Oliver Smithies

Personal Information
Title Professor
Expertise Nephropathy
Institution University of North Carolina
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Grants/SubContracts 1
Progress Reports 1
Publications 12
Protocols 0
Committees 2

Molecular events during progression from microalbuminuria to diabetic nephropathy
Abstract The occurrence of microalbuminuria in diabetic individuals is a well established risk factor for subsequent progression to nephropathy. Interrupting or reversing this progression is the aim of clinicians who care for diabetic patients. Yet, at the subcellular and molecular levels, there is a clear gap in our understanding of this progression. I have two tools that put me in a unique position to fill this gap. The first tool is the superb and diverse collection of well-characterized diabetic mice developed by the AMDCC, some of which undergo the progression from microalbuminuria to diabetic nephropathy (DN). The second tool, developed by my group under an R21 grant, is a diverse collection of gold nanoparticles and fluorescent proteins, with molecular sizes covering the range of plasma proteins, which are directly visible by electron and confocal microscopy as they enter and traverse the kidney. Specific Aim 1 will take advantage of these tools to determine the degree to which the progression from microalbuminuria to overt albuminuria is the consequence of deterioration in the glomerular filtration barrier, as judged by changes in the ability of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) to exclude molecules in a graded manner inversely related to their size. Specific Aim 2 will likewise determine the degree to which the progression is consequence of deterioration in tubular function, as judged by changes in the removal of macromolecules from the tubular fluid. We expect to obtain sufficient knowledge from our proposed pilot study to be able to assess the feasibility of applying the same procedures to evaluate the efficacy of new pharmaceutical interventions aimed at preventing or reversing the devastating progression of nephropathy that so frequently occurs in diabetics who develop microalbuminuria.

Progress Reports

Annual Reports
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 PublicationAltmetricsSubmitted ByPubMed IDStatus

Year: 2011; Items: 1

 
A modest decrease in endothelial NOS in mice comparable to that associated with human NOS3 variants exacerbates diabetic nephropathy.
Wang CH, Li F, Hiller S, Kim HS, Maeda N, Smithies O, Takahashi N
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2011 (108), 2070 - 2075
21245338
Published

Year: 2010; Items: 5

 
Diabetes regulates mitochondrial biogenesis and fission in mouse neurons.
Edwards JL, Quattrini A, Lentz SI, Figueroa-Romero C, Cerri F, Backus C, Hong Y, Feldman EL
Diabetologia, 2010 (53(1)), 160 - 169
19847394
Published
 
Abnormalities in signaling pathways in diabetic nephropathy.
Brosius FC, Khoury CC, Buller CL, Chen S
Expert review of endocrinology & metabolism, 2010 (5(1)), 51 - 64
20224802
Published
 
Lack of both bradykinin B1 and B2 receptors enhances nephropathy, neuropathy, and bone mineral loss in Akita diabetic mice.
Kakoki M, Sullivan KA, Backus C, Hayes JM, Oh SS, Hua K, Gasim AM, Tomita H, Grant R, Nossov SB, Kim HS, Jennette JC, Feldman EL, Smithies O
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2010 (107), 10190 - 10195
20479236
Published
 
Loss of bradykinin signaling does not accelerate the development of cardiac dysfunction in type 1 diabetic akita mice.
Wende AR, Soto J, Olsen CD, Pires KM, Schell JC, Larrieu-Lahargue F, Litwin SE, Kakoki M, Takahashi N, Smithies O, Abel ED
Endocrinology, 2010 (151), 3536 - 3542
20501666
Published
 
Elevated tissue factor expression contributes to exacerbated diabetic nephropathy in mice lacking eNOS fed a high fat diet
F . L I , C.-H. WANG, J .-G. WANG, T. THAI , G. BOYSEN, L . XU, A. L . TURNER, A. S . WOLBERG, N. MACKMAN, N. MAEDA and N. TAKAHASHI
Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis : JTH, 2010 (8), 2122 - 2132
20626618
Published

Year: 2009; Items: 2

 
Moderate exercise attenuates caspase-3 activity, oxidative stress, and inhibits progression of diabetic renal disease in db/db mice.
Ghosh S, Khazaei M, Moien-Afshari F, Ang LS, Granville DJ, Verchere CB, Dunn SR, McCue P, Mizisin A, Sharma K, Laher I
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, 2009 (296(4)), F700 - F708
19144689
Published
 
The kallikrein-kinin system in health and in diseases of the kidney
Kakoki M, Smithies O
Kidney international, 2009
19190676
Published

Year: 2007; Items: 2

 
Tandem mass spectrometry measurements of creatinine in mouse plasma and urine for determining glomerular filtration rate
Takahashi N, Boysen G, Li F, Li Y, Swenberg JA
Kidney international, 2007 (71), 266 - 271
17149371
Published
 
Bradykinin B1 and B2 receptors both have protective roles in renal ischemia/reperfusion injury
Kakoki M, McGarrah RW, Kim H-S, Smithies O
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2007 (104), 7576 - 7581
17452647
Published

Year: 2006; Items: 1

 
Senescence-associated phenotypes in Akita diabetic mice are enhanced by absence of bradykinin B2 receptors
Kakoki M, Kizer CM, Yi X, Takahashi N, Kim H-S, Bagnell CR, Edgell CJS, Maeda N, Jennette JC, Smithies O
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2006 (116), 1302 - 1309
16604193
Published

Year: 2004; Items: 1

 
Diabetic nephropathy is markedly enhanced in mice lacking the bradykinin B2 receptor.
Kakoki M, Takahashi N, Jennette JC, Smithies O
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2004 (101), 13302 - 13305
15326315
Published
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