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Dive into the research topics where Seth Rivera is active.

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Featured researches published by Seth Rivera.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

IL-6 mediates hypoferremia of inflammation by inducing the synthesis of the iron regulatory hormone hepcidin

Elizabeta Nemeth; Seth Rivera; Victoria Gabayan; Charlotte Keller; Sarah Taudorf; Bente Klarlund Pedersen; Tomas Ganz

Hypoferremia is a common response to systemic infections or generalized inflammatory disorders. In mouse models, the development of hypoferremia during inflammation requires hepcidin, an iron regulatory peptide hormone produced in the liver, but the inflammatory signals that regulate hepcidin are largely unknown. Our studies in human liver cell cultures, mice, and human volunteers indicate that IL-6 is the necessary and sufficient cytokine for the induction of hepcidin during inflammation and that the IL-6-hepcidin axis is responsible for the hypoferremia of inflammation.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2009

Hepcidin - A potential novel biomarker for iron status in chronic kidney disease

Joshua J. Zaritsky; Brian Young; He-Jing Wang; Mark Westerman; Gordana Olbina; Elizabeta Nemeth; Tomas Ganz; Seth Rivera; Allen R. Nissenson; Isidro B. Salusky

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Hepcidin is a key regulator of iron homeostasis, but its study in the setting of chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been hampered by the lack of validated serum assays. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS This study reports the first measurements of bioactive serum hepcidin using a novel competitive ELISA in 48 pediatric (PCKD2-4) and 32 adult (ACKD2-4) patients with stages 2 to 4 CKD along with 26 pediatric patients with stage 5 CKD (PCKD5D) on peritoneal dialysis. RESULTS When compared with their respective controls (pediatric median = 25.3 ng/ml, adult = 72.9 ng/ml), hepcidin was significantly increased in PCKD2-4 (127.3 ng/ml), ACKD2-4 (269.9 ng/ml), and PCKD5D (652.4 ng/ml). Multivariate regression analysis was used to assess the relationship between hepcidin and indicators of anemia, iron status, inflammation, and renal function. In PCKD2-4 (R(2) = 0.57), only ferritin correlated with hepcidin. In ACKD2-4 (R(2) = 0.78), ferritin and soluble transferrin receptor were associated with hepcidin, whereas GFR was inversely correlated. In PCKD5D (R(2) = 0.52), percent iron saturation and ferritin were predictors of hepcidin. In a multivariate analysis that incorporated all three groups (R(2) = 0.6), hepcidin was predicted by ferritin, C-reactive protein, and whether the patient had stage 5D versus stages 2 to 4 CKD. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that increased hepcidin across the spectrum of CKD may contribute to abnormal iron regulation and erythropoiesis and may be a novel biomarker of iron status and erythropoietin resistance.


Blood | 2010

In anemia of multiple myeloma, hepcidin is induced by increased bone morphogenetic protein 2

Ken Maes; Elizabeta Nemeth; G. David Roodman; Alissa Huston; Flavia Esteve; Cesar O. Freytes; Natalie S. Callander; Eirini Katodritou; Lisa Tussing-Humphreys; Seth Rivera; Karin Vanderkerken; Alan Lichtenstein; Tomas Ganz

Hepcidin is the principal iron-regulatory hormone and a pathogenic factor in anemia of inflammation. Patients with multiple myeloma (MM) frequently present with anemia. We showed that MM patients had increased serum hepcidin, which inversely correlated with hemoglobin, suggesting that hepcidin contributes to MM-related anemia. Searching for hepcidin-inducing cytokines in MM, we quantified the stimulation of hepcidin promoter-luciferase activity in HuH7 cells by MM sera. MM sera activated the hepcidin promoter significantly more than did normal sera. We then examined the role of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and interleukin-6 (IL-6), the major transcriptional regulators of hepcidin. Mutations in both BMP-responsive elements abrogated the activation dramatically, while mutations in the IL-6-responsive signal transducer and activator of transcription 3-binding site (STAT3-BS) had only a minor effect. Cotreatment with anti-BMP-2/4 or noggin-Fc blocked the promoter induction with all MM sera, anti-IL-6 blocked it with a minority of sera, whereas anti-BMP-4, -6, or -9 antibodies had no effect. BMP-2-immunodepleted MM sera had decreased promoter stimulatory capacity, and BMP-2 concentrations in MM sera were significantly higher than in normal sera. Our results demonstrate that BMP-2 is a major mediator of the hepcidin stimulatory activity of MM sera.


Seminars in Hematology | 2009

Animal Models of Anemia of Inflammation

Seth Rivera; Tomas Ganz

Anemia of inflammation (AI) is a complex multi-organ response to inflammatory disorders. Because AI can result from many infectious and non-infectious inflammatory diseases, multiple mechanisms may contribute to its pathogenesis, including iron restriction, direct erythropoietic suppression, shortened red blood cell survival, and frank hemolysis. Animal models have been helpful in the study of the mechanisms of AI and its potential treatments, but each model reflects distinct aspects of this heterogeneous syndrome. It is therefore important to study a variety of models of AI. This review focuses on the use of infectious and noninfectious mouse models of inflammation that have been shown to manifest anemia. We review many of the models reported in the literature or developed in our laboratory, and discuss their respective merits and drawbacks.


Haematologica | 2013

Investigation of the role of interleukin-6 and hepcidin antimicrobial peptide in the development of anemia with age

Bryan J. McCranor; Jacqueline M. Langdon; Olivier D. Prince; Laurette K. Femnou; Alan E. Berger; Chris Cheadle; Curt I. Civin; Airie Kim; Seth Rivera; Tomas Ganz; Sophie Vaulont; Qian Li Xue; Jeremy D. Walston; Cindy N. Roy

Anemia is common in older adults and associated with adverse health outcomes in epidemiological studies. A thorough understanding of the complex pathophysiological mechanisms driving anemia in the elderly is lacking; but inflammation, iron restriction, and impaired erythroid maturation are thought to influence the phenotype. We hypothesized that interleukin-6 contributes to this anemia, given its pro-inflammatory activities, its ability to induce hepcidin antimicrobial peptide, and its negative impact on several tissues in older adults. We tested this hypothesis by comparing changes in indices of inflammation, iron metabolism and erythropoiesis in aged C57BL/6 mice to aged mice with targeted deletions of interleukin-6 or hepcidin antimicrobial peptide. Circulating neutrophil and monocyte numbers and inflammatory cytokines increased with age. Decline in hemoglobin concentration and red blood cell number indicated that C57BL/6, interleukin-6 knockout mice, and hepcidin antimicrobial peptide knockout mice all demonstrated impaired erythropoiesis by 24 months. However, the interleukin-6 knock out genotype and the hepcidin antimicrobial peptide knock out genotype resulted in improved erythropoiesis in aged mice. Increased erythropoietic activity in the spleen suggested that the erythroid compartment was stressed in aged C57BL/6 mice compared to aged interleukin-6 knockout mice. Our data suggest C57BL/6 mice are an appropriate mammalian model for the study of anemia with age. Furthermore, although interleukin-6 and hepcidin antimicrobial peptide are not required, they can participate in the development of anemia in aging mice, and could be targeted, pre-clinically, with existing interventions to determine the feasibility of such agents for the treatment of anemia in older adults.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Mouse Models of Anemia of Cancer

Airie Kim; Seth Rivera; Dana Shprung; Donald Limbrick; Victoria Gabayan; Elizabeta Nemeth; Tomas Ganz

Anemia of cancer (AC) may contribute to cancer-related fatigue and impair quality of life. Improved understanding of the pathogenesis of AC could facilitate better treatment, but animal models to study AC are lacking. We characterized four syngeneic C57BL/6 mouse cancers that cause AC. Mice with two different rapidly-growing metastatic lung cancers developed the characteristic findings of anemia of inflammation (AI), with dramatically different degrees of anemia. Mice with rapidly-growing metastatic melanoma also developed a severe anemia by 14 days, with hematologic and inflammatory parameters similar to AI. Mice with a slow-growing peritoneal ovarian cancer developed an iron-deficiency anemia, likely secondary to chronically impaired nutrition and bleeding into the peritoneal cavity. Of the four models, hepcidin mRNA levels were increased only in the milder lung cancer model. Unlike in our model of systemic inflammation induced by heat-killed Brucella abortus, ablation of hepcidin in the ovarian cancer and the milder lung cancer mouse models did not affect the severity of anemia. Hepcidin-independent mechanisms play an important role in these murine models of AC.


Blood | 2006

Suppression of hepcidin during anemia requires erythropoietic activity

Mihwa Pak; Miguel Lopez; Victroia Gabayan; Tomas Ganz; Seth Rivera


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Interleukin-6 regulates the zinc transporter Zip14 in liver and contributes to the hypozincemia of the acute-phase response

Louis A. Lichten; Seth Rivera; Raymond K. Blanchard; Tolunay Beker Aydemir; Mitchell D. Knutson; Tomas Ganz; Robert J. Cousins


Blood | 2005

Synthetic hepcidin causes rapid dose-dependent hypoferremia and is concentrated in ferroportin-containing organs

Seth Rivera; Elizabeta Nemeth; Victoria Gabayan; Miguel Lopez; Dina Farshidi; Tomas Ganz


Blood | 2005

Hepcidin excess induces the sequestration of iron and exacerbates tumor-associated anemia

Seth Rivera; Lide Liu; Elizabeta Nemeth; Victoria Gabayan; Ole E. Sørensen; Tomas Ganz

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Tomas Ganz

University of California

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Alice Yu

University of California

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Mihwa Pak

University of California

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Airie Kim

University of California

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Dana Shprung

University of California

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