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Dive into the research topics where Lisbeth Nielsen Fink is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisbeth Nielsen Fink.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

Cross-talk between skeletal muscle and immune cells: muscle-derived mediators and metabolic implications

Nicolas J. Pillon; Philip J. Bilan; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Amira Klip

Skeletal muscles contain resident immune cell populations and their abundance and type is altered in inflammatory myopathies, endotoxemia or different types of muscle injury/insult. Within tissues, monocytes differentiate into macrophages and polarize to acquire pro- or anti-inflammatory phenotypes. Skeletal muscle macrophages play a fundamental role in repair and pathogen clearance. These events require a precisely regulated cross-talk between myofibers and immune cells, involving paracrine/autocrine and contact interactions. Skeletal muscle also undergoes continuous repair as a result of contractile activity that involves participation of myokines and anti-inflammatory input. Finally, skeletal muscle is the major site of dietary glucose disposal; therefore, muscle insulin resistance is essential to the development of whole body insulin resistance. Notably, muscle inflammation is emerging as a potential contributor to insulin resistance. Recent reports show that inflammatory macrophage numbers within muscle are elevated during obesity and that muscle cells in vitro can mount autonomous inflammatory responses under metabolic challenge. Here, we review the nature of skeletal muscle inflammation associated with muscle exercise, damage, and regeneration, endotoxin presence, and myopathies, as well as the new evidence of local inflammation arising with obesity that potentially contributes to insulin resistance.


Obesity | 2014

Pro‐Inflammatory macrophages increase in skeletal muscle of high fat‐Fed mice and correlate with metabolic risk markers in humans

Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Sheila R. Costford; Yun Sok Lee; Thomas E. Jensen; Philip J. Bilan; Andreas Oberbach; Matthias Blüher; Jerrold M. Olefsky; Anette Sams; Amira Klip

In obesity, immune cells infiltrate adipose tissue. Skeletal muscle is the major tissue of insulin‐dependent glucose disposal, and indices of muscle inflammation arise during obesity, but whether and which immune cells increase in muscle remain unclear.


Diabetologia | 2013

Expression of anti-inflammatory macrophage genes within skeletal muscle correlates with insulin sensitivity in human obesity and type 2 diabetes

Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Andreas Oberbach; S. R. Costford; K. L. Chan; Anette Sams; Matthias Blüher; Amira Klip

Aims/hypothesisLow-grade systemic inflammation and adipose tissue inflammatory macrophages are frequently detected in patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes. Whether inflammatory macrophages also increase in skeletal muscle of individuals with metabolic disorders remains controversial. Here, we assess whether macrophage polarisation markers in skeletal muscle of humans correlate with insulin sensitivity in obesity and type 2 diabetes.MethodsSkeletal muscle biopsies were obtained from individuals of normal weight and with normal glucose tolerance (NGT), and overweight/obese individuals with or without type 2 diabetes. Insulin sensitivity was determined by euglycaemic–hyperinsulinaemic clamps. Expression of macrophage genes was analysed by quantitative RT-PCR.ResultsGene expression of the inflammatory macrophage phenotype marker cluster of differentiation (CD)11c was higher in muscle of type 2 diabetes patients (p = 0.0069), and correlated with HbA1c (p = 0.0139, ρ = 0.48) and fasting plasma glucose (p = 0.0284, ρ = 0.43), but not after correction for age. Expression of TGFB1, encoding the anti-inflammatory marker TGF-β1, correlated inversely with HbA1c (p = 0.0095, ρ = −0.50; p = 0.0484, ρ = −0.50) and fasting plasma glucose (p = 0.0471, ρ = −0.39; p = 0.0374, ρ = −0.52) in two cohorts, as did HbA1c with gene expression of macrophage galactose-binding lectin (MGL) (p = 0.0425, ρ = −0.51). TGFB1 expression was higher in NGT individuals than in individuals with type 2 diabetes (p = 0.0303), and correlated with low fasting plasma insulin (p = 0.0310, ρ = −0.42). In exercised overweight/obese individuals, expression of genes for three anti-inflammatory macrophage markers, MGL (p = 0.0031, ρ = 0.71), CD163 (p = 0.0268, ρ = 0.57) and mannose receptor (p = 0.0125, ρ = 0.63), correlated with high glucose-disposal rate.Conclusions/interpretationMuscle expression of macrophage genes reveals a link between inflammatory macrophage markers, age and high glycaemia, whereas anti-inflammatory markers correlate with low glycaemia and high glucose-disposal rate.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Palmitate-Activated Macrophages Confer Insulin Resistance to Muscle Cells by a Mechanism Involving Protein Kinase C θ and ε

Girish Kewalramani; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Farzad Asadi; Amira Klip

Background Macrophage-derived factors contribute to whole-body insulin resistance, partly by impinging on metabolically active tissues. As proof of principle for this interaction, conditioned medium from macrophages treated with palmitate (CM-PA) reduces insulin action and glucose uptake in muscle cells. However, the mechanism whereby CM-PA confers this negative response onto muscle cells remains unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings L6-GLUT4myc myoblasts were exposed for 24 h to palmitate-free conditioned medium from RAW 264.7 macrophages pre-treated with 0.5 mM palmitate for 6 h. This palmitate-free CM-PA, containing selective cytokines and chemokines, inhibited myoblast insulin-stimulated insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS1) tyrosine phosphorylation, AS160 phosphorylation, GLUT4 translocation and glucose uptake. These effects were accompanied by a rise in c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation, degradation of Inhibitor of κBα (IκBα), and elevated expression of proinflammatory cytokines in myoblasts. Notably, CM-PA caused IRS1 phosphorylation on Ser1101, and phosphorylation of novel PKCθ and ε. Co-incubation of myoblasts with CM-PA and the novel and conventional PKC inhibitor Gö6983 (but not with the conventional PKC inhibitor Gö6976) prevented PKCθ and ε activation, JNK phosphorylation, restored IκBα mass and reduced proinflammatory cytokine production. Gö6983 also restored insulin signalling and glucose uptake in myoblasts. Moreover, co-silencing both novel PKC θ and ε isoforms in myoblasts by RNA interference, but not their individual silencing, prevented the inflammatory response and restored insulin sensitivity to CM-PA-treated myoblasts. Conclusions/Clinical Significance The results suggest that the block in muscle insulin action caused by CM-PA is mediated by novel PKCθ and PKCε. This study re-establishes the participation of macrophages as a relay in the action of fatty acids on muscle cells, and further identifies PKCθ and PKCε as key elements in the inflammatory and insulin resistance responses of muscle cells to macrophage products. Furthermore, it portrays these PKC isoforms as potential targets for the treatment of fatty acid-induced, inflammation-linked insulin resistance.


Diabetes | 2014

Nucleotides released from palmitate challenged muscle cells through pannexin-3 attract monocytes

Nicolas J. Pillon; Yujin E. Li; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Joseph T. Brozinick; Alexander Nikolayev; Ming-Shang Kuo; Philip J. Bilan; Amira Klip

Obesity-associated low-grade inflammation in metabolically relevant tissues contributes to insulin resistance. We recently reported monocyte/macrophage infiltration in mouse and human skeletal muscles. However, the molecular triggers of this infiltration are unknown, and the role of muscle cells in this context is poorly understood. Animal studies are not amenable to the specific investigation of this vectorial cellular communication. Using cell cultures, we investigated the crosstalk between myotubes and monocytes exposed to physiological levels of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Media from L6 myotubes treated with palmitate—but not palmitoleate—induced THP1 monocyte migration across transwells. Palmitate activated the Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)/nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) pathway in myotubes and elevated cytokine expression, but the monocyte chemoattracting agent was not a polypeptide. Instead, nucleotide degradation eliminated the chemoattracting properties of the myotube-conditioned media. Moreover, palmitate-induced expression and activity of pannexin-3 channels in myotubes were mediated by TLR4-NF-κB, and TLR4-NF-κB inhibition or pannexin-3 knockdown prevented monocyte chemoattraction. In mice, the expression of pannexin channels increased in adipose tissue and skeletal muscle in response to high-fat feeding. These findings identify pannexins as new targets of saturated fatty acid–induced inflammation in myotubes, and point to nucleotides as possible mediators of immune cell chemoattraction toward muscle in the context of obesity.


International Immunopharmacology | 2015

Enalapril treatment increases T cell number and promotes polarization towards M1-like macrophages locally in diabetic nephropathy.

Helena Cucak; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Maiken Pedersen; Alexander Rosendahl

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a serious complication of longstanding diabetes affecting up to 30% of all diabetes patients and is the main cause of end-stage kidney disease globally. Current standard treatment e.g. ACE-inhibitors like enalapril merely offers a delay in the progression leading to DN. Herein, we describe in two preclinical models evidence to local effects on the inflammatory signatures after intervention treatment with enalapril which provides enhanced understanding of the mechanism of ACE inhibitors. Enalapril transiently reduced albuminuria in both the db/db and the STZ-induced DN models with established disease, without modulating the HbA1c%. Albuminuria was strongly associated with loss of leukocytes, particularly B cells, but also of sub-populations of macrophages and CD4(+) T cells. The remaining kidney macrophages were polarized into a M2-like sub-population with reduced surface expression of the M1-like macrophage marker CD11c and enhanced expression of galectin-3. Enalapril treatment counteracted the reduction of leukocytes in the diabetic kidney towards levels noted in the non-diabetic kidney. Particularly, a subset of macrophages was increased and a clear expansion of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells was observed. However, enalapril failed to modulate the B cell compartment. Interestingly, enalapril treatment resulted in a re-polarization of the macrophages towards a M1-like phenotype characterized by elevated levels of CD11c with moderate down-regulation of the M2 marker galectin-3. The data demonstrate that ACE inhibition in pre-clinical models of DN shows a transient beneficial effect on albuminuria which is unexpectedly associated with restoration of T cells and M1-like macrophages in the kidney.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Abatacept Treatment Does Not Preserve Renal Function in the Streptozocin-Induced Model of Diabetic Nephropathy

Jenny Norlin; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Peter Helding Kvist; Elisabeth Douglas Galsgaard; Ken Coppieters

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is one of the most severe complications of diabetes and remains the largest cause of end-stage renal disease in the Western world. Treatment options are limited and novel therapies that effectively slow disease progression are warranted. Previous work suggested that treatment with CTLA4-Ig (abatacept), a molecule that binds and blocks B7-1 and is licensed for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, could ameliorate DN. This study was designed to assess whether B7-1 signalling constitutes a promising therapeutic pathway for DN. Mice injected with streptozotocin (STZ) were treated with abatacept and glycemia and renal function were assessed. No differences were found in diabetes progression, albumin excretion rates or albumin/creatine ratios, while mesangial expansion was unaltered at endpoint. Except for increased renal CCL5, treatment did not affect a panel of gene expression endpoints reflecting early fibrotic changes, inflammation and kidney injury. Finally, abatacept treatment effectively reduced the accumulation of activated CD4+ T cells in the kidney, suggesting that renal T cell inflammation is not a driving factor in the pathology of the STZ model. In conjunction with the recent data discounting the expression of B7-1 on podocytes, our present data do not support a role for abatacept in DN treatment.


Immunity, inflammation and disease | 2015

Neonatal microbial colonization in mice promotes prolonged dominance of CD11b(+)Gr-1(+) cells and accelerated establishment of the CD4(+) T cell population in the spleen.

Matilde Bylov Kristensen; Stine Broeng Metzdorff; Anders Bergström; Dina Silke Malling Damlund; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Tine Rask Licht; Hanne Frøkiær

To assess the microbial influence on postnatal hematopoiesis, we examined the role of early life microbial colonization on the composition of leukocyte subsets in the neonatal spleen. A high number of CD11b+Gr‐1+ splenocytes present perinatally was sustained for a longer period in conventionally colonized (CONV) mice than in mono‐colonized (MC) and germfree (GF) mice, and the CD4+ T cell population established faster in CONV mice. At the day of birth, compared to GF mice, the expression of Cxcl2 was up‐regulated and Arg1 down‐regulated in livers of CONV mice. This coincided with lower abundance of polylobed cells in the liver of CONV mice. An earlier peak in the expression of the genes Tjp1, Cdh1, and JamA in intestinal epithelial cells of CONV mice indicated an accelerated closure of the epithelial barrier. In conclusion, we have identified an important microbiota‐dependent neonatal hematopoietic event, which we suggest impacts the subsequent development of the T cell population in the murine spleen.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2017

DBA2J db/db mice are susceptible to early albuminuria and glomerulosclerosis that correlates with systemic insulin resistance

Mette Viberg Østergaard; Vanda Pinto; Kirsty Stevenson; Jesper Worm; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Richard J M Coward

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is the leading cause of kidney failure in the world. To understand important mechanisms underlying this condition, and to develop new therapies, good animal models are required. In mouse models of type 1 diabetes, the DBA/2J strain has been shown to be more susceptible to develop kidney disease than other common strains. We hypothesized this would also be the case in type 2 diabetes. We studied db/db and wild-type (wt) DBA/2J mice and compared these with the db/db BLKS/J mouse, which is currently the most widely used type 2 DN model. Mice were analyzed from age 6 to 12 wk for systemic insulin resistance, albuminuria, and glomerular histopathological and ultrastructural changes. Body weight and nonfasted blood glucose were increased by 8 wk in both genders, while systemic insulin resistance commenced by 6 wk in female and 8 wk in male db/db DBA/2J mice. The urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR) was closely linked to systemic insulin resistance in both sexes and was increased ~50-fold by 12 wk of age in the db/db DBA/2J cohort. Glomerulosclerosis, foot process effacement, and glomerular basement membrane thickening were observed at 12 wk of age in db/db DBA/2J mice. Compared with db/db BLKS/J mice, db/db DBA/2J mice had significantly increased levels of urinary ACR, but similar glomerular histopathological and ultrastructural changes. The db/db DBA/2J mouse is a robust model of early-stage albuminuric DN, and its levels of albuminuria correlate closely with systemic insulin resistance. This mouse model will be helpful in defining early mechanisms of DN and ultimately the development of novel therapies.


Renal Failure | 2017

Disparate phospho-Smad2 levels in advanced type 2 diabetes patients with diabetic nephropathy and early experimental db/db mouse model

Lise Høj Thomsen; Morten Fog-Tonnesen; Lisbeth Nielsen Fink; Jenny Norlin; Amaya García de Vinuesa; Troels Krarup Hansen; Emile de Heer; Peter ten Dijke; Alexander Rosendahl

Abstract Uncontrolled activation of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) family members is hypothesized to participate in type 2 diabetes (T2D) dependent diabetic nephropathy (DN). We evaluated and compared downstream activation of the Smad2-signaling pathway in kidney samples from T2D patients to kidneys from the T2D model of leptin receptor deficient db/db mouse. Furthermore, expression of TGF-β family members was evaluated to elucidate molecular mechanisms in the mouse model. Kidney samples from patients with advanced stages of DN showed elevated pSmad2 staining whereas db/db mouse kidneys surprisingly showed a decrease in pSmad2 in the tubular compartment. Structurally, kidney tissue showed dilated tubules and expanded glomeruli, but no clear fibrotic pattern was found in the diabetic mice. Selective TGF-β family members were up-regulated at the mRNA level. Antagonists of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) ligands, such as Gremlin1, USAG1 and Sclerostin, were strongly up-regulated suggesting a dampening effect on BMP pathways. Together, these results indicate a lack of translation from T2D patient kidneys to the db/db model with regards to Smad signaling pathway. It is plausible that a strong up-regulation of BMP antagonizing factors account for the lack of Smad1/5/8 activation, in spite of increased expression of several BMP members.

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Anders Bergström

Technical University of Denmark

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