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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2017

MicroRNA-138 and MicroRNA-25 Down-regulate Mitochondrial Calcium Uniporter, Causing the Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Cancer Phenotype

Zhigang Hong; Kuang Hueih Chen; Asish Dasgupta; François Potus; Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Sébastien Bonnet; Lian Tian; Jennifer Fu; Sandra Breuils-Bonnet; Steeve Provencher; Danchen Wu; Jeffrey Mewburn; Mark L. Ormiston; Stephen L. Archer

Rationale: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an obstructive vasculopathy characterized by excessive pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PASMC) proliferation, migration, and apoptosis resistance. This cancer‐like phenotype is promoted by increased cytosolic calcium ([Ca2+]cyto), aerobic glycolysis, and mitochondrial fission. Objectives: To determine how changes in mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU) complex (MCUC) function influence mitochondrial dynamics and contribute to PAHs cancer‐like phenotype. Methods: PASMCs were isolated from patients with PAH and healthy control subjects and assessed for expression of MCUC subunits. Manipulation of the pore‐forming subunit, MCU, in PASMCs was achieved through small interfering RNA knockdown or MCU plasmid‐mediated up‐regulation, as well as through modulation of the upstream microRNAs (miRs) miR‐138 and miR‐25. In vivo, nebulized anti‐miRs were administered to rats with monocrotaline‐induced PAH. Measurements and Main Results: Impaired MCUC function, resulting from down‐regulation of MCU and up‐regulation of an inhibitory subunit, mitochondrial calcium uptake protein 1, is central to PAHs pathogenesis. MCUC dysfunction decreases intramitochondrial calcium ([Ca2+]mito), inhibiting pyruvate dehydrogenase activity and glucose oxidation, while increasing [Ca2+]cyto, promoting proliferation, migration, and fission. In PAH PASMCs, increasing MCU decreases cell migration, proliferation, and apoptosis resistance by lowering [Ca2+]cyto, raising [Ca2+]mito, and inhibiting fission. In normal PASMCs, MCUC inhibition recapitulates the PAH phenotype. In PAH, elevated miRs (notably miR‐138) down‐regulate MCU directly and also by decreasing MCUs transcriptional regulator cAMP response element‐binding protein 1. Nebulized anti‐miRs against miR‐25 and miR‐138 restore MCU expression, reduce cell proliferation, and regress established PAH in the monocrotaline model. Conclusions: These results highlight miR‐mediated MCUC dysfunction as a unifying mechanism in PAH that can be therapeutically targeted.


Chest | 2017

Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction: From Molecular Mechanisms to Medicine

Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Danchen Wu; Edward A. Sykes; Amar Thakrar; Leah R.G. Parlow; Jeffrey Mewburn; Joel L. Parlow; Stephen L. Archer

&NA; Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) is a homeostatic mechanism that is intrinsic to the pulmonary vasculature. Intrapulmonary arteries constrict in response to alveolar hypoxia, diverting blood to better‐oxygenated lung segments, thereby optimizing ventilation/perfusion matching and systemic oxygen delivery. In response to alveolar hypoxia, a mitochondrial sensor dynamically changes reactive oxygen species and redox couples in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC). This inhibits potassium channels, depolarizes PASMC, activates voltage‐gated calcium channels, and increases cytosolic calcium, causing vasoconstriction. Sustained hypoxia activates rho kinase, reinforcing vasoconstriction, and hypoxia‐inducible factor (HIF)‐1&agr;, leading to adverse pulmonary vascular remodeling and pulmonary hypertension (PH). In the nonventilated fetal lung, HPV diverts blood to the systemic vasculature. After birth, HPV commonly occurs as a localized homeostatic response to focal pneumonia or atelectasis, which optimizes systemic Po2 without altering pulmonary artery pressure (PAP). In single‐lung anesthesia, HPV reduces blood flow to the nonventilated lung, thereby facilitating thoracic surgery. At altitude, global hypoxia causes diffuse HPV, increases PAP, and initiates PH. Exaggerated or heterogeneous HPV contributes to high‐altitude pulmonary edema. Conversely, impaired HPV, whether due to disease (eg, COPD, sepsis) or vasodilator drugs, promotes systemic hypoxemia. Genetic and epigenetic abnormalities of this oxygen‐sensing pathway can trigger normoxic activation of HIF‐1&agr; and can promote abnormal metabolism and cell proliferation. The resulting pseudohypoxic state underlies the Warburg metabolic shift and contributes to the neoplasia‐like phenotype of PH. HPV and oxygen sensing are important in human health and disease.


Laboratory Investigation | 2011

THE MITOCHONDRIAL PARADIGM FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE SUSCEPTIBILITY AND CELLULAR FUNCTION: A COMPLEMENTARY CONCEPT TO MENDELIAN GENETICS

David M. Krzywanski; Douglas R. Moellering; Jessica L. Fetterman; Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Melissa J Sammy; Scott W. Ballinger

While there is general agreement that cardiovascular disease (CVD) development is influenced by a combination of genetic, environmental, and behavioral contributors, the actual mechanistic basis of how these factors initiate or promote CVD development in some individuals while others with identical risk profiles do not, is not clearly understood. This review considers the potential role for mitochondrial genetics and function in determining CVD susceptibility from the standpoint that the original features that molded cellular function were based upon mitochondrial–nuclear relationships established millions of years ago and were likely refined during prehistoric environmental selection events that today, are largely absent. Consequently, contemporary risk factors that influence our susceptibility to a variety of age-related diseases, including CVD were probably not part of the dynamics that defined the processes of mitochondrial–nuclear interaction, and thus, cell function. In this regard, the selective conditions that contributed to cellular functionality and evolution should be given more consideration when interpreting and designing experimental data and strategies. Finally, future studies that probe beyond epidemiologic associations are required. These studies will serve as the initial steps for addressing the provocative concept that contemporary human disease susceptibility is the result of selection events for mitochondrial function that increased chances for prehistoric human survival and reproductive success.


Redox biology | 2014

A method for assessing mitochondrial bioenergetics in whole white adipose tissues

Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Michael W. Sandel; David G. Westbrook; Scott W. Ballinger

Obesity is a primary risk factor for numerous metabolic diseases including metabolic syndrome, type II diabetes (T2DM), cardiovascular disease and cancer. Although classically viewed as a storage organ, the field of white adipose tissue biology is expanding to include the consideration of the tissue as an endocrine organ and major contributor to overall metabolism. Given its role in energy production, the mitochondrion has long been a focus of study in metabolic dysfunction and a link between the organelle and white adipose tissue function is likely. Herein, we present a novel method for assessing mitochondrial bioenergetics from whole white adipose tissue. This method requires minimal manipulation of tissue, and eliminates the need for cell isolation and culture. Additionally, this method overcomes some of the limitations to working with transformed and/or isolated primary cells and allows for results to be obtained more expediently. In addition to the novel method, we present a comprehensive statistical analysis of bioenergetic data as well as guidelines for outlier analysis.


Redox biology | 2016

The methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine prevents liver hypoxia and dysregulation of mitochondrial bioenergetic function in a rat model of alcohol-induced fatty liver disease.

Adrienne L. King; Sudheer K. Mantena; Kelly K. Andringa; Telisha Millender-Swain; Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Claudia R. Oliva; Corinne E. Griguer; Shannon M. Bailey

Background Mitochondrial dysfunction and bioenergetic stress play an important role in the etiology of alcoholic liver disease. Previous studies from our laboratory show that the primary methyl donor S-Adenosylmethionine (SAM) minimizes alcohol-induced disruptions in several mitochondrial functions in the liver. Herein, we expand on these earlier observations to determine whether the beneficial actions of SAM against alcohol toxicity extend to changes in the responsiveness of mitochondrial respiration to inhibition by nitric oxide (NO), induction of the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) pore, and the hypoxic state of the liver. Methods For this, male Sprague-Dawley rats were pair-fed control and alcohol-containing liquid diets with and without SAM for 5 weeks and liver hypoxia, mitochondrial respiration, MPT pore induction, and NO-dependent control of respiration were examined. Results Chronic alcohol feeding significantly enhanced liver hypoxia, whereas SAM supplementation attenuated hypoxia in livers of alcohol-fed rats. SAM supplementation prevented alcohol-mediated decreases in mitochondrial state 3 respiration and cytochrome c oxidase activity. Mitochondria isolated from livers of alcohol-fed rats were more sensitive to calcium-mediated MPT pore induction (i.e., mitochondrial swelling) than mitochondria from pair-fed controls, whereas SAM treatment normalized sensitivity for calcium-induced swelling in mitochondria from alcohol-fed rats. Liver mitochondria from alcohol-fed rats showed increased sensitivity to NO-dependent inhibition of respiration compared with pair-fed controls. In contrast, mitochondria isolated from the livers of SAM treated alcohol-fed rats showed no change in the sensitivity to NO-mediated inhibition of respiration. Conclusion Collectively, these findings indicate that the hepato-protective effects of SAM against alcohol toxicity are mediated, in part, through a mitochondrial mechanism involving preservation of key mitochondrial bioenergetic parameters and the attenuation of hypoxic stress.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2013

Mitochondrial genetics and obesity: evolutionary adaptation and contemporary disease susceptibility.

Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Scott W. Ballinger

Obesity is a leading risk factor for a variety of metabolic diseases including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer. Although in its simplest terms, obesity may be thought of as a consequence of excessive caloric intake and sedentary lifestyle, it is also evident that individual propensity for weight gain can vary. The etiology of individual susceptibility to obesity seems to be complex-involving a combination of environmental-genetic interactions. Herein, we suggest that the mitochondrion plays a major role in influencing individual susceptibility to this disease via mitochondrial-nuclear interaction processes and that environmentally influenced selection events for mitochondrial function that conveyed increased reproductive and survival success during the global establishment of human populations during prehistoric times can influence individual susceptibility to weight gain and obesity.


Science | 2015

Mitochondrial-nuclear DNA mismatch matters

Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Scott W. Ballinger

Could different nuclear DNA–mitochondrial DNA combinations affect disease severity? Diseases caused by pathogenic mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) often lead to severe, multisystem complications and death during childhood or adolescence, and in some cases, adult onset can lead to premature death. Researchers have proposed techniques to prevent the transmission of mtDNA disease through mtDNA replacement therapies that involve combining healthy nuclear and mtDNA from three individuals. This past February, the United Kingdom became the first country to legalize mtDNA replacement (the United States continues to consider the ethical and social implications). Although mitochondrial and nuclear genomes are physically separate in the cell, they work together functionally to control various metabolic and developmental processes, including energy production, cell growth, programmed cell death, and thermogenesis. This intergenomic relationship raises questions about possible effects of different mtDNAs (those that are not the original mtDNAs in a given cell) on cellular bioenergetics and disease susceptibility (see the figure). Recent studies in mice that have examined this issue suggest that different mtDNA and nuclear DNA combinations could plausibly have differential effects on gene expression and cell function.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2016

A mitochondrial redox oxygen sensor in the pulmonary vasculature and ductus arteriosus

Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Zhigang G. Hong; Ping Y. Xiong; Joseph C. Del Paggio; Julia E. Herr; Amer M. Johri; Stephen L. Archer

The mammalian homeostatic oxygen sensing system (HOSS) initiates changes in vascular tone, respiration, and neurosecretion that optimize oxygen uptake and tissue oxygen delivery within seconds of detecting altered environmental or arterial PO2. The HOSS includes carotid body type 1 cells, adrenomedullary cells, neuroepithelial bodies, and smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in pulmonary arteries (PAs), ductus arteriosus (DA), and fetoplacental arteries. Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) optimizes ventilation–perfusion matching. In utero, HPV diverts placentally oxygenated blood from the non-ventilated lung through the DA. At birth, increased alveolar and arterial oxygen tension dilates the pulmonary vasculature and constricts the DA, respectively, thereby transitioning the newborn to an air-breathing organism. Though modulated by endothelial-derived relaxing and constricting factors, O2 sensing is intrinsic to PASMCs and DASMCs. Within the SMC’s dynamic mitochondrial network, changes in PO2 alter the reduction–oxidation state of redox couples (NAD+/NADH, NADP+/NADPH) and the production of reactive oxygen species, ROS (e.g., H2O2), by complexes I and III of the electron transport chain (ETC). ROS and redox couples regulate ion channels, transporters, and enzymes, changing intracellular calcium [Ca2+]i and calcium sensitivity and eliciting homeostatic responses to hypoxia. In PASMCs, hypoxia inhibits ROS production and reduces redox couples, thereby inhibiting O2-sensitive voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels, depolarizing the plasma membrane, activating voltage-gated calcium channels (CaL), increasing [Ca2+]i, and causing vasoconstriction. In DASMCs, elevated PO2 causes mitochondrial fission, increasing ETC complex I activity and ROS production. The DASMC’s downstream response to elevated PO2 (Kv channel inhibition, CaL activation, increased [Ca2+]i, and rho kinase activation) is similar to the PASMC’s hypoxic response. Impaired O2 sensing contributes to human diseases, including pulmonary arterial hypertension and patent DA.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2016

Endothelial Cell Bioenergetics and Mitochondrial DNA Damage Differ in Humans Having African or West Eurasian Maternal Ancestry.

David M. Krzywanski; Douglas R. Moellering; David G. Westbrook; Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Alexander W. Bray; Kyle P. Feeley; Melissa J Sammy; Matthew R. Smith; Theodore G. Schurr; Joseph A. Vita; Namasivayam Ambalavanan; David A. Calhoun; Louis J. Dell’Italia; Scott W. Ballinger

Background—We hypothesized that endothelial cells having distinct mitochondrial genetic backgrounds would show variation in mitochondrial function and oxidative stress markers concordant with known differential cardiovascular disease susceptibilities. To test this hypothesis, mitochondrial bioenergetics were determined in endothelial cells from healthy individuals with African versus European maternal ancestries. Methods and Results—Bioenergetics and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage were assessed in single-donor human umbilical vein endothelial cells belonging to mtDNA haplogroups H and L, representing West Eurasian and African maternal ancestries, respectively. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells from haplogroup L used less oxygen for ATP production and had increased levels of mtDNA damage compared with those in haplogroup H. Differences in bioenergetic capacity were also observed in that human umbilical vein endothelial cells belonging to haplogroup L had decreased maximal bioenergetic capacities compared with haplogroup H. Analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from age-matched healthy controls with West Eurasian or African maternal ancestries showed that haplogroups sharing an A to G mtDNA mutation at nucleotide pair 10398 had increased mtDNA damage compared with those lacking this mutation. Further study of angiographically proven patients with coronary artery disease and age-matched healthy controls revealed that mtDNA damage was associated with vascular function and remodeling and that age of disease onset was later in individuals from haplogroups lacking the A to G mutation at nucleotide pair 10398. Conclusions—Differences in mitochondrial bioenergetics and mtDNA damage associated with maternal ancestry may contribute to endothelial dysfunction and vascular disease.


Circulation | 2018

Epigenetic Dysregulation of the Drp1 Binding Partners MiD49 and MiD51 Increases Mitotic Mitochondrial Fission and Promotes Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension: Mechanistic and Therapeutic Implications

Kuang-Hueih Chen; Asish Dasgupta; Jianhui Lin; François Potus; Sébastien Bonnet; James Iremonger; Jennifer Fu; Jeffrey Mewburn; Danchen Wu; Kimberly J. Dunham-Snary; Anne L. Theilmann; Zhi-Cheng Jing; Charles Hindmarch; Mark L. Ormiston; Allan Lawrie; Stephen L. Archer

Background: Mitotic fission is increased in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a hyperproliferative, apoptosis-resistant disease. The fission mediator dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) must complex with adaptor proteins to cause fission. Drp1-induced fission has been therapeutically targeted in experimental PAH. Here, we examine the role of 2 recently discovered, poorly understood Drp1 adapter proteins, mitochondrial dynamics protein of 49 and 51 kDa (MiD49 and MiD51), in normal vascular cells and explore their dysregulation in PAH. Methods: Immunoblots of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (control, n=6; PAH, n=8) and immunohistochemistry of lung sections (control, n=6; PAH, n=6) were used to assess the expression of MiD49 and MiD51. The effects of manipulating MiDs on cell proliferation, cell cycle, and apoptosis were assessed in human and rodent PAH pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells with flow cytometry. Mitochondrial fission was studied by confocal imaging. A microRNA (miR) involved in the regulation of MiD expression was identified using microarray techniques and in silico analyses. The expression of circulatory miR was assessed with quantitative reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction in healthy volunteers (HVs) versus patients with PAH from Sheffield, UK (plasma: HV, n=29, PAH, n=27; whole blood: HV, n=11, PAH, n=14) and then confirmed in a cohort from Beijing, China (plasma: HV, n=19, PAH, n=36; whole blood: HV, n=20, PAH, n=39). This work was replicated in monocrotaline and Sugen 5416-hypoxia, preclinical PAH models. Small interfering RNAs targeting MiDs or an miR mimic were nebulized to rats with monocrotaline-induced PAH (n=4–10). Results: MiD expression is increased in PAH pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, which accelerates Drp1-mediated mitotic fission, increases cell proliferation, and decreases apoptosis. Silencing MiDs (but not other Drp1 binding partners, fission 1 or mitochondrial fission factor) promotes mitochondrial fusion and causes G1-phase cell cycle arrest through extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2– and cyclin-dependent kinase 4–dependent mechanisms. Augmenting MiDs in normal cells causes fission and recapitulates the PAH phenotype. MiD upregulation results from decreased miR-34a-3p expression. Circulatory miR-34a-3p expression is decreased in both patients with PAH and preclinical models of PAH. Silencing MiDs or augmenting miR-34a-3p regresses experimental PAH. Conclusions: In health, MiDs regulate Drp1-mediated fission, whereas in disease, epigenetic upregulation of MiDs increases mitotic fission, which drives pathological proliferation and apoptosis resistance. The miR-34a-3p-MiD pathway offers new therapeutic targets for PAH.

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Scott W. Ballinger

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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David G. Westbrook

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Melissa J Sammy

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Martin E. Young

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Michael W. Sandel

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Douglas R. Moellering

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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