Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Whitney L Breslin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Whitney L Breslin.


Pediatrics | 2012

Obese Mexican American Children Have Elevated MCP-1, TNF-α, Monocyte Concentration, and Dyslipidemia

Whitney L Breslin; Craig A. Johnston; Kelley Strohacker; Katie C. Carpenter; Tiffany Davidson; Jennette P. Moreno; John P. Foreyt; Brian K. McFarlin

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Obesity is an independent risk factor for chronic disease. The prevalence of obesity is especially high among Mexican American children. Peripheral blood monocytes are altered with obesity contributing to elevated systemic inflammation and increased risk of chronic disease. In addition, obesity alters the circulating levels of cytokines/chemokines that influence monocyte behavior. The study objective was to investigate alterations in blood monocytes and plasma cytokines/chemokine levels among healthy weight (standardized BMI [zBMI] ≤85th percentile; n = 66), overweight (zBMI 85th–95th percentile; n = 23), and obese (zBMI ≥95th percentile; n = 39) Mexican American children. METHODS: Blood samples were analyzed for total and subset monocyte concentration via flow cytometry. Serum monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), fractalkine, interleukin-8, and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) were measured by using a Milliplex MagPix assay. Serum cholesterol, high-density lipoproteins, triglycerides, and glucose were measured by using an enzymatic assay. RESULTS: Total monocyte concentration (P = .012), classic monocyte concentration (P = .045), MCP-1 (P = .015), and TNF-α (P = .002) were significantly greater in obese children compared with healthy weight children. Also, overweight and obese children had elevated triglycerides (P = .001) and reduced high-density lipoproteins (P = .033) compared with healthy weight children. CONCLUSIONS: Childhood obesity alters monocytes and circulating chemokines, putting children at a greater risk of developing obesity-related chronic diseases in adulthood. Further characterization of early immune alterations in childhood obesity may provide additional clinical insight into the assessment of obesity-related disease risk.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2013

Baker's yeast β-glucan supplementation increases monocytes and cytokines post-exercise: implications for infection risk?

Katie C. Carpenter; Whitney L Breslin; Tiffany Davidson; A. Adams; Brian K. McFarlin

Strenuous aerobic exercise is known to weaken the immune system, and while many nutritional supplements have been proposed to boost post-exercise immunity, few are known to be effective. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate whether 10 d of supplementation with a defined source of bakers yeast β-glucan (BG, Wellmune WGP®) could minimise post-exercise immunosuppression. Recreationally active men and women (n 60) completed two 10 d trial conditions using a cross-over design with a 7 d washout period: placebo (rice flour) and bakers yeast BG (250 mg/d of β-1,3/1,6-glucans derived from Saccharomyces cerevisiae) before a bout of cycling (49 ± 6 min) in a hot (38 ± 2°C), humid (45 ± 2 % relative humidity) environment. Blood was collected at baseline (before supplement), pre- (PRE), post- (POST) and 2 h (2H) post-exercise. Total and subset monocyte concentration was measured by four-colour flow cytometry. Plasma cytokine levels and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated cytokine production were measured using separate multiplex assays. Total (CD14⁺) and pro-inflammatory monocyte concentrations (CD14⁺/CD16⁺) were significantly greater at POST and 2H (P<0·05) with BG supplementation. BG supplementation boosted LPS-stimulated production of IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) at PRE and POST (P<0·05). Plasma IL-4, IL-5 and IFN-γ concentrations were greater at 2H following BG supplementation. It appears that 10 d of supplementation with BG increased the potential of blood leucocytes for the production of IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and IFN-γ. The key findings of the present study demonstrate that BG may have potential to alter immunity following a strenuous exercise session.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2013

Mouse blood monocytes: standardizing their identification and analysis using CD115.

Whitney L Breslin; Kelley Strohacker; Katie C. Carpenter; D.L. Haviland; Brian K. McFarlin

Monocytes have been used to assess immune dysfunction and disease. While mouse models are a useful longitudinal analog, few researchers have assessed changes in mouse monocytes. The purpose of this study was to provide recommendations for the sample processing and flow cytometric analysis of mouse blood monocytes. Blood was drawn in a non-lethal manner from CD-1 male mice to be used in three experiments. Experiment 1 compared commonly used mouse monocyte markers. Experiment 2 compared the stability of CD115 expression after immediate (0h) and delayed (2 and 4h) processing following blood collection under various experimental conditions (laser strength, anticoagulant, and storage temp.). Experiment 3 compared the consistency of CD115(+) monocyte and subset concentrations using decreasing (40, 20, 10 and 5μL) volumes of blood. In experiment 1, >95% of CD115(+) events co-expressed CD11b; >85% co-expressed CD14. 70% of CD14(+) and 50% of CD11b(+) events co-expressed CD115. In experiment 2, CD115 expression decreased by 33% between 0 and 4h when stored at room temperature. Blood treated with EDTA and refrigerated maintained CD115 stability. In experiment 3, calculated concentrations for total monocyte events varied by <10% when 40, 20 and 10μL of blood were stained. While CD115 staining provides the most distinct monocyte population, it is important to treat blood with EDTA and refrigerate if sample processing will be delayed over 2h. Collectively, the findings of the present study outline important considerations that must be addressed when examining mouse monocytes in small, non-lethal blood samples.


Maternal and Child Nutrition | 2013

A one-year school-based diet/exercise intervention improves non-traditional disease biomarkers in Mexican-American children.

Brian K. McFarlin; Craig Johnston; Katie C. Carpenter; Tiffany Davidson; Jennette Moreno; Kelley Strohacker; Whitney L Breslin; John P. Foreyt

School-based interventions are an effective way to treat childhood obesity. The purpose of the present study was to biologically validate an established school-based intervention designed to reduce standardised body mass index (zBMI) over a period of 12 months. This intervention focused on a subset of Mexican-American children who were participating in a larger clinical weight loss study. Plasma samples were analysed from self-identified Mexican-American children (12-14 years) who were randomised to either a school-based intervention (IN, n = 152) or self-help control (CN, n = 69). Treatment was 4 days week⁻¹ of exercise (45 min day⁻¹) and 1 day week⁻¹ of nutritional counselling for 6 months. Fasting (>8 h) blood samples were collected at baseline, 6 months (end of active intervention) and 12 months (6 months after the end of the active intervention). Plasma resistin, adiponectin and leptin concentration were measured using a multiplex assay. Separate linear mixed models and a P < 0.05 were used to test for significance. Significant group × time interactions were found for resistin (P < 0.0001), adiponectin (P = 0.001) and leptin (P = 0.013). For resistin, IN was 12% lower at 6 months than CN. Adiponectin concentration in IN was greater at 6 months (26%) and 12 months (8%) than CN. Leptin concentration was 22% lower for IN at 12 months than CN. We have previously reported that our school-based intervention reduced zBMI and now reported alterations in biologically relevant disease biomarkers. Some of the observed changes were only present at the end of the active intervention (resistin), while others persisted until 12 months (leptin and adiponectin). These changes underscore the effectiveness of our school-based intervention at not only improving zBMI but also at reducing disease risk.


Journal of Biosciences | 2012

Aged mice have increased inflammatory monocyte concentration and altered expression of cell-surface functional receptors

Kelley Strohacker; Whitney L Breslin; Katie C. Carpenter; Brian K. McFarlin

The expression of monocyte cell-surface receptors represents one index of immune dysfunction, which is common with aging. Although mouse models of aging are prevalent, monocyte subset assessment is rare. Our purpose was to compare cell receptor expression on classic (CD115+/Gr-1high) and non-classic (CD115+/Gr-1low) monocytes from 80- or 20-week-old CD-1 mice. Three-colour flow cytometry was used to determine the concentration of monocyte subsets and their respective cell-surface expression of TLR2, TLR4, CD80, CD86, MHC II and CD54. These receptors were selected because they have been previously associated with altered monocyte function. Data were analysed with independent t-tests; significance was set at P < 0.05. Old mice had a greater concentration of both classic (258%, P = 0.003) and non-classic (70%, P = 0.026) monocytes. The classic : non-classic monocyte ratio doubled in old as compared with that in young mice (P = 0.006), indicating a pro-inflammatory shift. TLR4 (↓27%, P = 0.001) and CD80 (↓37%, P = 0.004) were decreased on classic monocytes from old as compared with those from young mice. TLR2 (↑24%, P = 0.002) and MHCII (↓21%, P = 0.026) were altered on non-classic monocytes from old as compared with those from young mice. The increased classic : non-classic monocyte ratio combined with changes in the cell-surface receptor expression on both monocyte subsets is indicative of immune dysfunction, which may increase age-associated disease risk.


Laboratory Animals | 2010

Weight gain in response to high-fat feeding in CD-1 male mice.

Whitney L Breslin; Kelley Strohacker; Katie C. Carpenter; Lisa M. Esposito; Brian K. McFarlin

The purpose of this study was to compare weight gain and food intake during high-fat feeding in outbred CD-1 male mice while considering several different experimental designs. This study was completed using data from three separate experiments and was designed to address different experimental design issues. Experiment 1 compared mice housed in groups or singly. Experiment 2 compared adolescent and young adult mice. Experiment 3 examined mice that had been previously exercise-trained prior to diet-induced weight gain. Data from each experiment were analysed using repeated measures analysis of variance and linear regression. While housing and age did not significantly affect weight gain, mice that were previously exercise-trained consumed significantly more kilocalories than sedentary mice while maintaining comparable body weights. We generated a linear prediction model using data from Experiments 1 and 2 that will allow investigators to calculate the weeks of high-fat feeding needed to reach a target body weight. Our key findings characterize the issues related to and affecting experimental design when utilizing an outbred mouse diet-induced weight gain model and will serve as a guide for future researchers.


Preventive medicine reports | 2015

The use of periodization in exercise prescriptions for inactive adults: A systematic review

Kelley Strohacker; Daniel Fazzino; Whitney L Breslin; Xiaomeng Xu

Background Periodization of exercise is a method typically used in sports training, but the impact of periodized exercise on health outcomes in untrained adults is unclear. Purpose This review aims to summarize existing research wherein aerobic or resistance exercise was prescribed to inactive adults using a recognized periodization method. Methods A search of relevant databases, conducted between January and February of 2014, yielded 21 studies published between 2000 and 2013 that assessed the impact of periodized exercise on health outcomes in untrained participants. Results Substantial heterogeneity existed between studies, even under the same periodization method. Compared to baseline values or non-training control groups, prescribing periodized resistance or aerobic exercise yielded significant improvements in health outcomes related to traditional and emerging risk factors for cardiovascular disease, low-back and neck/shoulder pain, disease severity, and quality of life, with mixed results for increasing bone mineral density. Conclusions Although it is premature to conclude that periodized exercise is superior to non-periodized exercise for improving health outcomes, periodization appears to be a feasible means of prescribing exercise to inactive adults within an intervention setting. Further research is necessary to understand the effectiveness of periodizing aerobic exercise, the psychological effects of periodization, and the feasibility of implementing flexible non-linear methods.


Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism | 2012

Moderate-intensity, premeal cycling blunts postprandial increases in monocyte cell surface CD18 and CD11a and endothelial microparticles following a high-fat meal in young adults

Kelley Strohacker; Whitney L Breslin; Katie C. Carpenter; Tiffany Davidson; Nadia Agha; Brian K. McFarlin


Comparative Medicine | 2012

Effects of Exercise on Weight Loss and Monocytes in Obese Mice

Katie C. Carpenter; Kelley Strohacker; Whitney L Breslin; Thomas Lowder; Nadia Agha; Brian K. McFarlin


Comparative Medicine | 2012

Comparison of blood monocytes and adipose tissue macrophages in a mouse model diet-induced weight gain.

Brian K. McFarlin; Katie C. Carpenter; Kelley Strohacker; Whitney L Breslin

Collaboration


Dive into the Whitney L Breslin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John P. Foreyt

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennette P. Moreno

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge