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Deborah Simon Kelly

Verified

University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine

Active 1966–2024

h-index120
Citations57.3k
Papers43385 last 5y
Funding$84.6M2 active
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Research topics

  • Endocrinology
  • Cell biology
  • Biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Internal medicine
  • Medicine
  • Intensive care medicine
  • Bioinformatics

Selected publications

  • Circadian REV-ERBs repress E4bp4 to activate NAMPT-dependent NAD+ biosynthesis and sustain cardiac function

    Nature Cardiovascular Research · 2021 · 66 citations

    • Biology
    • Cell biology
    • Biochemistry
  • Therapeutic Potential of Ketone Bodies for Patients With Cardiovascular Disease

    Journal of the American College of Cardiology · 2021 · 212 citations

    • Medicine
    • Bioinformatics
    • Intensive care medicine

    Metabolic perturbations underlie a variety of cardiovascular disease states; yet, metabolic interventions to prevent or treat these disorders are sparse. Ketones carry a negative clinical stigma as they are involved in diabetic ketoacidosis. However, evidence from both experimental and clinical research has uncovered a protective role for ketones in cardiovascular disease. Although ketones may provide supplemental fuel for the energy-starved heart, their cardiovascular effects appear to extend far beyond cardiac energetics. Indeed, ketone bodies have been shown to influence a variety of cellular processes including gene transcription, inflammation and oxidative stress, endothelial function, cardiac remodeling, and cardiovascular risk factors. This paper reviews the bioenergetic and pleiotropic effects of ketone bodies that could potentially contribute to its cardiovascular benefits based on evidence from animal and human studies.

  • Implications of Altered Ketone Metabolism and Therapeutic Ketosis in Heart Failure

    Circulation · 2020 · 195 citations

    • Medicine
    • Internal medicine
    • Endocrinology

    Despite existing therapy, patients with heart failure (HF) experience substantial morbidity and mortality, highlighting the urgent need to identify novel pathophysiological mechanisms and therapies, as well. Traditional models for pharmacological intervention have targeted neurohormonal axes and hemodynamic disturbances in HF. However, several studies have now highlighted the potential for ketone metabolic modulation as a promising treatment paradigm. During the pathophysiological progression of HF, the failing heart reduces fatty acid and glucose oxidation, with associated increases in ketone metabolism. Recent studies indicate that enhanced myocardial ketone use is adaptive in HF, and limited data demonstrate beneficial effects of exogenous ketone therapy in studies of animal models and humans with HF. This review will summarize current evidence supporting a salutary role for ketones in HF including (1) normal myocardial ketone use, (2) alterations in ketone metabolism in the failing heart, (3) effects of therapeutic ketosis in animals and humans with HF, and (4) the potential significance of ketosis associated with sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors. Although a number of important questions remain regarding the use of therapeutic ketosis and mechanism of action in HF, current evidence suggests potential benefit, in particular, in HF with reduced ejection fraction, with theoretical rationale for its use in HF with preserved ejection fraction. Although it is early in its study and development, therapeutic ketosis across the spectrum of HF holds significant promise.

  • Extreme Acetylation of the Cardiac Mitochondrial Proteome Does Not Promote Heart Failure

    Circulation Research · 2020 · 78 citations

    • Biology
    • Cell biology
    • Biochemistry

    RATIONALE: Circumstantial evidence links the development of heart failure to posttranslational modifications of mitochondrial proteins, including lysine acetylation (Kac). Nonetheless, direct evidence that Kac compromises mitochondrial performance remains sparse. OBJECTIVE: This study sought to explore the premise that mitochondrial Kac contributes to heart failure by disrupting oxidative metabolism. METHODS AND RESULTS: A DKO (dual knockout) mouse line with deficiencies in CrAT (carnitine acetyltransferase) and Sirt3 (sirtuin 3)-enzymes that oppose Kac by buffering the acetyl group pool and catalyzing lysine deacetylation, respectively-was developed to model extreme mitochondrial Kac in cardiac muscle, as confirmed by quantitative acetyl-proteomics. The resulting impact on mitochondrial bioenergetics was evaluated using a respiratory diagnostics platform that permits comprehensive assessment of mitochondrial function and energy transduction. Susceptibility of DKO mice to heart failure was investigated using transaortic constriction as a model of cardiac pressure overload. The mitochondrial acetyl-lysine landscape of DKO hearts was elevated well beyond that observed in response to pressure overload or Sirt3 deficiency alone. Relative changes in the abundance of specific acetylated lysine peptides measured in DKO versus Sirt3 KO hearts were strongly correlated. A proteomics comparison across multiple settings of hyperacetylation revealed ≈86% overlap between the populations of Kac peptides affected by the DKO manipulation as compared with experimental heart failure. Despite the severity of cardiac Kac in DKO mice relative to other conditions, deep phenotyping of mitochondrial function revealed a surprisingly normal bioenergetics profile. Thus, of the >120 mitochondrial energy fluxes evaluated, including substrate-specific dehydrogenase activities, respiratory responses, redox charge, mitochondrial membrane potential, and electron leak, we found minimal evidence of oxidative insufficiencies. Similarly, DKO hearts were not more vulnerable to dysfunction caused by transaortic constriction-induced pressure overload. CONCLUSIONS: The findings challenge the premise that hyperacetylation per se threatens metabolic resilience in the myocardium by causing broad-ranging disruption to mitochondrial oxidative machinery.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Deborah M. Muoio

    Duke University

    253 shared
  • Teresa C. Leone

    University of Pennsylvania

    209 shared
  • Rick B. Vega

    AstraZeneca (United States)

    171 shared
  • Ling‐Ping Lai

    National Taiwan University Hospital

    162 shared
  • Åsa B. Gustafsson

    University of California, San Diego

    157 shared
  • Lisa Schwartz Longacre

    National Heart Lung and Blood Institute

    123 shared
  • Renee Wong

    National Institutes of Health

    123 shared
  • Donald M. Bers

    123 shared
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