody microarray will be used to profile panels of surgically excised melanoma lymph node metastases (melanoma and leukocyte fractions) to determine whether the immunophenotypes correlate with clinicopathological characteristics, disease progression and clinical outcome.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2014

Protein signatures correspond to survival outcomes of AJCC stage III melanoma patients

Swetlana Mactier; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Penghao Wang; Ben Crossett; Gulietta M. Pupo; Philippa L. Kohnke; John F. Thompson; Richard A. Scolyer; Jean Y. Yang; Graham J. Mann; Richard I. Christopherson

Outcomes for melanoma patients with stage III disease differ widely even within the same subcategory. Molecular signatures that more accurately predict prognosis are needed to stratify patients according to risk. Proteomic analyses were used to identify differentially abundant proteins in extracts of surgically excised samples from patients with stage IIIc melanoma lymph node metastases. Analysis of samples from patients with poor (n = 14, <1 yr) and good (n = 19, >4 yr) survival outcomes identified 84 proteins that were differentially abundant between prognostic groups. Subsequent selected reaction monitoring analysis verified 21 proteins as potential biomarkers for survival. Poor prognosis patients are characterized by increased levels of proteins involved in protein metabolism, nucleic acid metabolism, angiogenesis, deregulation of cellular energetics and methylation processes, and decreased levels of proteins involved in apoptosis and immune response. These proteins are able to classify stage IIIc patients into prognostic subgroups (P < 0.02). This is the first report of potential prognostic markers from stage III melanoma using proteomic analyses. Validation of these protein markers in larger patient cohorts should define protein signatures that enable better stratification of stage III melanoma patients.


Proteomics | 2015

Microparticles released from Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected human macrophages contain increased levels of the type I interferon inducible proteins including ISG15

Nathan J. Hare; Brian Chan; Edwina Chan; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Warwick J. Britton; Bernadette M. Saunders

Microparticles (MPs) are small membranous particles (100–1000 nm) released under normal steady‐state conditions and are thought to provide a communication network between host cells. Previous studies demonstrated that Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) infection of macrophages increased the release of MPs, and these MPs induced a proinflammatory response from uninfected macrophages in vitro and in vivo following their transfer into uninfected mice. To determine how M. tb infection modulates the protein composition of the MPs, and if this contributes to their proinflammatory properties, we compared the proteomes of MPs derived from M. tb‐infected (TBinf‐MP) and uninfected human THP‐1 monocytic cells. MP proteins were analyzed by GeLC‐MS/MS with spectral counting revealing 68 proteins with statistically significant differential abundances. The 42 proteins increased in abundance in TBinf‐MPs included proteins associated with immune function (7), lysosomal/endosomal maturation (4), vesicular formation (12), nucleosome proteins (4), and antigen processing (9). Prominent among these were the type I interferon inducible proteins, ISG15, IFIT1, IFIT2, and IFIT3. Exposure of uninfected THP‐1 cells to TBinf‐MPs induced increased gene expression of isg15, ifit1, ifit2, and ifit3 and the release of proinflammatory cytokines. These proteins may regulate the proinflammatory potential of the MPs and provide candidate biomarkers for M. tb infection.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2015

Membrane Proteome Analysis of Glioblastoma Cell Invasion

Duthika M. Mallawaaratchy; Michael E. Buckland; Kerrie L. McDonald; Cheryl C.Y. Li; Linda Ly; Erin K. Sykes; Richard I. Christopherson; Kimberley L. Kaufman

Abstract Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) tumor invasion is facilitated by cell migration and degradation of the extracellular matrix. Invadopodia are actin-rich structures that protrude from the plasma membrane in direct contact with the extracellular matrix and are proposed to participate in epithelial-mesenchymal transition. We characterized the invasiveness of 9 established GBM cell lines using an invadopodia assay and performed quantitative mass spectrometry–based proteomic analyses on enriched membrane fractions. All GBM cells produced invadopodia, with a 65% difference between the most invasive cell line (U87MG) and the least invasive cell line (LN229) (p = 0.0001). Overall, 1,141 proteins were identified in the GBM membrane proteome; the levels of 49 proteins correlated with cell invasiveness. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis predicted activation “cell movement” (z-score = 2.608, p = 3.94E−04) in more invasive cells and generated a network of invasion-associated proteins with direct links to key regulators of invadopodia formation. Gene expression data relating to the invasion-associated proteins ITGA5 (integrin &agr;5), CD97, and ANXA1 (annexin A1) showed prognostic significance in independent GBM cohorts. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrated ITGA5, CD97, and ANXA1 localization in invadopodia assays, and small interfering RNA knockdown of ITGA5 reduced invadopodia formation in U87MG cells. Thus, invasion-associated proteins, including ITGA5, may prove to be useful anti-invasive targets; volociximab, a therapeutic antibody against integrin &agr;5&bgr;1, may be useful for treatment of patients with GBM.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2011

B-RAF: A contributor to the melanoma phenotype

E.M.L. Heath; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Richard I. Christopherson

B-RAF, a serine-threonine protein kinase, is one of the three RAF paralogs in humans. B-RAF participates in the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK pathway, a conserved protein kinase-signalling cascade that is involved in regulating a number of critical cellular functions. Mutated B-RAF is believed to play a crucial role in the development, maintenance and progression of melanoma, where it contributes to multiple aspects of the malignant phenotype, such as cell survival, proliferation and apoptosis resistance. Indeed, it is mutated in a high proportion of melanocytic skin lesions and B-RAF mutations are preserved through melanoma progression. Despite this, the direct inhibition of B-RAF has shown little success clinically in the treatment of melanoma, presumably due to the complexity of the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK pathway. For this reason, alternative strategies must be developed to treat oncogenic B-RAF-induced melanomas.


Journal of Proteomics | 2012

The phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitor LY294002, decreases aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, chaperones and glycolytic enzymes in human HT-29 colorectal cancer cells.

Duthika M. Mallawaaratchy; Swetlana Mactier; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Katherine Blomfield; Richard I. Christopherson

The proposed anticancer drug LY294002, inhibits phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) that initiates a signalling pathway often activated in colorectal cancer (CRC). The effects of LY294002 (10 μM, 48 h) on the cytosolic, mitochondrial and nuclear proteomes of human HT-29 CRC cells have been determined using iTRAQ (isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Analysis of cells treated with LY294002 identified 26 differentially abundant proteins that indicate several mechanisms of action. The majority of protein changes were directly or indirectly associated with Myc and TNF-α, previously implicated in CRC progression. LY294002 decreased the levels of 6 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (average 0.39-fold) required for protein translation, 5 glycolytic enzymes (average 0.37-fold) required for ATP synthesis, and 3 chaperones required for protein folding. There was a 3.2-fold increase in lysozyme C involved in protein-glycoside hydrolysis. LY294002 increased cytosolic p53 with a concomitant decrease in nuclear p53, suggesting transfer of p53 to the cytosol where apoptosis might be initiated via the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway. Protein changes described here suggest that the anti-angiogenic effects of LY294002 may be related to p53; the mutational status of p53 in CRC may be an important determinant of the efficacy of PI3K inhibitors for treatment.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Hsp90 Inhibitor SNX-7081 dysregulates proteins involved with DNA repair and replication and the cell cycle in human chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells.

Yiping Che; O. Giles Best; Ling Zhong; Kimberley L. Kaufman; Swetlana Mactier; Mark J. Raftery; Lee M. Graves; Stephen P. Mulligan; Richard I. Christopherson

The proteomic effects of the Hsp90 inhibitor, SNX-7081, have been determined on the p53-mutated B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cell line, MEC1. Following SNX-7081 treatment (500 nM, 24 h), 51 proteins changed abundance by more than 2-fold (p < 0.05); 7 proteins increased while 44 proteins decreased. Proteins identified as differentially abundant by LC-MS/MS were validated by Western blotting (DDB1, PCNA, MCM2, Hsp90, Hsp70, GRP78, PDIA6, HLA-DR). RT-PCR showed that SNX-7081 unexpectedly modulates a number of these proteins in MEC1 cells at the mRNA level (PCNA, MCM2, Nup155, Hsp70, GRP78, PDIA6, and HLA-DR). Pathway analysis determined that 3 of the differentially abundant proteins (cyclin D1, c-Myc and pRb) were functionally related. p53 levels did not change upon SNX-7081 treatment of p53 wild-type Raji cells or p53-mutated MEC1 and U266 cells, indicating that SNX-7081 has a p53-independent mechanism. The decreases in DDB1, MCM2, c-Myc, and PCNA and increases of pRb and cyclin D1 were confirmed in MEC1, U266, Raji, and p53 null HL60 cells by Western blotting. These data suggest that SNX-7081 arrests the cell cycle and inhibits DNA replication and r epair and provides evidence for the mechanism of the observed synergy between Hsp90 inhibitors and drugs that induce DNA strand breaks.


Oncotarget | 2015

The Hsp90 inhibitor SNX-7081 is synergistic with fludarabine nucleoside via DNA damage and repair mechanisms in human, p53-negative chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Kimberley L. Kaufman; Yiping Jenkins; Munther Alomari; Mehdi Mirzaei; O. Giles Best; Dana Pascovici; Swetlana Mactier; Stephen P. Mulligan; Paul A. Haynes; Richard I. Christopherson

Clinical trials of heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors have been limited by high toxicity. We previously showed that the Hsp90 inhibitor, SNX-7081, synergizes with and restores sensitivity to fludarabine nucleoside (2-FaraA) in human chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells with lesions in the p53 pathway (Best OG, et al., Leukemia Lymphoma 53:1367-75, 2012). Here, we used label-free quantitative shotgun proteomics and comprehensive bioinformatic analysis to determine the mechanism of this synergy. We propose that 2-FaraA-induced DNA damage is compounded by SNX-7081-mediated inhibition of DNA repair, resulting in enhanced induction of apoptosis. DNA damage responses are impaired in part due to reductions in checkpoint regulators BRCA1 and cyclin D1, and cell death is triggered following reductions of MYC and nucleolin and an accumulation of apoptosis-inducing NFkB2 p100 subunit. Loss of nucleolin can activate Fas-mediated apoptosis, leading to the increase of pro-apoptotic proteins (BID, fas-associated factor-2) and subsequent apoptosis of p53-negative, 2-FaraA refractory CLL cells. A significant induction of DNA damage, indicated by increases in DNA damage marker ϕH2AX, was observed following the dual drug treatment of additional cell lines, indicating that a similar mechanism may operate in other p53-mutated human B-lymphoid cancers. These results provide valuable insight into the synergistic mechanism between SNX-7081 and 2-FaraA that may provide an alternative treatment for CLL patients with p53 mutations, for whom therapeutic options are currently limited. Moreover, this drug combination reduces the effective dose of the Hsp90 inhibitor and may therefore alleviate any toxicity encountered.

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Michael E. Buckland

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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O. Giles Best

Royal North Shore Hospital

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Kerrie L. McDonald

University of New South Wales

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