Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kimberly P. Keil is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kimberly P. Keil.


Developmental Dynamics | 2011

A high‐resolution molecular atlas of the fetal mouse lower urogenital tract

Lisa L. Abler; Kimberly P. Keil; Vatsal Mehta; Pinak S. Joshi; Christopher T. Schmitz; Chad M. Vezina

Epithelial‐stromal interactions in the lower urogenital tract (LUT) are integral to prostatic and seminal vesicle development in males, vaginal and uterine development in females, and urethral development in both sexes. Gene expression profiling of isolated LUT stroma and epithelium has unraveled mechanisms of LUT development, but such studies are confounded by heterogeneous and ill‐defined cell sub‐populations contained within each tissue compartment. We used in situ hybridization to synthesize a high‐resolution molecular atlas of 17‐day post‐coitus fetal mouse LUT. We identified mRNAs that mark selective cell populations of the seminal vesicle, ejaculatory duct, prostate, urethra, and vagina, subdividing these tissues into 16 stromal and 8 epithelial sub‐compartments. These results provide a powerful tool for mapping LUT gene expression patterns and also reveal previously uncharacterized sub‐compartments that may play mechanistic roles in LUT development of which we were previously unaware. Developmental Dynamics 240:2364–2377, 2011.


Developmental Dynamics | 2011

Atlas of Wnt and R‐spondin gene expression in the developing male mouse lower urogenital tract

Vatsal Mehta; Lisa L. Abler; Kimberly P. Keil; Christopher T. Schmitz; Pinak S. Joshi; Chad M. Vezina

Prostate development is influenced by β‐catenin signaling, but it is unclear which β‐catenin activators are involved, where they are synthesized, and whether their mRNA abundance is influenced by androgens. We identified WNT/β‐catenin‐responsive β‐galactosidase activity in the lower urogenital tract (LUT) of transgenic reporter mice, but β‐galactosidase activity differed among the four mouse strains we examined. We used in situ hybridization to compare patterns of Wnts, r‐spondins (Rspos, co‐activators of β‐catenin signaling), β‐catenin‐responsive mRNAs, and an androgen receptor‐responsive mRNA in wild type fetal male, fetal female, and neonatal male LUT. Most Wnt and Rspo mRNAs were present in LUT during prostate development. Sexually dimorphic expression patterns were observed for WNT/β‐catenin‐responsive genes, and for Wnt2b, Wnt4, Wnt7a, Wnt9b, Wnt10b, Wnt11, Wnt16, and Rspo3 mRNAs. These results reveal sexual differences in WNT/β‐catenin signaling in fetal LUT, supporting the idea that this pathway may be directly or indirectly responsive to androgens during prostate ductal development. Developmental Dynamics 240:2548–2560, 2011.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

A high throughput in situ hybridization method to characterize mRNA expression patterns in the fetal mouse lower urogenital tract.

Lisa L. Abler; Vatsal Mehta; Kimberly P. Keil; Pinak S. Joshi; Chelsea-Leigh Flucus; Heather Hardin; Christopher T. Schmitz; Chad M. Vezina

Development of the lower urogenital tract (LUT) is an intricate process. This complexity is evidenced during formation of the prostate from the fetal male urethra, which relies on androgenic signals and epithelial-mesenchymal interactions(1,2). Understanding the molecular mechanisms responsible for prostate development may reveal growth mechanisms that are inappropriately reawakened later in life to give rise to prostate diseases such as benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostate cancer. The developing LUT is anatomically complex. By the time prostatic budding begins on 16.5 days post conception (dpc), numerous cell types are present. Vasculature, nerves and smooth muscle reside within the mesenchymal stroma(3). This stroma surrounds a multilayered epithelium and gives rise to the fetal prostate through androgen receptor-dependent paracrine signals(4). The identity of the stromal androgen receptor-responsive genes required for prostate development and the mechanism by which prostate ductal epithelium forms in response to these genes is not fully understood. The ability to precisely identify cell types and localize expression of specific factors within them is imperative to further understand prostate development. In situ hybridization (ISH) allows for localization of mRNAs within a tissue. Thus, this method can be used to identify pattern and timing of expression of signaling molecules and their receptors, thereby elucidating potential prostate developmental regulators. Here, we describe a high throughput ISH technique to identify mRNA expression patterns in the fetal mouse LUT using vibrating microtome-cut sections. This method offers several advantages over other ISH protocols. Performing ISH on thin sections adhered to a slide is technically difficult; cryosections frequently have poor structural quality while both cryosections and paraffin sections often result in weak signal resolution. Performing ISH on whole mount tissues can result in probe trapping. In contrast, our high throughput technique utilizes thick-cut sections that reveal detailed tissue architecture. Modified microfuge tubes allow easy handling of sections during the ISH procedure. A maximum of 4 mRNA transcripts can be screened from a single 17.5dpc LUT with up to 24 mRNA transcripts detected in a single run, thereby reducing cost and maximizing efficiency. This method allows multiple treatment groups to be processed identically and as a single unit, thereby removing any bias for interpreting data. Most pertinently for prostate researchers, this method provides a spatial and temporal location of low and high abundance mRNA transcripts in the fetal mouse urethra that gives rise to the prostate ductal network.


Developmental Biology | 2013

Beta-catenin (CTNNB1) induces Bmp expression in urogenital sinus epithelium and participates in prostatic bud initiation and patterning.

Vatsal Mehta; Christopher T. Schmitz; Kimberly P. Keil; Pinak S. Joshi; Lisa L. Abler; Tien Min Lin; Makoto M. Taketo; Xin Sun; Chad M. Vezina

Fetal prostate development is initiated by androgens and patterned by androgen dependent and independent signals. How these signals integrate to control epithelial cell differentiation and prostatic bud patterning is not fully understood. To test the role of beta-catenin (Ctnnb1) in this process, we used a genetic approach to conditionally delete or stabilize Ctnnb1 in urogenital sinus (UGS) epithelium from which the prostate derives. Two opposing mechanisms of action were revealed. By deleting Ctnnb1, we found it is required for separation of UGS from cloaca, emergence or maintenance of differentiated UGS basal epithelium and formation of prostatic buds. By genetically inducing a patchy subset of UGS epithelial cells to express excess CTNNB1, we found its excess abundance increases Bmp expression and leads to a global impairment of prostatic bud formation. Addition of NOGGIN partially restores prostatic budding in UGS explants with excess Ctnnb1. These results indicate a requirement for Ctnnb1 in UGS basal epithelial cell differentiation, prostatic bud initiation and bud spacing and suggest some of these actions are mediated in part through activation of BMP signaling.


Endocrinology | 2012

Wnt inhibitory factor 1 (Wif1) is regulated by androgens and enhances androgen-dependent prostate development.

Kimberly P. Keil; Vatsal Mehta; Amanda M. Branam; Lisa L. Abler; Rita A. Buresh-Stiemke; Pinak S. Joshi; Christopher T. Schmitz; Paul C. Marker; Chad M. Vezina

Fetal prostate development from urogenital sinus (UGS) epithelium requires androgen receptor (AR) activation in UGS mesenchyme (UGM). Despite growing awareness of sexually dimorphic gene expression in the UGS, we are still limited in our knowledge of androgen-responsive genes in UGM that initiate prostate ductal development. We found that WNT inhibitory factor 1 (Wif1) mRNA is more abundant in male vs. female mouse UGM in which its expression temporally and spatially overlaps androgen-responsive steroid 5α-reductase 2 (Srd5a2). Wif1 mRNA is also present in prostatic buds during their elongation and branching morphogenesis. Androgens are necessary and sufficient for Wif1 expression in mouse UGS explant mesenchyme, and testicular androgens remain necessary for normal Wif1 expression in adult mouse prostate stroma. WIF1 contributes functionally to prostatic bud formation. In the presence of androgens, exogenous WIF1 protein increases prostatic bud number and UGS basal epithelial cell proliferation without noticeably altering the pattern of WNT/β-catenin-responsive Axin2 or lymphoid enhancer binding factor 1 (Lef1) mRNA. Wif1 mutant male UGSs exhibit increased (Sfrp)2 and (Sfrp)3 expression and form the same number of prostatic buds as the wild-type control males. Collectively our results reveal Wif1 as one of the few known androgen-responsive genes in the fetal mouse UGM and support the hypothesis that androgen-dependent Wif1 expression is linked to the mechanism of androgen-induced prostatic bud formation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Peripheral Serotonin Regulates Maternal Calcium Trafficking in Mammary Epithelial Cells during Lactation in Mice

J. Laporta; Kimberly P. Keil; Chad M. Vezina; Laura L. Hernandez

Lactation is characterized by massive transcellular flux of calcium, from the basolateral side of the mammary alveolar epithelium (blood) into the ductal lumen (milk). Regulation of calcium transport during lactation is critical for maternal and neonatal health. The monoamine serotonin (5-HT) is synthesized by the mammary gland and functions as a homeostatic regulation of lactation. Genetic ablation of tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (Tph1), which encodes the rate-limiting enzyme in non-neuronal serotonin synthesis, causes a deficiency in circulating serotonin. As a consequence maternal calcium concentrations decrease, mammary epithelial cell morphology is altered, and cell proliferation is decreased during lactation. Here we demonstrate that serotonin deficiency decreases the expression and disrupts the normal localization of calcium transporters located in the apical (PMCA2) and basolateral (CaSR, ORAI-1) membranes of the lactating mammary gland. In addition, serotonin deficiency decreases the mRNA expression of calcium transporters located in intracellular compartments (SERCA2, SPCA1 and 2). Mammary expression of serotonin receptor isoform 2b and its downstream pathways (PLCβ3, PKC and MAP-ERK1/2) are also decreased by serotonin deficiency, which might explain the numerous phenotypic alterations described above. In most cases, addition of exogenous 5-hydroxy-L-tryptophan to the Tph1 deficient mice rescued the phenotype. Our data supports the hypothesis that serotonin is necessary for proper mammary gland structure and function, to regulate blood and mammary epithelial cell transport of calcium during lactation. These findings can be applicable to the treatment of lactation-induced hypocalcemia in dairy cows and can have profound implications in humans, given the wide-spread use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors as antidepressants during pregnancy and lactation.


The Journal of Urology | 2014

Estrogen Receptor-α is a Key Mediator and Therapeutic Target for Bladder Complications of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia

Tristan Nicholson; Michael A. Moses; Kristen S. Uchtmann; Kimberly P. Keil; Dale E. Bjorling; Chad M. Vezina; Ronald W. Wood; William A. Ricke

PURPOSE Estrogens are important in prostate growth and have a role in benign prostatic hyperplasia. However, to our knowledge no current therapy directly targets estrogen action. Estrogens act primarily via estrogen receptors α and β. In a mouse model we evaluated the relative contribution of these receptors to bladder complications of benign prostatic hyperplasia. We also evaluated the prevention of these bladder complications using the selective estrogen receptor modulators raloxifene and tamoxifen (estrogen receptor-α selective antagonists), and R,R-THC (estrogen receptor-β selective antagonist). MATERIALS AND METHODS Adult male C57bl/6 mice received implants of 25 mg testosterone and 2.5 mg 17β-estradiol slow release pellets. Untreated controls underwent sham surgery. We evaluated the contributions of the estrogen receptor subtypes in ERαKO and ERβKO mice compared to their respective wild-type litter mates. Wild-type mice treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol were compared to mice treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol and 25 mg selective estrogen receptor modulators to evaluate the prevention of benign prostatic hyperplasia complications by selective estrogen receptor modulators. RESULTS Large bladders with urinary retention developed in ERαWT and ERβWT litter mates treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol but such bladders did not develop in ERαKO mice treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol. ERβKO mice treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol had large bladders with urinary retention and increased bladder mass. Cotreatment with the estrogen receptor-α antagonist raloxifene resulted in decreased bladder mass compared to that in wild-type mice treated with testosterone plus 17β-estradiol. Bladders in mice treated with the estrogen receptor-β antagonist R,R-THC were similar to those in testosterone plus 17β-estradiol treated mice. CONCLUSIONS Estrogen receptor-α but not β is a key mediator of bladder complications of benign prostatic hyperplasia and a potential target for future therapies.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2014

Serotonin Regulates Calcium Homeostasis in Lactation by Epigenetic Activation of Hedgehog Signaling

J. Laporta; Kimberly P. Keil; Samantha R. Weaver; Callyssa M. Cronick; Austin P Prichard; Thomas D. Crenshaw; Galen W. Heyne; Chad M. Vezina; Robert J. Lipinski; Laura L. Hernandez

Calcium homeostasis during lactation is critical for maternal and neonatal health. We previously showed that nonneuronal/peripheral serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] causes the lactating mammary gland to synthesize and secrete PTHrP in an acute fashion. Here, using a mouse model, we found that genetic inactivation of tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (Tph1), which catalyzes the rate-limiting step in peripheral 5-HT synthesis, reduced circulating and mammary PTHrP expression, osteoclast activity, and maternal circulating calcium concentrations during the transition from pregnancy to lactation. Tph1 inactivation also reduced sonic hedgehog signaling in the mammary gland during lactation. Each of these deficiencies was rescued by daily injections of 5-hydroxy-L-tryptophan (an immediate precursor of 5-HT) to Tph1-deficient dams. We used immortalized mouse embryonic fibroblasts to demonstrate that 5-HT induces PTHrP through a sonic hedgehog-dependent signal transduction mechanism. We also found that 5-HT altered DNA methylation of the Shh gene locus, leading to transcriptional initiation at an alternate start site and formation of a variant transcript in mouse embryonic fibroblasts in vitro and in mammary tissue in vivo. These results support a new paradigm of 5-HT-mediated Shh regulation involving DNA methylation remodeling and promoter switching. In addition to having immediate implications for lactation biology, identification and characterization of a novel functional regulatory relationship between nonneuronal 5-HT, hedgehog signaling, and PTHrP offers new avenues for the study of these important factors in development and disease.


Differentiation | 2012

Visualization and quantification of mouse prostate development by in situ hybridization.

Kimberly P. Keil; Vatsal Mehta; Lisa L. Abler; Pinak S. Joshi; Christopher T. Schmitz; Chad M. Vezina

The purpose of this study was to validate a combined in situ hybridization (ISH)/immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining method for visualizing and quantifying mouse prostatic buds. To refine animal usage in prostate development studies, we also determined whether a comparable number of prostatic buds were formed in male and female mouse urogenital sinus (UGS) explants grown in vitro in the presence of androgen. We used IHC to label UGS epithelium and ISH to label prostatic buds with one of three different prostatic bud marking riboprobes: a previously identified prostatic bud marker, NK-3 transcription factor, locus 1 (Nkx3-1), and two newly identified prostatic bud markers, wingless-related MMTV integration site 10b (Wnt10b) and ectodysplasin-A receptor (Edar). We calculated total buds formed per UGS and the proportion marked by each mRNA after male UGS development in vivo and male and female UGS development in vitro. Nkx3-1 was first to mark the prostate field during UGS development in vivo but all three mRNAs marked prostatic buds during later developmental stages. The mRNAs localized to different domains: Nkx3-1 was present along about half the prostatic bud length while Edar and Wnt10b were restricted to distal bud tips. None of the mRNAs marked all buds formed in vitro and the proportion marked was developmental stage- and gender-dependent. Nkx3-1 marked the highest proportion of prostatic buds during in vitro UGS development. Together, our results reveal that ISH staining of mouse UGS can be used to quantify prostatic bud number, Nkx3-1 is currently the best suited riboprobe for this method, and female UGSs cannot be used interchangeably with male UGSs when conducting prostate development studies in vitro. We also found that Nkx3-1, Edar, and Wnt10b mark different prostatic bud regions and are likely to be useful in future studies of regional differences in prostatic bud gene expression.


Developmental Biology | 2014

DNA methylation of E-cadherin is a priming mechanism for prostate development.

Kimberly P. Keil; Lisa L. Abler; Vatsal Mehta; Helene M. Altmann; J. Laporta; Erin H. Plisch; M. Suresh; Laura L. Hernandez; Chad M. Vezina

In prostate and other epithelial cancers, E-cadherin (CDH1) is downregulated inappropriately by DNA methylation to promote an invasive phenotype. Though cancer frequently involves a reawakening of developmental signaling pathways, whether DNA methylation of Cdh1 occurs during organogenesis has not been determined. Here we show that DNA methylation of Cdh1 mediates outgrowth of developing prostate ducts. During the three-day gestational window leading up to and including prostate ductal initiation, Cdh1 promoter methylation increases and its mRNA and protein abundance decreases in epithelium giving rise to prostatic buds. DNA methylation is required for prostate specification, ductal outgrowth, and branching morphogenesis. All three endpoints are impaired by a DNA methylation inhibitor, which also decreases Cdh1 promoter methylation and increases Cdh1 mRNA and protein abundance. A CDH1 function-blocking antibody restores prostatic identity, bud outgrowth, and potentiates epithelial differentiation in the presence of the DNA methylation inhibitor. This is the first study to mechanistically link acquired changes in DNA methylation to the normal process of prostate organogenesis. We propose a novel mechanism whereby Cdh1 promoter methylation restricts Cdh1 abundance in developing prostate epithelium to create a permissive environment for prostatic bud outgrowth. Thus, DNA methylation primes the prostate primordium to respond to developmental cues mediating outgrowth, differentiation and maturation of the ductal network.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kimberly P. Keil's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chad M. Vezina

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lisa L. Abler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vatsal Mehta

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Helene M. Altmann

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Laura L. Hernandez

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher T. Schmitz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pinak S. Joshi

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William A. Ricke

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dale E. Bjorling

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Laporta

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge