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Dive into the research topics where Natalie Homer is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalie Homer.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Prolonged exposure to acetaminophen reduces testosterone production by the human fetal testis in a xenograft model

Sander van den Driesche; Joni Macdonald; Richard A. Anderson; Zoe Johnston; Tarini Chetty; Lee B. Smith; Chris McKinnell; Afshan Dean; Natalie Homer; Anne Jørgensen; Maria-Elena Camacho-Moll; Richard M. Sharpe; Rod T. Mitchell

Prolonged exposure to therapeutic doses of acetaminophen reduces testosterone production by human fetal testis xenografts in mice. A risk of prolonged acetaminophen use The analgesic acetaminophen is one of the most commonly used medications worldwide. Although it has a good safety profile, previous human studies have found an association between the use of acetaminophen in pregnancy and cryptorchidism in male offspring. Now, van den Driesche et al. confirmed and refined this observation in a xenograft model using human fetal testicular tissue. The authors found that a single therapeutic dose of acetaminophen had no effect on testicular development, but continued dosing of acetaminophen for a week at clinically relevant doses reduced fetal testosterone and markers of androgen exposure. Further work will be needed to determine a safe dose and duration of acetaminophen exposure, but the current findings suggest a need for caution. Most common male reproductive disorders are linked to lower testosterone exposure in fetal life, although the factors responsible for suppressing fetal testosterone remain largely unknown. Protracted use of acetaminophen during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of cryptorchidism in sons, but effects on fetal testosterone production have not been demonstrated. We used a validated xenograft model to expose human fetal testes to clinically relevant doses and regimens of acetaminophen. Exposure to a therapeutic dose of acetaminophen for 7 days significantly reduced plasma testosterone (45% reduction; P = 0.025) and seminal vesicle weight (a biomarker of androgen exposure; 18% reduction; P = 0.005) in castrate host mice bearing human fetal testis xenografts, whereas acetaminophen exposure for just 1 day did not alter either parameter. Plasma acetaminophen concentrations (at 1 hour after the final dose) in exposed host mice were substantially below those reported in humans after a therapeutic oral dose. Subsequent in utero exposure studies in rats indicated that the acetaminophen-induced reduction in testosterone likely results from reduced expression of key steroidogenic enzymes (Cyp11a1, Cyp17a1). Our results suggest that protracted use of acetaminophen (1 week) may suppress fetal testosterone production, which could have adverse consequences. Further studies are required to establish the dose-response and treatment-duration relationships to delineate the maximum dose and treatment period without this adverse effect.


Nature Medicine | 2016

Kynurenine–3–monooxygenase inhibition prevents multiple organ failure in rodent models of acute pancreatitis

Damian J. Mole; Scott P. Webster; Iain Uings; Xiaozhong Zheng; Margaret Binnie; Kris Wilson; Jonathan P. Hutchinson; Olivier Mirguet; Ann Louise Walker; Benjamin Beaufils; Nicolas Ancellin; Lionel Trottet; Véronique Bénéton; Christopher G. Mowat; Martin Wilkinson; Paul Rowland; Carl Haslam; Andrew McBride; Natalie Homer; James Baily; Matthew Sharp; O. James Garden; Jeremy Hughes; Sarah E. M. Howie; Duncan S. Holmes; John Liddle; John P. Iredale

Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a common and devastating inflammatory condition of the pancreas that is considered to be a paradigm of sterile inflammation leading to systemic multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) and death. Acute mortality from AP-MODS exceeds 20% (ref. 3), and the lifespans of those who survive the initial episode are typically shorter than those of the general population. There are no specific therapies available to protect individuals from AP-MODS. Here we show that kynurenine-3-monooxygenase (KMO), a key enzyme of tryptophan metabolism, is central to the pathogenesis of AP-MODS. We created a mouse strain that is deficient for Kmo (encoding KMO) and that has a robust biochemical phenotype that protects against extrapancreatic tissue injury to the lung, kidney and liver in experimental AP-MODS. A medicinal chemistry strategy based on modifications of the kynurenine substrate led to the discovery of the oxazolidinone GSK180 as a potent and specific inhibitor of KMO. The binding mode of the inhibitor in the active site was confirmed by X-ray co-crystallography at 3.2 Å resolution. Treatment with GSK180 resulted in rapid changes in the levels of kynurenine pathway metabolites in vivo, and it afforded therapeutic protection against MODS in a rat model of AP. Our findings establish KMO inhibition as a novel therapeutic strategy in the treatment of AP-MODS, and they open up a new area for drug discovery in critical illness.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2014

Acute inhibition of NCC does not activate distal electrogenic Na+ reabsorption or kaliuresis

Robert W. Hunter; Eilidh Craigie; Natalie Homer; John J. Mullins; Matthew A. Bailey

Na+ reabsorption from the distal renal tubule involves electroneutral and electrogenic pathways, with the latter promoting K+ excretion. The relative activities of these two pathways are tightly controlled, participating in the minute-to-minute regulation of systemic K+ balance. The pathways are interdependent: the activity of the NaCl cotransporter (NCC) in the distal convoluted tubule influences the activity of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) downstream. This effect might be mediated by changes in distal Na+ delivery per se or by molecular and structural adaptations in the connecting tubule and collecting ducts. We hypothesized that acute inhibition of NCC activity would cause an immediate increase in Na+ flux through ENaC, with a concomitant increase in renal K+ excretion. We tested this using renal clearance methodology in anesthetized mice, by the administration of hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) and/or benzamil (BZM) to exert specific blockade of NCC and ENaC, respectively. Bolus HCTZ elicited a natriuresis that was sustained for up to 110 min; urinary K+ excretion was not affected. Furthermore, the magnitude of the natriuresis was no greater during concomitant BZM administration. This suggests that ENaC-mediated Na+ reabsorption was not normally limited by Na+ delivery, accounting for the absence of thiazide-induced kaliuresis. After dietary Na+ restriction, HCTZ elicited a kaliuresis, but the natiuretic effect of HCTZ was not enhanced by BZM. Our findings support a model in which inhibition of NCC activity does not increase Na+ reabsorption through ENaC solely by increasing distal Na+ delivery but rather by inducing a molecular and structural adaptation in downstream nephron segments.


Talanta | 2016

Derivatization of estrogens enhances specificity and sensitivity of analysis of human plasma and serum by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry

Abdullah M.M. Faqehi; Diego F. Cobice; Gregorio Naredo; Tracy C S Mak; Rita Upreti; Fraser W. Gibb; Geoffrey J. Beckett; Brian R. Walker; Natalie Homer; Ruth Andrew

Estrogens circulate at concentrations less than 20 pg/mL in men and postmenopausal women, presenting analytical challenges. Quantitation by immunoassay is unreliable at these low concentrations. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) offers greater specificity and sometimes greater sensitivity, but ionization of estrogens is inefficient. Introduction of charged moieties may enhance ionization, but many such derivatives of estrogens generate non-specific product ions originating from the “reagent” group. Therefore an approach generating derivatives with product ions specific to individual estrogens was sought. Estrogens were extracted from human plasma and serum using solid phase extraction and derivatized using 2-fluoro-1-methylpyridinium-p-toluenesulfonate (FMP-TS). Electrospray in positive mode with multiple reaction monitoring using a QTrap 5500 mass spectrometer was used to quantify “FMP” derivatives of estrogens, following LC separation. Transitions for the FMP derivatives of estrone (E1) and estradiol (E2) were compound specific (m/z 362→238 and m/z 364→128, respectively). The limits of detection and quantitation were 0.2 pg on-column and the method was linear from 1–400 pg/sample. Measures of intra- and inter-assay variability, precision and accuracy were acceptable (<20%). The derivatives were stable over 24 h at 10 °C (7–9% degradation). Using this approach, E1 and E2, respectively were detected in human plasma and serum: pre-menopausal female serum (0.5 mL) 135–473, 193–722 pmol/L; male plasma (1 mL) 25–111, 60–180 pmol/L and post-menopausal female plasma (2 mL), 22–78, 29–50 pmol/L. Thus FMP derivatization, in conjunction with LC–MS/MS, is suitable for quantitative analysis of estrogens in low abundance in plasma and serum, offering advantages in specificity over immunoassay and existing MS techniques.


Basic & Clinical Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2017

Human hepatic HepaRG cells maintain an organotypic phenotype with high intrinsic CYP450 activity/metabolism and significantly outperform standard HepG2/C3A cells for pharmaceutical and therapeutic applications

Leonard J. Nelson; Katie Morgan; Philipp Treskes; Kay Samuel; Catherine Henderson; Claire LeBled; Natalie Homer; M. Helen Grant; Peter C. Hayes; John Plevris

Conventional in vitro human hepatic models for drug testing are based on the use of standard cell lines derived from hepatomas or primary human hepatocytes (PHHs). Limited availability, interdonor functional variability and early phenotypic alterations in PHHs restrict their use, whilst standard cell lines such as HepG2 lack a substantial and variable set of liver‐specific functions such as CYP450 activity. Alternatives include the HepG2‐derivative C3A cells selected as a more differentiated and metabolically active hepatic phenotype. Human HepaRG cells are an alternative organotypic co‐culture model of hepatocytes and cholangiocytes reported to maintain in vivo‐like liver‐specific functions, including intact Phase I–III drug metabolism. In this study, we compared C3A and human HepaRG cells using phenotypic profiling, CYP450 activity and drug metabolism parameters to assess their value as hepatic models for pre‐clinical drug testing or therapeutics. Compared with C3As, HepaRG co‐cultures exhibit a more organotypic phenotype, including evidence of hepatic polarity with the strong expression of CYP3A4, the major isoform involved in the metabolism of over 60% of marketed drugs. Significantly greater CYP450 activity and expression of CYP1A2, CYP2E1 and CYP3A4 genes in HepaRG cells (comparable with that of human liver tissue) was demonstrated. Moreover, HepaRG cells also preferentially expressed the hepatic integrin α5β1 – an important modulator of cell behaviour including growth and survival, differentiation and polarity. Drug metabolite profiling of phenacetin (CYP1A2) and testosterone (CYP3A4) using LC‐MS/MS and HPLC, respectively, revealed that HepaRGs had more intact (Phase I–II) metabolism profile. Thus, HepaRG cells significantly outperform C3A cells for the potential pharmaceutical and therapeutic applications.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2014

Bacterial expression of human kynurenine 3-monooxygenase: solubility, activity, purification.

Kris Wilson; Damian J. Mole; Margareth Binnie; Natalie Homer; Xiaozhong Zheng; Beverley A. Yard; John P. Iredale; Manfred Auer; Scott P. Webster

Highlights • This is the first report of soluble and active bacterially expressed human KMO protein.• Partial purification of the enzyme was achieved and the two protein co-elutants identified.• Steady state kinetic parameters were comparable to those reported for mammalian expressed.• The C-terminal membrane targetting domain of human KMO is required for its enzymatic activity.


Talanta | 2015

Simultaneous pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analysis of 5α-reductase inhibitors and androgens by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry

Rita Upreti; Gregorio Naredo; Abdullah M.M. Faqehi; Katherine A. Hughes; Laurence Stewart; Brian R. Walker; Natalie Homer; Ruth Andrew

Benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostate cancer can be treated with the 5α-reductase inhibitors, finasteride and dutasteride, when pharmacodynamic biomarkers are useful in assessing response. A novel method was developed to measure the substrates and products of 5α-reductases (testosterone, 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), androstenedione) and finasteride and dutasteride simultaneously by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, using an ABSciex QTRAP® 5500, with a Waters Acquity™ UPLC. Analytes were extracted from serum (500 µL) via solid-phase extraction (Oasis® HLB), with 13C3-labelled androgens and d9-finasteride included as internal standards. Analytes were separated on a Kinetex C18 column (150×3 mm, 2.6 µm), using a gradient run of 19 min. Temporal resolution of analytes from naturally occurring isomers and mass +2 isotopomers was ensured. Protonated molecular ions were detected in atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation mode and source conditions optimised for DHT, the least abundant analyte. Multiple reaction monitoring was performed as follows: testosterone (m/z 289→97), DHT (m/z 291→255), androstenedione (m/z 287→97), dutasteride (m/z 529→461), finasteride (m/z 373→317). Validation parameters (intra- and inter-assay precision and accuracy, linearity, limits of quantitation) were within acceptable ranges and biological extracts were stable for 28 days. Finally the method was employed in men treated with finasteride or dutasteride; levels of DHT were lowered by both drugs and furthermore the substrate concentrations increased.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Aromatase Inhibition Reduces Insulin Sensitivity in Healthy Men

Fraser W. Gibb; Natalie Homer; Abdullah M.M. Faqehi; Rita Upreti; Dawn E. W. Livingstone; Kerry McInnes; Ruth Andrew; Brian R. Walker

Context: Deficiency of aromatase, the enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of androgens to estrogens, is associated with insulin resistance in humans and mice. Objective: We hypothesized that pharmacological aromatase inhibition results in peripheral insulin resistance in humans. Design: This was a double-blind, randomized, controlled, crossover study. Setting: The study was conducted at a clinical research facility. Participants: Seventeen healthy male volunteers (18–50 y) participated in the study. Intervention: The intervention included oral anastrozole (1 mg daily) and placebo, each for 6 weeks with a 2-week washout period. Main Outcome Measure: Glucose disposal and rates of lipolysis were measured during a stepwise hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. Data are mean (SEM). Results: Anastrozole therapy resulted in significant estradiol suppression (59.9 ± 3.6 vs 102.0 ± 5.7 pmol/L, P = < .001) and a more modest elevation of total T (25.8 ± 1.2 vs 21.4 ± 0.7 nmol/L, P = .003). Glucose infusion rate, during the low-dose insulin infusion, was lower after anastrozole administration (12.16 ± 1.33 vs 14.15 ± 1.55 μmol/kg·min, P = .024). No differences in hepatic glucose production or rate of lipolysis were observed. Conclusion: Aromatase inhibition reduces insulin sensitivity, with respect to peripheral glucose disposal, in healthy men. Local generation and action of estradiol, at the level of skeletal muscle, is likely to be an important determinant of insulin sensitivity.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

ABCC1 confers tissue-specific sensitivity to cortisol versus corticosterone: A rationale for safer glucocorticoid replacement therapy.

Mark Nixon; Scott D Mackenzie; Ashley I. Taylor; Natalie Homer; Dawn E. W. Livingstone; Rabah Mouras; Ruth Morgan; Damian J. Mole; Roland H. Stimson; Rebecca M. Reynolds; Alistair Elfick; Ruth Andrew; Brian R. Walker

Corticosterone is as effective as cortisol for ACTH suppression but lacks metabolic adverse effects. A kinder, gentler steroid In some clinical situations, such as congenital adrenal hyperplasia, it is necessary to suppress endogenous adrenal function by blocking the secretion of the adrenocorticotropic hormone from the brain. Usually, cortisol is used for this purpose, but cortisol doses large enough to achieve adrenal suppression are problematic because they cause metabolic adverse effects. Nixon et al. have identified another steroid, corticosterone, as offering a better solution for this treatment scenario. Because of the differences in the expression patterns of transporters that export each steroid out of cells, corticosterone is more effectively retained in brain cells, where it is needed, and less likely to be retained in adipose tissue, where it would cause side effects. The aim of treatment in congenital adrenal hyperplasia is to suppress excess adrenal androgens while achieving physiological glucocorticoid replacement. However, current glucocorticoid replacement regimes are inadequate because doses sufficient to suppress excess androgens almost invariably induce adverse metabolic effects. Although both cortisol and corticosterone are glucocorticoids that circulate in human plasma, any physiological role for corticosterone has been neglected. In the brain, the adenosine 5′-triphosphate–binding cassette transporter ABCB1 exports cortisol but not corticosterone. Conversely, ABCC1 exports corticosterone but not cortisol. We show that ABCC1, but not ABCB1, is expressed in human adipose and that ABCC1 inhibition increases intracellular corticosterone, but not cortisol, and induces glucocorticoid-responsive gene transcription in human adipocytes. Both C57Bl/6 mice treated with the ABCC1 inhibitor probenecid and FVB mice with deletion of Abcc1 accumulated more corticosterone than cortisol in adipose after adrenalectomy and corticosteroid infusion. This accumulation was sufficient to increase glucocorticoid-responsive adipose transcript expression. In human adipose tissue, tissue corticosterone concentrations were consistently low, and ABCC1 mRNA was up-regulated in obesity. To test the hypothesis that corticosterone effectively suppresses adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) without the metabolic adverse effects of cortisol, we infused cortisol or corticosterone in patients with Addison’s disease. ACTH suppression was similar, but subcutaneous adipose transcripts of glucocorticoid-responsive genes were higher after infusion with cortisol rather than with corticosterone. These data indicate that corticosterone may be a metabolically favorable alternative to cortisol for glucocorticoid replacement therapy when ACTH suppression is desirable, as in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and justify development of a pharmaceutical preparation.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2009

Quantitative analysis of RU38486 (mifepristone) by HPLC triple quadrupole mass spectrometry

Natalie Homer; Rebecca M. Reynolds; Cecilia Mattsson; Matthew A. Bailey; Brian R. Walker; Ruth Andrew

A sensitive liquid chromatography-mass spectrometric method was validated for the quantification of RU38486 (mifepristone) in human and murine plasma. The analyte and internal standard (alfaxolone) were extracted by liquid-liquid extraction with diethyl ether, resolved on a C18 column using gradient elution with methanol and ammonium acetate and detected after positive electrospray ionization (m/z 430-->372; m/z 333-->297, respectively). Quantification was linear over the range 0.5-500ng (r(2)>0.997), precise and accurate (intra-assay RSD< or =7.2%, RME< or =8.2%; inter-assay RSD< or =15.7% RME< or =10.2%). The limit of quantification (LOQ) was 50pg injected on column, permitting reproducible analysis of RU38486 in small volumes of plasma.

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Ruth Andrew

Western General Hospital

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Alice Keely

Edinburgh Napier University

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Andrew Weeks

University of Liverpool

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Calum Gray

University of Edinburgh

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