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Dive into the research topics where Alison Homstad is active.

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Featured researches published by Alison Homstad.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

TRPC6 enhances angiotensin II-induced albuminuria.

Jason Eckel; Peter Lavin; Elizabeth A. Finch; Nirvan Mukerji; Jarrett Burch; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Brandy L. Bowling; Alison Byrd; Gentzon Hall; Matthew A. Sparks; Zhu Shan Zhang; Alison Homstad; Laura Barisoni; Lutz Birbaumer; Paul B. Rosenberg; Michelle P. Winn

Mutations in the canonical transient receptor potential cation channel 6 (TRPC6) are responsible for familial forms of adult onset focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). The mechanisms by which TRPC6 mutations cause kidney disease are not well understood. We used TRPC6-deficient mice to examine the function of TRPC6 in the kidney. We found that adult TRPC6-deficient mice had BP and albumin excretion rates similar to wild-type animals. Glomerular histomorphology revealed no abnormalities on both light and electron microscopy. To determine whether the absence of TRPC6 would alter susceptibility to hypertension and renal injury, we infused mice with angiotensin II continuously for 28 days. Although both groups developed similar levels of hypertension, TRPC6-deficient mice had significantly less albuminuria, especially during the early phase of the infusion; this suggested that TRPC6 adversely influences the glomerular filter. We used whole-cell patch-clamp recording to measure cell-membrane currents in primary cultures of podocytes from both wild-type and TRPC6-deficient mice. In podocytes from wild-type mice, angiotensin II and a direct activator of TRPC6 both augmented cell-membrane currents; TRPC6 deficiency abrogated these increases in current magnitude. Our findings suggest that TRPC6 promotes albuminuria, perhaps by promoting angiotensin II-dependent increases in Ca(2+), suggesting that TRPC6 blockade may be therapeutically beneficial in proteinuric kidney disease.


Kidney International | 2014

Rare hereditary COL4A3/COL4A4 variants may be mistaken for familial focal segmental glomerulosclerosis.

Andrew F. Malone; Paul J. Phelan; Gentzon Hall; Umran Cetincelik; Alison Homstad; Andrea S. Alonso; Thomas Lindsey; Matthew A. Sparks; Stephen R. Smith; Nicholas J. A. Webb; Philip A. Kalra; Adebowale Adeyemo; Andrey S. Shaw; Peter J. Conlon; J. Charles Jennette; David N. Howell; Michelle P. Winn; Rasheed Gbadegesin

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a histological lesion with many causes including inherited genetic defects with significant proteinuria being the predominant clinical finding at presentation. Mutations in COL4A3 and COL4A4 are known to cause Alport syndrome, thin basement membrane nephropathy, and to result in pathognomonic glomerular basement membrane findings. Secondary FSGS is known to develop in classic Alport Syndrome at later stages of the disease. Here, we present seven families with rare or novel variants in COL4A3 or COL4A4 (six with single and one with two heterozygous variants) from a cohort of 70 families with a diagnosis of hereditary FSGS. The predominant clinical findings at diagnosis were proteinuria associated with hematuria. In all seven families, there were individuals with nephrotic range proteinuria with histologic features of FSGS by light microscopy. In one family, electron microscopy showed thin glomerular basement membrane, but four other families had variable findings inconsistent with classical Alport nephritis. There was no recurrence of disease after kidney transplantation. Families with COL4A3 and COL4A4 variants that segregated with disease represent 10% of our cohort. Thus, COL4A3 and COL4A4 variants should be considered in the interpretation of next-generation sequencing data from such patients. Furthermore, this study illustrates the power of molecular genetic diagnostics in the clarification of renal phenotypes.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2014

Mutations in the Gene That Encodes the F-Actin Binding Protein Anillin Cause FSGS

Rasheed Gbadegesin; Gentzon Hall; Adebowale Adeyemo; Nils Hanke; Irini Tossidou; James L. Burchette; Alison Homstad; Matthew A. Sparks; Jose A. Gomez; Andrea S. Alonso; Peter Lavin; Peter J. Conlon; Ron Korstanje; M. Christine Stander; Ghaidan Shamsan; Moumita Barua; Robert F. Spurney; Pravin C. Singhal; Jeffrey B. Kopp; Hermann Haller; David N. Howell; Martin R. Pollak; Andrey S. Shaw; Mario Schiffer; Michelle P. Winn

FSGS is characterized by segmental scarring of the glomerulus and is a leading cause of kidney failure. Identification of genes causing FSGS has improved our understanding of disease mechanisms and points to defects in the glomerular epithelial cell, the podocyte, as a major factor in disease pathogenesis. Using a combination of genome-wide linkage studies and whole-exome sequencing in a kindred with familial FSGS, we identified a missense mutation R431C in anillin (ANLN), an F-actin binding cell cycle gene, as a cause of FSGS. We screened 250 additional families with FSGS and found another variant, G618C, that segregates with disease in a second family with FSGS. We demonstrate upregulation of anillin in podocytes in kidney biopsy specimens from individuals with FSGS and kidney samples from a murine model of HIV-1-associated nephropathy. Overexpression of R431C mutant ANLN in immortalized human podocytes results in enhanced podocyte motility. The mutant anillin displays reduced binding to the slit diaphragm-associated scaffold protein CD2AP. Knockdown of the ANLN gene in zebrafish morphants caused a loss of glomerular filtration barrier integrity, podocyte foot process effacement, and an edematous phenotype. Collectively, these findings suggest that anillin is important in maintaining the integrity of the podocyte actin cytoskeleton.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

HLA-DQA1 and PLCG2 Are Candidate Risk Loci for Childhood-Onset Steroid-Sensitive Nephrotic Syndrome

Rasheed Gbadegesin; Adebowale Adeyemo; Nicholas J. A. Webb; Larry A. Greenbaum; Asiri Abeyagunawardena; Shenal Thalgahagoda; Arundhati S. Kale; Debbie S. Gipson; Tarak Srivastava; Jen Jar Lin; Deepa H. Chand; Tracy E. Hunley; Patrick D. Brophy; Arvind Bagga; Aditi Sinha; Michelle N. Rheault; Joanna Ghali; Kathy Nicholls; Elizabeth Abraham; Halima S. Janjua; Abiodun Omoloja; Gina Marie Barletta; Yi Cai; David D. Milford; Catherine O'Brien; Atif Awan; Vladimir Belostotsky; William E. Smoyer; Alison Homstad; Gentzon Hall

Steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome (SSNS) accounts for >80% of cases of nephrotic syndrome in childhood. However, the etiology and pathogenesis of SSNS remain obscure. Hypothesizing that coding variation may underlie SSNS risk, we conducted an exome array association study of SSNS. We enrolled a discovery set of 363 persons (214 South Asian children with SSNS and 149 controls) and genotyped them using the Illumina HumanExome Beadchip. Four common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in HLA-DQA1 and HLA-DQB1 (rs1129740, rs9273349, rs1071630, and rs1140343) were significantly associated with SSNS at or near the Bonferroni-adjusted P value for the number of single variants that were tested (odds ratio, 2.11; 95% confidence interval, 1.56 to 2.86; P=1.68×10(-6) (Fisher exact test). Two of these SNPs-the missense variants C34Y (rs1129740) and F41S (rs1071630) in HLA-DQA1-were replicated in an independent cohort of children of white European ancestry with SSNS (100 cases and ≤589 controls; P=1.42×10(-17)). In the rare variant gene set-based analysis, the best signal was found in PLCG2 (P=7.825×10(-5)). In conclusion, this exome array study identified HLA-DQA1 and PLCG2 missense coding variants as candidate loci for SSNS. The finding of a MHC class II locus underlying SSNS risk suggests a major role for immune response in the pathogenesis of SSNS.


Kidney International | 2012

Inverted formin 2 mutations with variable expression in patients with sporadic and hereditary focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis

Rasheed Gbadegesin; Peter Lavin; Gentzon Hall; Bartlomiej Bartkowiak; Alison Homstad; Alison Byrd; Kelvin L. Lynn; Norman Wolfish; Carolina Ottati; Paul Stevens; David N. Howell; Peter J. Conlon; Michelle P. Winn

Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a major cause of end-stage kidney disease. Recent advances in molecular genetics show that defects in the podocyte play a major role in its pathogenesis and mutations in inverted formin 2 (INF2) cause autosomal dominant FSGS. In order to delineate the role of INF2 mutations in familial and sporadic FSGS, we sought to identify variants in a large cohort of patients with FSGS. A secondary objective was to define an approach for genetic screening in families with autosomal dominant disease. A total of 248 individuals were identified with FSGS, of whom 31 had idiopathic disease. The remaining patients clustered into 64 families encompassing 15 from autosomal recessive and 49 from autosomal dominant kindreds. There were missense mutations in 8 of the 49 families with autosomal dominant disease. Three of the detected variants were novel and all mutations were confined to exon 4 of INF2, a regulatory region responsible for 90% of all changes reported in FSGS due to INF2 mutations. Thus, in our series, INF2 mutations were responsible for 16% of all cases of autosomal dominant FSGS, with these mutations clustered in exon 4. Hence, screening for these mutations may represent a rapid, non-invasive and cost-effective method for the diagnosis of autosomal dominant FSGS.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

TNXB Mutations Can Cause Vesicoureteral Reflux

Rasheed Gbadegesin; Patrick D. Brophy; Adebowale Adeyemo; Gentzon Hall; Indra R. Gupta; David S. Hains; Bartlomeij Bartkowiak; C. Egla Rabinovich; Settara C. Chandrasekharappa; Alison Homstad; Katherine Westreich; Yutao Liu; Danniele G. Holanda; Jason Clarke; Peter Lavin; Angelica Selim; Sara E. Miller; John S. Wiener; Sherry S. Ross; John Foreman; Charles N. Rotimi; Michelle P. Winn

Primary vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is the most common congenital anomaly of the kidney and the urinary tract, and it is a major risk factor for pyelonephritic scarring and CKD in children. Although twin studies support the heritability of VUR, specific genetic causes remain elusive. We performed a sequential genome-wide linkage study and whole-exome sequencing in a family with hereditary VUR. We obtained a significant multipoint parametric logarithm of odds score of 3.3 on chromosome 6p, and whole-exome sequencing identified a deleterious heterozygous mutation (T3257I) in the gene encoding tenascin XB (TNXB in 6p21.3). This mutation segregated with disease in the affected family as well as with a pathogenic G1331R change in another family. Fibroblast cell lines carrying the T3257I mutation exhibited a reduction in both cell motility and phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase expression, suggesting a defect in the focal adhesions that link the cell cytoplasm to the extracellular matrix. Immunohistochemical studies revealed that the human uroepithelial lining of the ureterovesical junction expresses TNXB, suggesting that TNXB may be important for generating tensile forces that close the ureterovesical junction during voiding. Taken together, these results suggest that mutations in TNXB can cause hereditary VUR.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

A New Locus for Familial FSGS on Chromosome 2P

Rasheed Gbadegesin; Peter Lavin; Louis Janssens; Bartlomiej Bartkowiak; Alison Homstad; Brandy L. Bowling; Jason Eckel; Chris Potocky; Diana Abbott; Peter J. Conlon; William K. Scott; David N. Howell; Elizabeth R. Hauser; Michelle P. Winn

FSGS is a clinicopathologic entity characterized by nephrotic syndrome and progression to ESRD. Although the pathogenesis is unknown, the podocyte seems to play a central role in this disorder. Here, we present six kindreds with hereditary FSGS that did not associate with mutations in known causal genes, and we report a new locus for the disease on chromosome 2p15 in one kindred. We performed genome-wide linkage analysis and refined the linkage area with microsatellite markers and haplotype analysis to define the minimal candidate region. Genome-wide linkage analysis yielded a maximum two-point logarithm of odds (LOD) score of 3.6 for the six families on chromosome 2p. One family contributed the largest proportion of the additive score (LOD 2.02) at this locus. Multipoint parametric LOD score calculation in this family yielded a significant LOD score of 3.1 at markers D2S393 and D2S337, and fine mapping of this region with microsatellite markers defined a minimal candidate region of 0.9 Mb with observed recombinations at markers D2S2332 and RS1919481. We excluded the remaining five families from linkage to this region by haplotype analysis. These data support a new gene locus for familial FSGS on chromosome 2p15. Identification of the mutated gene at this locus may provide further insight into the disease mechanisms of FSGS.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

A Novel Missense Mutation of Wilms’ Tumor 1 Causes Autosomal Dominant FSGS

Gentzon Hall; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Peter Lavin; Yangfan Liu; Edwin C. Oh; Liming Wang; Robert F. Spurney; Jason Eckel; Thomas Lindsey; Alison Homstad; Andrew F. Malone; Paul J. Phelan; Andrey S. Shaw; David N. Howell; Peter J. Conlon; Nicholas Katsanis; Michelle P. Winn


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2014

Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibition ameliorates angiontensin II-induced podocyte dysmotility via the protein kinase G-mediated downregulation of TRPC6 activity

Gentzon Hall; Janelle Rowell; Federica Farinelli; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Peter Lavin; Alison Homstad; Andrew F. Malone; Thomas Lindsey; Robert F. Spurney; Gordon F. Tomaselli; David A. Kass; Michelle P. Winn


Pediatric Nephrology | 2016

Rare variants in tenascin genes in a cohort of children with primary vesicoureteric reflux

Shan Elahi; Alison Homstad; Himani Vaidya; Jennifer Stout; Gentzon Hall; Peter J. Conlon; Jonathan C. Routh; John S. Wiener; Sherry S. Ross; Shashi Nagaraj; Delbert R. Wigfall; John Foreman; Adebowale Adeyemo; Indra R. Gupta; Patrick D. Brophy; C. Egla Rabinovich; Rasheed Gbadegesin

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Adebowale Adeyemo

National Institutes of Health

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