Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Norma A. Bobadilla is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Norma A. Bobadilla.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Kidney injury molecule-1 outperforms traditional biomarkers of kidney injury in preclinical biomarker qualification studies

Vishal S. Vaidya; Josef S. Ozer; Frank Dieterle; Fitz B. Collings; Victoria Ramírez; Sean P. Troth; Nagaraja Muniappa; Douglas Thudium; David Gerhold; Daniel J. Holder; Norma A. Bobadilla; Estelle Marrer; Elias Perentes; André Cordier; Jacky Vonderscher; Gerard Maurer; Peter L. Goering; Frank D. Sistare; Joseph V. Bonventre

Kidney toxicity accounts both for the failure of many drug candidates as well as considerable patient morbidity. Whereas histopathology remains the gold standard for nephrotoxicity in animal systems, serum creatinine (SCr) and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) are the primary options for monitoring kidney dysfunction in humans. The transmembrane tubular protein kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) was previously reported to be markedly induced in response to renal injury. Owing to the poor sensitivity and specificity of SCr and BUN, we used rat toxicology studies to compare the diagnostic performance of urinary Kim-1 to BUN, SCr and urinary N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) as predictors of kidney tubular damage scored by histopathology. Kim-1 outperforms SCr, BUN and urinary NAG in multiple rat models of kidney injury. Urinary Kim-1 measurements may facilitate sensitive, specific and accurate prediction of human nephrotoxicity in preclinical drug screens. This should enable early identification and elimination of compounds that are potentially nephrotoxic.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Angiotensin II signaling increases activity of the renal Na-Cl cotransporter through a WNK4-SPAK-dependent pathway

Pedro San-Cristobal; Diana Pacheco-Alvarez; Ciaran Richardson; Aaron M. Ring; Norma Vázquez; Fatema H. Rafiqi; Divya Chari; Kristopher T. Kahle; Qiang Leng; Norma A. Bobadilla; Steven C. Hebert; Dario R. Alessi; Richard P. Lifton; Gerardo Gamba

Mutations in the kinase WNK4 cause pseudohypoaldosteronism type II (PHAII), a syndrome featuring hypertension and high serum K+ levels (hyperkalemia). WNK4 has distinct functional states that regulate the balance between renal salt reabsorption and K+ secretion by modulating the activities of renal transporters and channels, including the Na-Cl cotransporter NCC and the K+ channel ROMK. WNK4s functions could enable differential responses to intravascular volume depletion (hypovolemia) and hyperkalemia. Because hypovolemia is uniquely associated with high angiotensin II (AngII) levels, AngII signaling might modulate WNK4 activity. We show that AngII signaling in Xenopus oocytes increases NCC activity by abrogating WNK4s inhibition of NCC but does not alter WNK4s inhibition of ROMK. This effect requires AngII, its receptor AT1R, and WNK4, and is prevented by the AT1R inhibitor losartan. NCC activity is also increased by WNK4 harboring mutations found in PHAII, and this activity cannot be further augmented by AngII signaling, consistent with PHAII mutations providing constitutive activation of the signaling pathway between AT1R and NCC. AngIIs effect on NCC is also dependent on the kinase SPAK because dominant-negative SPAK or elimination of the SPAK binding motif in NCC prevent activation of NCC by AngII signaling. These effects extend to mammalian cells. AngII increases phosphorylation of specific sites on SPAK and NCC that are necessary for activation of each in mpkDCT cells. These findings place WNK4 in the signaling pathway between AngII and NCC, and provide a mechanism by which hypovolemia maximizes renal salt reabsoprtion without concomitantly increasing K+ secretion.


Kidney International | 2009

A rapid urine test for early detection of kidney injury

Vishal S. Vaidya; Glen M. Ford; Sushrut S. Waikar; Yizhuo Wang; Matthew Clement; Victoria Ramírez; Warren E. Glaab; Sean P. Troth; Frank D. Sistare; Walter C. Prozialeck; Joshua R. Edwards; Norma A. Bobadilla; Stephen C. Mefferd; Joseph V. Bonventre

Kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) has been qualified by the Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency as a highly sensitive and specific urinary biomarker to monitor drug-induced kidney injury in preclinical studies and on a case-by-case basis in clinical trials. Here we report the development and evaluation of a rapid direct immunochromatographic lateral flow 15-min assay for detection of urinary Kim-1 (rat) or KIM-1 (human). The urinary Kim-1 band intensity using the rat Kim-1 dipstick significantly correlated with levels of Kim-1 as measured by a microbead-based assay, histopathological damage, and immunohistochemical assessment of renal Kim-1 in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Kim-1 was detected following kidney injury induced in rats by cadmium, gentamicin, or bilateral renal ischemia/reperfusion. In humans, the urinary KIM-1 band intensity was significantly greater in urine from patients with acute kidney injury than in urine from healthy volunteers. The KIM-1 dipstick also enabled temporal evaluation of kidney injury and recovery in two patients who developed postoperative acute kidney injury following cytoreductive surgery for malignant mesothelioma with intraoperative local cisplatin administration. We hope that future, more extensive studies will confirm the utility of these results, which show that the Kim-1/KIM-1 dipsticks can provide a sensitive and accurate detection of Kim-1/KIM-1, thereby providing a rapid diagnostic assay for kidney damage and facilitating the rapid and early detection of kidney injury in preclinical and clinical studies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Activation of the renal Na+:Cl− cotransporter by angiotensin II is a WNK4-dependent process

María Castañeda-Bueno; Luz Graciela Cervantes-Pérez; Norma Vázquez; Norma Uribe; Sheila Kantesaria; Luciana Morla; Norma A. Bobadilla; Alain Doucet; Dario R. Alessi; Gerardo Gamba

Pseudohypoaldosteronism type II is a salt-sensitive form of hypertension with hyperkalemia in humans caused by mutations in the with-no-lysine kinase 4 (WNK4). Several studies have shown that WNK4 modulates the activity of the renal Na+Cl− cotransporter, NCC. Because the renal consequences of WNK4 carrying pseudoaldosteronism type II mutations resemble the response to intravascular volume depletion (promotion of salt reabsorption without K+ secretion), a condition that is associated with high angiotensin II (AngII) levels, it has been proposed that AngII signaling might affect WNK4 modulation of the NCC. In Xenopus laevis oocytes, WNK4 is required for modulation of NCC activity by AngII. To demonstrate that WNK4 is required in the AngII-mediated regulation of NCC in vivo, we used a total WNK4-knockout mouse strain (WNK4−/−). WNK4 mRNA and protein expression were absent in WNK4−/− mice, which exhibited a mild Gitelman-like syndrome, with normal blood pressure, increased plasma renin activity, and reduced NCC expression and phosphorylation at T-58. Immunohistochemistry revealed normal morphology of the distal convoluted tubule with reduced NCC expression. Low-salt diet or infusion of AngII for 4 d induced phosphorylation of STE20/SPS1-related proline/alanine-rich kinase (SPAK) and of NCC at S-383 and T-58, respectively, in WNK4+/+ but not WNK4−/− mice. Thus, the absence of WNK4 in vivo precludes NCC and SPAK phosphorylation promoted by a low-salt diet or AngII infusion, suggesting that AngII action on the NCC occurs via a WNK4-SPAK–dependent signaling pathway. Additionally, stimulation of aldosterone secretion by AngII, but not by a high-K+ diet, was impaired in WNK4−/− mice.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Regulation of NKCC2 by a chloride-sensing mechanism involving the WNK3 and SPAK kinases

José Ponce-Coria; Pedro San-Cristobal; Kristopher T. Kahle; Norma Vázquez; Diana Pacheco-Alvarez; Paola de los Heros; Patricia Juárez; Eva Muñoz; Gabriela Michel; Norma A. Bobadilla; Ignacio Gimenez; Richard P. Lifton; Steven C. Hebert; Gerardo Gamba

The Na+:K+:2Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2) is the target of loop diuretics and is mutated in Bartters syndrome, a heterogeneous autosomal recessive disease that impairs salt reabsorption in the kidneys thick ascending limb (TAL). Despite the importance of this cation/chloride cotransporter (CCC), the mechanisms that underlie its regulation are largely unknown. Here, we show that intracellular chloride depletion in Xenopus laevis oocytes, achieved by either coexpression of the K-Cl cotransporter KCC2 or low-chloride hypotonic stress, activates NKCC2 by promoting the phosphorylation of three highly conserved threonines (96, 101, and 111) in the amino terminus. Elimination of these residues renders NKCC2 unresponsive to reductions of [Cl−]i. The chloride-sensitive activation of NKCC2 requires the interaction of two serine-threonine kinases, WNK3 (related to WNK1 and WNK4, genes mutated in a Mendelian form of hypertension) and SPAK (a Ste20-type kinase known to interact with and phosphorylate other CCCs). WNK3 is positioned upstream of SPAK and appears to be the chloride-sensitive kinase. Elimination of WNK3s unique SPAK-binding motif prevents its activation of NKCC2, as does the mutation of threonines 96, 101, and 111. A catalytically inactive WNK3 mutant also completely prevents NKCC2 activation by intracellular chloride depletion. Together these data reveal a chloride-sensing mechanism that regulates NKCC2 and provide insight into how increases in the level of intracellular chloride in TAL cells, as seen in certain pathological states, could drastically impair renal salt reabsorption.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 1998

Role of NO in cyclosporin nephrotoxicity: effects of chronic NO inhibition and NO synthases gene expression

Norma A. Bobadilla; Gerardo Gamba; Edilia Tapia; Romeo García-Torres; Alexis Bolio; Pedro López-Zetina; Jaime Herrera-Acosta

The role of nitric oxide (NO) during cyclosporin renal vasoconstriction was evaluated by glomerular hemodynamic and histological changes produced by chronic NO synthesis inhibition and neuronal (nNOS), inducible (iNOS), and endothelial (eNOS) NO synthases mRNA expression in renal cortex and medulla. Uninephrectomized rats treated during 7 days with vehicle (Veh), cyclosporin A (CsA) 30 mg/kg, CsA + nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME), and Veh +l-NAME (10 mg/dl) in the drinking water were studied. Increase in arterial pressure and afferent and efferent resistances, as well as decrease in glomerular plasma flow, ultrafiltration coefficient, and single-nephron glomerular filtration rate were significantly greater with CsA +l-NAME than with CsA alone. The increase in afferent resistance was higher with CsA +l-NAME than with Veh +l-NAME. In addition, glomerular thrombosis, proximal tubular vacuolization, and arteriolar thickening were more prominent. In renal cortex, eNOS mRNA expression exhibited a 2.7-fold increase in CsA, whereas, in medulla, nNOS and iNOS expression were lower in CsA than in Veh, while eNOS tended to increase. Our results support the hypothesis that NO synthesis is enhanced at cortical level during CsA nephrotoxicity, counterbalancing predominantly preglomerular vasoconstriction. Higher NO production could be the result of increased eNOS mRNA expression.The role of nitric oxide (NO) during cyclosporin renal vasoconstriction was evaluated by glomerular hemodynamic and histological changes produced by chronic NO synthesis inhibition and neuronal (nNOS), inducible (iNOS), and endothelial (eNOS) NO syntheses mRNA expression in renal cortex and medulla. Uninephrectomized rats treated during 7 days with vehicle (Veh), cyclosporin A (CsA) 30 mg/kg, CsA + nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), and Veh + L-NAME (10 mg/dl) in the drinking water were studied. Increase in arterial pressure and afferent and efferent resistances, as well as decrease in glomerular plasma flow, ultrafiltration coefficient, and single-nephron glomerular filtration rate were significantly greater with CsA + L-NAME than with CsA alone. The increase in afferent resistance was higher with CsA + L-NAME than with Veh + L-NAME. In addition, glomerular thrombosis, proximal tubular vacuolization, and arteriolar thickening were more prominent. In renal cortex, eNOS mRNA expression exhibited a 2.7-fold increase in CsA, whereas, in medulla, nNOS and iNOs expression were lower in CsA than in Veh, while eNOS tended to increase. Our results support the hypothesis that NO synthesis is enhanced at cortical level during CsA nephrotoxicity, counterbalancing predominantly preglomerular vasoconstriction. Higher NO production could be the result of increased eNOS mRNA expression.


Kidney International | 2013

Spironolactone prevents chronic kidney disease caused by ischemic acute kidney injury

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Roxana Rodríguez-Romo; Juan Reyna; Norma Uribe; Gerardo Gamba; Norma A. Bobadilla

Acute kidney injury (AKI) has been recognized as a risk factor for the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Aldosterone has a critical role in promoting renal injury induced by ischemia. Here, we evaluated whether spironolactone administered before or after AKI caused by ischemia protects against CKD. In the first set of experiments, Wistar rats underwent a sham operation without or with prior spironolactone treatment, or underwent 45 minutes of bilateral renal ischemia without or with spironolactone treatment before ischemia and assessed over 270 days. The second set of rats received low (20 mg/kg) or high (80 mg/kg) doses of spironolactone at three different times after the sham operation or bilateral renal ischemia and were assessed after 90 days. Untreated animals developed CKD following ischemia-induced AKI as characterized by a progressive increase in proteinuria, renal dysfunction, podocyte injury, glomerular hypertrophy, and focal sclerosis. This was associated with increased oxidative stress, an upregulation of tumor growth factor (TGF)-β, followed by upregulation of the TGF-β downstream effectors phospho-Smad3, collagen I, fibronectin, and proinflammatory cytokines. Treatment with spironolactone either before or after ischemia prevented subsequent CKD by avoiding the activation of fibrotic and inflammatory pathways. Thus, spironolactone may be a promising treatment for the prevention of AKI-induced CKD.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

WNK2 kinase is a novel regulator of essential neuronal cation-chloride cotransporters.

Jesse Rinehart; Norma Vázquez; Kristopher T. Kahle; Caleb A. Hodson; Aaron M. Ring; Erol E. Gulcicek; Angeliki Louvi; Norma A. Bobadilla; Gerardo Gamba; Richard P. Lifton

NKCC1 and KCC2, related cation-chloride cotransporters (CCC), regulate cell volume and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic neurotranmission by modulating the intracellular concentration of chloride [Cl−]. These CCCs are oppositely regulated by serine-threonine phosphorylation, which activates NKCC1 but inhibits KCC2. The kinase(s) that performs this function in the nervous system are not known with certainty. WNK1 and WNK4, members of the WNK (with no lysine [K]) kinase family, either directly or via the downstream SPAK/OSR1 Ste20-type kinases, regulate the furosemide-sensitive NKCC2 and the thiazide-sensitive NCC, kidney-specific CCCs. What role the novel WNK2 kinase plays in this regulatory cascade, if any, is unknown. Here, we show that WNK2, unlike other WNKs, is not expressed in kidney; rather, it is a neuron-enriched kinase primarily expressed in neocortical pyramidal cells, thalamic relay cells, and cerebellar granule and Purkinje cells in both the developing and adult brain. Bumetanide-sensitive and Cl−-dependent 86Rb+ uptake assays in Xenopus laevis oocytes revealed that WNK2 promotes Cl− accumulation by reciprocally activating NKCC1 and inhibiting KCC2 in a kinase-dependent manner, effectively bypassing normal tonicity requirements for cotransporter regulation. TiO2 enrichment and tandem mass spectrometry studies demonstrate WNK2 forms a protein complex in the mammalian brain with SPAK, a known phosphoregulator of NKCC1. In this complex, SPAK is phosphorylated at Ser-383, a consensus WNK recognition site. These findings suggest a role for WNK2 in the regulation of CCCs in the mammalian brain, with implications for both cell volume regulation and/or GABAergic signaling.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

WNK3 and WNK4 amino-terminal domain defines their effect on the renal Na+-Cl− cotransporter

Pedro San-Cristobal; José Ponce-Coria; Norma Vázquez; Norma A. Bobadilla; Gerardo Gamba

Loss of physiological regulation of the renal thiazide-sensitive Na+-Cl- cotransporter (NCC) by mutant WNK1 or WNK4 results in pseudohypoaldosteronism type II (PHAII) characterized by arterial hypertension and hyperkalemia. WNK4 normally inhibits NCC, but this effect is lost by eliminating WNK4 catalytic activity or through PHAII-type mutations. In contrast, another member of the WNK family, WNK3, activates NCC. The positive effect of WNK3 on NCC also requires its catalytic activity. Because the opposite effects of WNK3 and WNK4 on NCC were observed in the same expression system, sequences within the WNKs should endow these kinases with their activating or inhibiting properties. To gain insight into the structure-function relationships between the WNKs and NCC, we used a chimera approach between WNK3 and WNK4 to elucidate the domain of the WNKs responsible for the effects on NCC. Chimeras were constructed by swapping the amino or carboxyl terminus domains, which flank the central kinase domain, between WNK3 and WNK4. Our results show that the effect of chimeras toward NCC follows the amino-terminal domain. Thus the amino terminus of the WNKs contains the sequences that are required for their activating or inhibiting properties on NCC.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2011

Hsp72 is an early and sensitive biomarker to detect acute kidney injury

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Cesar Cortés-González; Marcos Ojeda-Cervantes; Gerardo Gamba; Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro; Norma A. Bobadilla

This study was designed to assess whether heat shock protein Hsp72 is an early and sensitive biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI) as well as to monitor a renoprotective strategy. Seventy‐two Wistar rats were divided into six groups: sham‐operated and rats subjected to 10, 20, 30, 45 and 60 min of bilateral ischemia (I) and 24 h of reperfusion (R). Different times of reperfusion (3, 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 48, 72, 96 and 120 h) were also evaluated in 30 other rats subjected to 30 min of ischemia. Hsp72 messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein levels were determined in both kidney and urine. Hsp72‐specificity as a biomarker to assess the success of a renoprotective intervention was evaluated in rats treated with different doses of spironolactone before I/R. Renal Hsp72 mRNA and protein, as well as urinary Hsp72 levels, gradually increased relative to the extent of renal injury induced by different periods of ischemia quantified by histomorphometry as a benchmark of kidney damage. Urinary Hsp72 increased significantly after 3 h and continued rising until 18 h, followed by restoration after 120 h of reperfusion in accord with histopathological findings. Spironolactone renoprotection was associated with normalization of urinary Hsp72 levels. Accordingly, urinary Hsp72 was significantly increased in patients with clinical AKI before serum creatinine elevation. Our results show that urinary Hsp72 is a useful biomarker for early detection and stratification of AKI. In addition, urinary Hsp72 levels are sensitive enough to monitor therapeutic interventions and the degree of tubular recovery following an I/R insult.

Collaboration


Dive into the Norma A. Bobadilla's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerardo Gamba

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Norma Vázquez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Victoria Ramírez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rosalba Pérez-Villalva

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cristino Cruz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Norma Uribe

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joyce Trujillo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge