Lynelle K. Jones
Monash University
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Featured researches published by Lynelle K. Jones.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2009
Lynelle K. Jones; Kim M. O’Sullivan; Timothy J. Semple; Michael P. Kuligowski; Kei Fukami; David J. Nikolic-Paterson; Stephen R. Holdsworth; A. Richard Kitching
BACKGROUND IL-1beta has the potential to promote progressive renal disease by effects on macrophage recruitment and activation or by effects mediated through tubular cell transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta production, previously demonstrated in vitro. METHODS The in vivo roles of endogenous IL-1beta and its type I receptor (IL-1RI) in renal fibrosis were studied using wild-type C57BL/6 mice, IL-1beta(-/-) and IL-1RI(-/-) mice with unilateral ureteric obstruction. RESULTS After 7 days, IL-1RI(-/-) mice (IL-1alpha and IL-1beta deficient) were protected from injury and collagen accumulation. IL-1beta(-/-) mice demonstrated some histological protection, but no reduction in alpha1(1) procollagen mRNA or biochemically measured collagen accumulation. Compared with obstructed kidneys from wild-type mice, TGF-beta1 mRNA was reduced in IL-1RI(-/-) mice (with trends to reduced TGF-beta2 and TGF-beta3). Expression of a downstream TGF-beta effector, connective tissue growth factor, was decreased in IL-1RI(-/-) mice. IL-1RI(-/-) mice exhibited less tubulointerstitial apoptosis compared with wild-type mice. Macrophage infiltration and adhesion molecule mRNA expression was unchanged in IL-1beta(-/-) or IL-1RI(-/-) mice. While TNF expression was similar to wild-type mice, IFN-gamma expression was reduced in both IL-1beta(-/-) and IL-1RI(-/-) mice. IL-1RI(-/-) mice at 14 days showed a catch-up in fibrosis compared with wild-type mice. CONCLUSION IL-1/IL-1RI interactions are profibrotic in renal fibrosis. IL-1RI(-/-) mice were more protected at an early stage, associated with changes in TGF-beta and downstream mediators of fibrosis, but independent of the presence of infiltrating macrophages.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008
Richard Ks Phoon; A. Richard Kitching; Dragana Odobasic; Lynelle K. Jones; Timothy J. Semple; Stephen R. Holdsworth
T-bet is a transcription factor that is essential for T helper (Th)1 lineage commitment and optimal IFN-gamma production by CD4(+) T cells. We examined the role of T-bet in the development of experimental crescentic glomerulonephritis, which is induced by Th1-predominant, delayed-type hypersensitivity-like responses directed against a nephritogenic antigen. Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) glomerulonephritis was induced in T-bet(-/-) and wild-type C57BL/6 mice. Compared with wild-type controls, renal injury was attenuated in T-bet(-/-) mice with glomerulonephritis, evidenced by less proteinuria, glomerular crescents, and tubulointerstitial inflammation. Accumulation of glomerular CD4(+) T cells and macrophages was decreased, and was associated with reduced intrarenal expression of the potent Th1 chemoattractants CCL5/RANTES and CXCL9/Mig. Supporting the pro-inflammatory nature of T-bet signaling, assessment of systemic immunity confirmed that T-bet(-/-) mice had a reduction in Th1 immunity. The kinetic profile of T-bet mRNA in wild-type mice supported the hypothesis that T-bet deficiency attenuates renal injury in part by shifting the Th1/Th2 balance away from a Th1 phenotype. Expression of renal and splenic IL-17A, characteristically expressed by the Th17 subset of effector T cells, which have been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease, was increased in T-bet(-/-) mice. We conclude that T-bet directs Th1 responses that induce renal injury in experimental crescentic glomerulonephritis.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Stacey Hokke; James A. Armitage; Victor G. Puelles; Kieran M. Short; Lynelle K. Jones; Ian Smyth; John F. Bertram; Luise A. Cullen-McEwen
There is strong evidence from human and animal models that exposure to maternal hyperglycemia during in utero development can detrimentally affect fetal kidney development. Notwithstanding this knowledge, the precise effects of diabetic pregnancy on the key processes of kidney development are unclear due to a paucity of studies and limitations in previously used methodologies. The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the effects of hyperglycemia on ureteric branching morphogenesis and nephrogenesis using unbiased techniques. Diabetes was induced in pregnant C57Bl/6J mice using multiple doses of streptozotocin (STZ) on embryonic days (E) 6.5-8.5. Branching morphogenesis was quantified ex vivo using Optical Projection Tomography, and nephrons were counted using unbiased stereology. Maternal hyperglycemia was recognised from E12.5. At E14.5, offspring of diabetic mice demonstrated fetal growth restriction and a marked deficit in ureteric tip number (control 283.7±23.3 vs. STZ 153.2±24.6, mean±SEM, p<0.01) and ureteric tree length (control 33.1±2.6 mm vs. STZ 17.6±2.7 mm, p = 0.001) vs. controls. At E18.5, fetal growth restriction was still present in offspring of STZ dams and a deficit in nephron endowment was observed (control 1246.2±64.9 vs. STZ 822.4±74.0, p<0.001). Kidney malformations in the form of duplex ureter and hydroureter were a common observation (26%) in embryos of diabetic pregnancy compared with controls (0%). Maternal insulin treatment from E13.5 normalised maternal glycaemia but did not normalise fetal weight nor prevent the nephron deficit. The detrimental effect of hyperglycemia on ureteric branching morphogenesis and, in turn, nephron endowment in the growth-restricted fetus highlights the importance of glycemic control in early gestation and during the initial stages of renal development.
Journal of Immunology | 2006
Ming Li; Kim M. O’Sullivan; Lynelle K. Jones; Timothy J. Semple; Atsushi Kumanogoh; Hitoshi Kikutani; Stephen R. Holdsworth; A. Richard Kitching
CD100, a member of the semaphorin family, is a costimulatory molecule in adaptive immune responses by switching off CD72’s negative signals. However, CD100’s potential pathogenetic effects in damaging immune responses remain largely unexplored. We tested the hypothesis that CD100 plays a pathogenetic role in experimental immune complex glomerulonephritis. Daily injection of horse apoferritin for 14 days induced immune complex formation, mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis and proteinuria in CD100-intact (CD100+/+) BALB/c mice. CD100-deficient (CD100−/−) mice were protected from histological and functional glomerular injury. They exhibited reduced deposition of Igs and C3 in glomeruli, reduced MCP-1 and MIP-2 intrarenal mRNA expression, and diminished glomerular macrophage accumulation. Attenuated glomerular injury was associated with decreased Ag-specific Ig production, reduced CD4+ cell activation and cytokine production. Following Ag injection, CD4+ cell CD100 expression was enhanced and dendritic cell CD86 expression was up-regulated. However, in CD100−/− mice, dendritic cell CD86 (but not CD80) up-regulation was significantly attenuated. Following i.p. immunization, CD86, but not CD80, promotes early Ag-specific TCR-transgenic DO11.10 CD4+ cell proliferation and IFN-γ production, suggesting that CD100 expression enables full expression of CD86 and consequent CD4+ cell activation. Transfer of CD100+/+ DO11.10 cells into CD100−/− mice resulted in decreased proliferation demonstrating that CD100 from other sources in addition to CD100 from Ag-specific CD4+ cells plays a role in initial T cell proliferation. Although T cell-B cell interactions also may be relevant, these studies demonstrate that CD100 enhances pathogenetic humoral immune responses and promotes the activation of APCs by up-regulating CD86 expression.
Cell Metabolism | 2013
Yi Fu; Nigora Mukhamedova; S Ip; Wilissa D'Souza; Katya J. Henley; K Ditommaso; Rajitha Kesani; Michael Ditiatkovski; Lynelle K. Jones; Rm Lane; Garry L. Jennings; Ian Smyth; Benjamin T. Kile; Dmitri Sviridov
ABCA12 is involved in the transport of ceramides in skin, but it may play a wider role in lipid metabolism. We show that, in Abca12-deficient macrophages, cholesterol efflux failed to respond to activation with LXR agonists. Abca12 deficiency caused a reduction in the abundance of Abca1, Abcg1, and Lxrβ. Overexpression of Lxrβ reversed the effects. Mechanistically, Abca12 deficiency did not affect expression of genes involved in cholesterol metabolism. Instead, a physical association between Abca1, Abca12, and Lxrβ proteins was established. Abca12 deficiency enhanced interaction between Abca1 and Lxrβ and the degradation of Abca1. Overexpression of ABCA12 in HeLa-ABCA1 cells increased the abundance and stability of ABCA1. Abca12 deficiency caused an accumulation of cholesterol in macrophages and the formation of foam cells, impaired reverse cholesterol transport in vivo, and increased the development of atherosclerosis in irradiated Apoe(-/-) mice reconstituted with Apoe(-/-)Abca12(-/-) bone marrow. Thus, ABCA12 regulates the cellular cholesterol metabolism via an LXRβ-dependent posttranscriptional mechanism.
Immunology | 2009
Ming Li; Kim M. O’Sullivan; Lynelle K. Jones; Cecilia Lo; Timothy J. Semple; Atsushi Kumanogoh; Hitoshi Kikutani; Stephen R. Holdsworth; Richard Kitching
CD100 participates in adaptive immune responses and is important in neural cell migration. To determine the role of endogenous CD100 in severe glomerular inflammation, we induced experimental crescentic glomerulonephritis by planting a foreign antigen in glomeruli of sensitized normal and CD100‐deficient (CD100−/−) mice. Fewer CD100−/− glomeruli exhibited crescent formation or severe histological changes. Antigen‐specific immune responses were reduced in CD100−/− mice. There was less interferon (IFN)‐γ and interleukin (IL)‐4 production by splenocytes and fewer activated T and B cells were present in lymph nodes of immunized CD100−/− mice. Serum antigen‐specific immunoglobulin (IgG) levels were also decreased. Glomerular macrophage and CD4+ cell infiltration, and IgG and C3 deposition were attenuated. Normal kidneys expressed mRNA for CD100 and plexin‐B1 (the tissue receptor of CD100). Direct immunofluorescence showed that renal‐CD100 protein was predominantly in tubules, while plexin‐B1 was present in both glomeruli and tubules. To determine whether glomerular plexin‐B1 mediates leucocyte recruitment via leucocyte CD100, recruitment was studied after passive transfer of heterologous antibody (attracting neutrophils) or isologous antibody (attracting macrophages). Glomerular macrophages were reduced in CD100−/− mice, but neutrophil recruitment was equivalent, consistent with CD100 expression on macrophages, but not neutrophils. CD100 promotes severe nephritogenic immune responses and leucocyte CD100–glomerular plexin‐B1 interactions enhance macrophage recruitment to glomeruli.
PLOS Genetics | 2014
Tia DiTommaso; Lynelle K. Jones; Denny L. Cottle; Anna-Karin Gerdin; Valerie E. Vancollie; Fiona M. Watt; Ramiro Ramirez-Solis; Allan Bradley; Karen P. Steel; John P. Sundberg; Jacqueline K. White; Ian Smyth
The skin is a highly regenerative organ which plays critical roles in protecting the body and sensing its environment. Consequently, morbidity and mortality associated with skin defects represent a significant health issue. To identify genes important in skin development and homeostasis, we have applied a high throughput, multi-parameter phenotype screen to the conditional targeted mutant mice generated by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institutes Mouse Genetics Project (Sanger-MGP). A total of 562 different mouse lines were subjected to a variety of tests assessing cutaneous expression, macroscopic clinical disease, histological change, hair follicle cycling, and aberrant marker expression. Cutaneous lesions were associated with mutations in 23 different genes. Many of these were not previously associated with skin disease in the organ (Mysm1, Vangl1, Trpc4ap, Nom1, Sparc, Farp2, and Prkab1), while others were ascribed new cutaneous functions on the basis of the screening approach (Krt76, Lrig1, Myo5a, Nsun2, and Nf1). The integration of these skin specific screening protocols into the Sanger-MGP primary phenotyping pipelines marks the largest reported reverse genetic screen undertaken in any organ and defines approaches to maximise the productivity of future projects of this nature, while flagging genes for further characterisation.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2015
Denny L. Cottle; Gloria Ursino; Sally Ip; Lynelle K. Jones; Tia DiTommaso; Douglas F. Hacking; Niamh E. Mangan; Natalie A. Mellett; Katya J. Henley; Dmitri Sviridov; Claudia A. Nold-Petry; Marcel F. Nold; Peter J. Meikle; Benjamin T. Kile; Ian Smyth
Harlequin ichthyosis (HI) is a severe skin disease which leads to neonatal death in ∼50% of cases. It is the result of mutations in ABCA12, a protein that transports lipids required to establish the protective skin barrier needed after birth. To better understand the life-threatening newborn HI phenotype, we analysed the developing epidermis for consequences of lipid dysregulation in mouse models. We observed a pro-inflammatory signature which was characterized by chemokine upregulation in embryonic skin which is distinct from that seen in other types of ichthyosis. Inflammation also persisted in grafted HI skin. To examine the contribution of inflammation to disease development, we overexpressed interleukin-37b to globally suppress fetal inflammation, observing considerable improvements in keratinocyte differentiation. These studies highlight inflammation as an unexpected contributor to HI disease development in utero, and suggest that inhibiting inflammation may reduce disease severity.
Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2013
Fenny Wiradjaja; Denny L. Cottle; Lynelle K. Jones; Ian Smyth
SUMMARY Fras1-related extracellular matrix protein 1 (FREM1) is required for epidermal adhesion during embryogenesis, and mice lacking the gene develop fetal skin blisters and a range of other developmental defects. Mutations in members of the FRAS/FREM gene family cause diseases of the Fraser syndrome spectrum. Embryonic epidermal blistering is also observed in mice lacking PdgfC and its receptor, PDGFRα. In this article, we show that FREM1 binds to PDGFC and that this interaction regulates signalling downstream of PDGFRα. Fibroblasts from Frem1-mutant mice respond to PDGFC stimulation, but with a shorter duration and amplitude than do wild-type cells. Significantly, PDGFC-stimulated expression of the metalloproteinase inhibitor Timp1 is reduced in cells with Frem1 mutations, leading to reduced basement membrane collagen I deposition. These results show that the physical interaction of FREM1 with PDGFC can regulate remodelling of the extracellular matrix downstream of PDGFRα. We propose that loss of FREM1 function promotes epidermal blistering in Fraser syndrome as a consequence of reduced PDGFC activity, in addition to its stabilising role in the basement membrane.
eLife | 2018
Kieran M. Short; Alexander N. Combes; Valerie Lisnyak; James G. Lefevre; Lynelle K. Jones; Melissa H. Little; Nicholas A. Hamilton; Ian Smyth
Branching morphogenesis of the ureteric bud is integral to kidney development; establishing the collecting ducts of the adult organ and driving organ expansion via peripheral interactions with nephron progenitor cells. A recent study suggested that termination of tip branching within the developing kidney involved stochastic exhaustion in response to nephron formation, with such a termination event representing a unifying developmental process evident in many organs. To examine this possibility, we have profiled the impact of nephron formation and maturation on elaboration of the ureteric bud during mouse kidney development. We find a distinct absence of random branch termination events within the kidney or evidence that nephrogenesis impacts the branching program or cell proliferation in either tip or progenitor cell niches. Instead, organogenesis proceeds in a manner indifferent to the development of these structures. Hence, stochastic cessation of branching is not a unifying developmental feature in all branching organs.