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Dive into the research topics where Mansi Krishan is active.

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Featured researches published by Mansi Krishan.


Journal of Nutrition | 2011

Dietary Whey Protein Lowers the Risk for Metabolic Disease in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet

Howard G. Shertzer; Sally Woods; Mansi Krishan; Mary Beth Genter; Kevin J. Pearson

Consuming a high-fat (HF) diet produces excessive weight gain, adiposity, and metabolic complications associated with risk for developing type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease. This study evaluated the influence of whey protein isolate (WPI) on systemic energy balance and metabolic changes in mice fed a HF diet. Female C57BL/6J mice received for 11 wk a HF diet, with or without 100 g WPI/L drinking water. Energy consumption and glucose and lipid metabolism were examined. WPI mice had lower rates of body weight gain and percent body fat and greater lean body mass, although energy consumption was unchanged. These results were consistent with WPI mice having higher basal metabolic rates, respiratory quotients, and hepatic mitochondrial respiration. Health implications for WPI were reflected in early biomarkers for fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes. Livers from WPI mice had significantly fewer hepatic lipid droplet numbers and less deposition of nonpolar lipids. Furthermore, WPI improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity. We conclude that in mice receiving a HF diet, consumption of WPI results in higher basal metabolic rates and altered metabolism of dietary lipids. Because WPI mice had less hepatosteatosis and insulin resistance, WPI dietary supplements may be effective in slowing the development of fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2011

Lipid metabolism and body composition in Gclm(-/-) mice

Eric L. Kendig; Ying Chen; Mansi Krishan; Elisabet Johansson; Scott N. Schneider; Mary Beth Genter; Daniel W. Nebert; Howard G. Shertzer

In humans and experimental animals, high fat diets (HFD) are associated with risk factors for metabolic diseases, such as excessive weight gain and adiposity, insulin resistance and fatty liver. Mice lacking the glutamate-cysteine ligase modifier subunit gene (Gclm(-/-)) and deficient in glutathione (GSH), are resistant to HFD-mediated weight gain. Herein, we evaluated Gclm-associated regulation of energy metabolism, oxidative stress, and glucose and lipid homeostasis. C57BL/6J Gclm(-/-) mice and littermate wild-type (WT) controls received a normal diet or an HFD for 11 weeks. HFD-fed Gclm(-/-) mice did not display a decreased respiratory quotient, suggesting that they are unable to process lipid for metabolism. Although dietary energy consumption and intestinal lipid absorption were unchanged in Gclm(-/-) mice, feeding these mice an HFD did not produce excess body weight nor fat storage. Gclm(-/-) mice displayed higher basal metabolic rates resulting from higher activities of liver mitochondrial NADH-CoQ oxidoreductase, thus elevating respiration. Although Gclm(-/-) mice exhibited strong systemic and hepatic oxidative stress responses, HFD did not promote glucose intolerance or insulin resistance. Furthermore, HFD-fed Gclm(-/-) mice did not develop fatty liver, likely resulting from very low expression levels of genes encoding lipid metabolizing enzymes. We conclude that Gclm is involved in the regulation of basal metabolic rate and the metabolism of dietary lipid. Although Gclm(-/-) mice display a strong oxidative stress response, they are protected from HFD-induced excessive weight gain and adipose deposition, insulin resistance and steatosis.


Neurotoxicology and Teratology | 2015

Systemic and behavioral effects of intranasal administration of silver nanoparticles.

Laurie L. Davenport; Heidi Hsieh; Bryan L. Eppert; Vinicius S. Carreira; Mansi Krishan; Taylor Ingle; Paul C. Howard; Michael T. Williams; Charles V. Vorhees; Mary Beth Genter

Use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) for their antimicrobial properties is widespread. Much of the previous work on the toxicity of AgNPs has been conducted in vitro or following oral or intravenous administration in vivo. Intranasal (IN) instillation of AgNPs mimics inhalation exposure and allows further exploration of the toxicity of these particles via respiratory tract exposure. The present study involved 1) single-dose exposures to assess tissue distribution and toxicity and 2) repeated exposures to assess behavioral effects of IN AgNP exposure (nominally uncoated 25 nm AgNP). AgNP deposition was localized in the liver, gut-associated lymphoid tissue, and brain. Decrease cellularity in spleen follicles was observed in treated mice, along with changes in cell number and populations in the spleen. The splenic GSH:GSSG ratio was also reduced following AgNP exposure. Expression of the oxidative stress-responsive gene Hmox1 was elevated in the hippocampus, but not cortex of treated mice, as was the level of HMOX1 protein. Mice receiving 7 days of IN exposure to 50 mg/kg AgNPs exhibited similar learning- and memory-related behaviors to control mice, except that treated mice spent significantly less time in the target quadrant of the Morris Water Maze during the acquisition phase probe trial. These findings indicate systemic distribution and toxicity following IN administration of AgNPs.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2010

Drug transporter expression and localization in rat nasal respiratory and olfactory mucosa and olfactory bulb.

Mary Beth Genter; Mansi Krishan; Lisa M. Augustine; Nathan J. Cherrington

Uptake of drugs and other xenobiotics from the nasal cavity and into either the brain or systemic circulation can occur through several different mechanisms, including paracellular transport and movement along primary olfactory nerve axons, which extend from the nasal cavity to the olfactory bulb of the brain. The present study was conducted to expand knowledge on a third means of uptake, namely the expression of drug transporters in the rat nasal epithelium. We used branched DNA technology to compare the level of expression of nine transporters [(equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENT)1 and ENT2; organic cation transporter (OCT)1, 2, and 3; OCTN1; organic anion-transporting polypeptide (OATP)3; and multidrug resistance (MRP)1 and MRP4] in nasal respiratory mucosa, olfactory mucosa, and olfactory bulb to the level of expression of these transporters in the liver and kidney. Transporters with high expression in the nasal respiratory mucosa or olfactory tissues were immunolocalized by immunohistochemistry. ENT1 and ENT2 expression was relatively high in nasal epithelia and olfactory bulb, which may explain the uptake of intranasally administered nucleoside derivatives observed by other investigators. OATP3 immunoreactivity was high in olfactory epithelium and olfactory nerve bundles, which suggests that substrates transported by OATP3 may be candidates for intranasal administration.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2012

Glutathione-deficient mice are susceptible to TCDD-Induced hepatocellular toxicity but resistant to steatosis.

Ying Chen; Mansi Krishan; Daniel W. Nebert; Howard G. Shertzer

2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) generates both hepatocellular injury and steatosis, processes that involve oxidative stress. Herein, we evaluated the role of the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) in TCDD-induced hepatotoxicity. Glutamate-cysteine ligase (GCL), comprising catalytic (GCLC) and modifier (GCLM) subunits, is rate limiting in de novo GSH biosynthesis; GCLM maintains GSH homeostasis by optimizing the catalytic efficiency of GCL holoenzyme. Gclm(-/-) transgenic mice exhibit 10-20% of normal tissue GSH levels. Gclm(-/-) and Gclm(+/+) wild-type (WT) female mice received TCDD for 3 consecutive days and were then examined 21 days later. As compared with WT littermates, Gclm(-/-) mice were more sensitive to TCDD-induced hepatocellular toxicity, exhibiting lower reduction potentials for GSH, lower ATP levels, and elevated levels of plasma glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) and γ-glutamyl transferase (GGT). However, the histopathology showed that TCDD-mediated steatosis, which occurs in WT mice, was absent in Gclm(-/-) mice. This finding was consistent with cDNA microarray expression analysis, revealing striking deficiencies in lipid biosynthesis pathways in Gclm(-/-) mice; qrt-PCR analysis confirmed that Gclm(-/-) mice are deficient in expression of several lipid metabolism genes including Srebp2, Elovl6, Fasn, Scd1/2, Ppargc1a, and Ppara. We suggest that whereas GSH protects against TCDD-mediated hepatocellular damage, GSH deficiency confers resistance to TCDD-induced steatosis due to impaired lipid metabolism.


Neuroscience Letters | 2013

Dietary whey protein stimulates mitochondrial activity and decreases oxidative stress in mouse female brain

Howard G. Shertzer; Mansi Krishan; Mary Beth Genter

In humans and experimental animals, protein-enriched diets are beneficial for weight management, muscle development, managing early stage insulin resistance and overall health. Previous studies have shown that in mice consuming a high fat diet, whey protein isolate (WPI) reduced hepatosteatosis and insulin resistance due in part to an increase in basal metabolic rate. In the current study, we examined the ability of WPI to increase energy metabolism in mouse brain. Female C57BL/6J mice were fed a normal AIN-93M diet for 12 weeks, with (WPI group) or without (Control group) 100g WPI/L drinking water. In WPI mice compared to controls, the oxidative stress biomarkers malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxyalkenals were 40% lower in brain homogenates, and the production of hydrogen peroxide and superoxide were 25-35% less in brain mitochondria. Brain mitochondria from WPI mice remained coupled, and exhibited higher rates of respiration with proportionately greater levels of cytochromes a+a3 and c+c1. These results suggested that WPI treatment increased the number or improved the function of brain mitochondria. qRT-PCR revealed that the gene encoding a master regulator of mitochondrial activity and biogenesis, Pgc-1alpha (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1alpha) was elevated 2.2-fold, as were the PGC-1alpha downstream genes, Tfam (mitochondrial transcription factor A), Gabpa/Nrf-2a (GA-binding protein alpha/nuclear respiratory factor-2a), and Cox-6a1 (cytochrome oxidase-6a1). Each of these genes had twice the levels of transcript in brain tissue from WPI mice, relative to controls. There was no change in the expression of the housekeeping gene B2mg (beta-2 microglobulin). We conclude that dietary whey protein decreases oxidative stress and increases mitochondrial activity in mouse brain. Dietary supplementation with WPI may be a useful clinical intervention to treat conditions associated with oxidative stress or diminished mitochondrial activity in the brain.


Drug Delivery | 2014

Manipulation of olfactory tight junctions using papaverine to enhance intranasal delivery of gemcitabine to the brain

Mansi Krishan; Gary A. Gudelsky; Pankaj B. Desai; Mary Beth Genter

Abstract Context: Delivery of drugs from the nasal cavity to the brain is becoming more widely accepted, due to the non-invasive nature of this route and the ability to circumvent the blood brain barrier (BBB). Objective: Because of similarities in the proteins comprising the olfactory epithelial tight junction (TJ) proteins and those of the BBB, we sought to determine whether papaverine (PV), which is known to reversibly enhance BBB permeability, could increase the delivery of intranasally administered gemcitabine to the central nervous system in rats. Experimental methods: Included intranasal administration of gemcitabine, fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran beads and PV, histopathology, immunostaining, RT-PCR, western blot analysis, immunofluorescence localization, spectrofluorometric analysis, in vivo brain microdialysis, HPLC analysis and in vitro gemcitabine recovery. Results and discussion: PV transiently decreased the levels and altered immunolocalization of the TJ protein phosphorylated-occludin in the olfactory epithelium, while causing an approximately four-fold increase in gemcitabine concentration reaching the brain. The enhanced delivery was not accompanied by nasal epithelial damage or toxicity to distant organs. Conclusions: The ability to transiently and safely increase drug delivery from the nose to the brain represents a non-invasive way to improve treatment of patients with brain disorders.


Toxicology Letters | 2017

Identification, categorization, and evaluation of food-use chemicals in ToxCast

Agnes L. Karmaus; Mansi Krishan


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2017

Curation of food-relevant chemicals in ToxCast

Agnes L. Karmaus; Thomas D. Trautman; Mansi Krishan; Dayne L. Filer; Laurel A. Fix


Handbook of Olfaction and Gustation | 2015

The Olfactory System as a Route of Delivery for Agents to the Brain and Circulation

Mary Beth Genter; Mansi Krishan; Rui Daniel Prediger

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Ying Chen

University of Colorado Denver

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Charles V. Vorhees

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Dayne L. Filer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Eric L. Kendig

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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