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Dive into the research topics where Michelle A. King is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle A. King.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2013

Regional susceptibility to stress-induced intestinal injury in the mouse.

Veronica Lea Novosad; Jennifer L. Richards; Neil A. Phillips; Michelle A. King; Thomas L. Clanton

Injury to the intestinal mucosa is a life-threatening problem in a variety of clinical disorders, including hemorrhagic shock, trauma, burn, pancreatitis, and heat stroke. The susceptibility to injury of different regions of intestine in these disorders is not well understood. We compared histological injury across the small intestine in two in vivo mouse models of injury, hemorrhagic shock (30% loss of blood volume) and heat stroke (peak core temperature 42.4°C). In both injury models, areas near the duodenum showed significantly greater mucosal injury and reductions in villus height. To determine if these effects were dependent on circulating factors, experiments were performed on isolated intestinal segments to test for permeability to 4-kDa FITC-dextran. The segments were exposed to hyperthermia (42°C for 90 min), moderate simulated ischemia (Po2 ∼30 Torr, Pco2 ∼60 Torr, pH 7.1), severe ischemia (Po2 ∼20 Torr, Pco2 ∼80 Torr, pH 6.9), or severe hypoxia (Po2 ∼0 Torr, Pco2 ∼35 Torr) for 90 min, and each group was compared with sham controls. All treatments resulted in marked elevations in permeability within segments near the duodenum. In severe hypoxia or hyperthermia, permeability was also moderately elevated in the jejunum and ileum; in moderate or severe ischemia, permeability was unaffected in these regions. The results demonstrate increased susceptibility of proximal regions of the small intestine to acute stress-induced damage, irrespective of circulating factors. The predominant injury in the duodenum may impact the pattern of acute inflammatory responses arising from breach of the intestinal barrier, and such knowledge may be useful for designing therapeutic strategies.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2016

Hyperthermia, dehydration, and osmotic stress: unconventional sources of exercise-induced reactive oxygen species

Michelle A. King; Thomas L. Clanton; Orlando Laitano

Evidence of increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production is observed in the circulation during exercise in humans. This is exacerbated at elevated body temperatures and attenuated when normal exercise-induced body temperature elevations are suppressed. Why ROS production during exercise is temperature dependent is entirely unknown. This review covers the human exercise studies to date that provide evidence that oxidant and antioxidant changes observed in the blood during exercise are dependent on temperature and fluid balance. We then address possible mechanisms linking exercise with these variables that include shear stress, effects of hemoconcentration, and signaling pathways involving muscle osmoregulation. Since pathways of muscle osmoregulation are rarely discussed in this context, we provide a brief review of what is currently known and unknown about muscle osmoregulation and how it may be linked to oxidant production in exercise and hyperthermia. Both the circulation and the exercising muscle fibers become concentrated with osmolytes during exercise in the heat, resulting in a competition for available water across the muscle sarcolemma and other tissues. We conclude that though multiple mechanisms may be responsible for the changes in oxidant/antioxidant balance in the blood during exercise, a strong case can be made that a significant component of ROS produced during some forms of exercise reflect requirements of adapting to osmotic challenges, hyperthermia challenges, and loss of circulating fluid volume.


The Journal of Physiology | 2015

Protection of intestinal injury during heat stroke in mice by interleukin‐6 pretreatment

Neil A. Phillips; Steven S. Welc; Shannon M. Wallet; Michelle A. King; Thomas L. Clanton

Heat stroke afflicts thousands of humans each year, worldwide. The immune system responds to hyperthermia exposure resulting in heat stroke by producing an array of immunological proteins, such as interleukin‐6 (IL‐6). However, the physiological functions of IL‐6 and other cytokines in hyperthermia are poorly understood. We hypothesized that IL‐6 plays a protective role in conditions of heat stroke. To test this, we gave small IL‐6 supplements to mice prior to exposing them to hot environments sufficient to induce conditions of heat stroke. Pretreatment with IL‐6 resulted in improved ability to withstand heat exposure in anaesthetized mice, it protected the intestine from injury, reducing the permeability of the intestinal barrier, and it attenuated the release of other cytokines involved in inflammation. The results support the hypothesis that IL‐6 is a ‘physiological stress hormone’ that plays an important role in survival during acute life‐threatening conditions such as heat stroke.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Impact of Hyperthermia on Receptor-Mediated Interleukin-6 Regulation in Mouse Skeletal Muscle.

Steven S. Welc; Deborah A. Morse; Alex J. Mattingly; Orlando Laitano; Michelle A. King; Thomas L. Clanton

In inflammatory cells, hyperthermia inhibits lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene expression and protein secretion. Since hyperthermia alone stimulates IL-6 in skeletal muscle, we hypothesized that it would amplify responses to other receptor-mediated stimuli. IL-6 regulation was tested in C2C12 myotubes and in soleus during treatment with epinephrine (EPI) or LPS. In EPI-treated myotubes (100 ng/ml), 1 h exposure at 40.5°C-42°C transiently increased IL-6 mRNA compared to EPI treatment alone at 37°C. In LPS-treated myotubes (1 μg/ml), exposure to 41°C-42°C also increased IL-6 mRNA. In isolated mouse soleus, similar amplifications of IL-6 gene expression were observed in 41°C, during both low (1 ng/ml) and high dose (100 ng/ml) EPI, but only in high dose LPS (1 μg/ml). In myotubes, heat increased IL-6 secretion during EPI exposure but had no effect or inhibited secretion with LPS. In soleus there were no effects of heat on IL-6 secretion during either EPI or LPS treatment. Mechanisms for the effects of heat on IL-6 mRNA were explored using a luciferase-reporter in C2C12 myotubes. Overexpression of heat shock factor-1 (HSF-1) had no impact on IL-6 promoter activity during EPI stimulation, but elevated IL-6 promoter activity during LPS stimulation. In contrast, when the activator protein-1 (AP-1) element was mutated, responses to both LPS and EPI were suppressed in heat. Using siRNA against activating transcription factor-3 (ATF-3), a heat-stress-induced inhibitor of IL-6, no ATF-3-dependent effects were observed. The results demonstrate that, unlike inflammatory cells, hyperthermia in muscle fibers amplifies IL-6 gene expression to EPI and LPS. The effect appears to reflect differential engagement of HSF-1 and AP-1 sensitive elements on the IL-6 gene, with no evidence for involvement of ATF-3. The functional significance of increased IL-6 mRNA expression during heat may serve to overcome the well-known suppression of protein synthetic pathways occurring during heat shock.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2017

Unique cytokine and chemokine responses to exertional heat stroke in mice

Michelle A. King; Lisa R. Leon; Deborah A. Morse; Thomas L. Clanton

In heat stroke, cytokines are believed to play important roles in multiorgan dysfunction and recovery of damaged tissue. The time course of the cytokine response is well defined in passive heat stroke (PHS), but little is known about exertional heat stroke (EHS). In this study we used a recently developed mouse EHS model to measure the responses of circulating cytokines/chemokines and cytokine gene expression in muscle. A very rapid increase in circulating IL-6 was observed at maximum core temperature (Tc,max) that peaked at 0.5 h of recovery and disappeared by 3 h. IL-10 was not elevated at any time. This contrasts with PHS where both IL-6 and IL-10 peak at 3 h of recovery. Keratinocyte chemoattractant (KC), granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-2, MIP-1β, and monocyte chemoattractive factor-1 also demonstrated near peak responses at 0.5 h. Only G-CSF and KC remained elevated at 3 h. Muscle mRNA for innate immune cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-1β, but not TNF-α) were greatly increased in diaphragm and soleus compared with similar measurements in PHS. We hypothesized that these altered cytokine responses in EHS may be due to a lower Tc,max achieved in EHS or a lower overall heat load. However, when these variables were controlled for, they could not account for the differences between EHS and PHS. We conclude that moderate exercise, superimposed on heat exposure, alters the pattern of circulating cytokine and chemokine production and muscle cytokine expression in EHS. This response may comprise an endocrine reflex to exercise in heat that initiates survival pathways and early onset tissue repair mechanisms. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Immune modulators called cytokines are released following extreme hyperthermia leading to heat stroke. It is not known whether exercise in hyperthermia, leading to EHS, influences this response. Using a mouse model of EHS, we discovered a rapid accumulation of interleukin-6 and other cytokines involved in immune cell trafficking. This response may comprise a protective mechanism for early induction of cell survival and tissue repair pathways needed for recovery from thermal injury.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2015

Biomarkers of multiorgan injury in a preclinical model of exertional heat stroke

Michelle A. King; Lisa R. Leon; Danielle L. Mustico; Joel M. Haines; Thomas L. Clanton

It is likely that the pathophysiology of exertional heat stroke (EHS) differs from passive heat stroke (PHS), but this has been difficult to verify experimentally. C57Bl/6 mice were instrumented with temperature transponders and underwent 3 wk of training using voluntary and forced running wheels. An EHS group was exposed to environmental temperatures (Tenv) of 37.5, 38.5, or 39.5°C at either 30, 50, or 90% relative humidities (RH) while exercising on a forced running wheel. Results were compared with sham-matched exercise controls (EXC) and naïve controls (NC). In EHS, mice exercised in heat until they reached limiting neurological symptoms (loss of consciousness). The symptom-limited maximum core temperatures achieved were between 42.1 and 42.5°C at 50% RH. All mice that were followed for 4 days survived. Additional groups were killed at 0.5, 3, 24, and 96 h, post-EHS or -EXC. Histopathology revealed extensive damage in all regions of the small intestine, liver, and kidney. Plasma creatine kinase, blood urea nitrogen, alanine transaminase, and intestinal fatty acid binding protein-2 were significantly elevated compared with matched EXC and NC, suggesting multiple organ injury to striated muscle, kidney, liver, and intestine, respectively. EHS mice were hypoglycemic immediately following EHS but exhibited sustained hyperglycemia through 4 days. The results demonstrate unique features of survivable EHS in the mouse that included loss of consciousness, extensive organ injury, and rhabdomyolysis.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Exertional vs. Passive Heat Stroke: Altered Time Course of Cytokine Expression in Plasma and Skeletal Muscle

Michelle A. King; Deb Morse; Thomas L. Clanton


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2018

Multi-Environmental Exposure does not Alter Plasma Cortisol or Perceived Stress Response to Steady-State Cycle Exercise: 1375 Board #183 May 31 8

John H. Sellers; Michelle A. King; Roy M. Salgado; Karleigh E. Bradbury; Charles S. Fulco; Robert W. Kenefick


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2018

Sex-dependent responses to exertional heat stroke in mice

Christian K. Garcia; Alex J. Mattingly; Gerard P. Robinson; Orlando Laitano; Michelle A. King; Shauna M. Dineen; Lisa R. Leon; Thomas L. Clanton


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2017

Recent Illness but Not Prior Heat Injury Affects the Rate of Cooling Following Exertional Heat Stroke: 3804 Board #251 June 3 9

Michelle A. King; Matthew Ward; Bruce Adams; Lisa R. Leon

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Lisa R. Leon

United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

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Orlando Laitano

Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco

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Charles S. Fulco

United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

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