Brenda S. Magenheimer
University of Kansas
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Featured researches published by Brenda S. Magenheimer.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Zhousheng Xiao; Shiqin Zhang; Josh Mahlios; Gan Zhou; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Dayong Guo; Sarah L. Dallas; Robin L. Maser; James P. Calvet; Lynda F. Bonewald; Leigh Darryl Quarles
We examined the osteoblast/osteocyte expression and function of polycystin-1 (PC1), a transmembrane protein that is a component of the polycystin-2 (PC2)-ciliary mechano-sensor complex in renal epithelial cells. We found that MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts and MLO-Y4 osteocytes express transcripts for PC1, PC2, and the ciliary proteins Tg737 and Kif3a. Immunohistochemical analysis detected cilia-like structures in MC3T3-E1 osteoblastic and MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cell lines as well as primary osteocytes and osteoblasts from calvaria. Pkd1m1Bei mice have inactivating missense mutations of Pkd1 gene that encode PC1. Pkd1m1Bei homozygous mutant mice demonstrated delayed endochondral and intramembranous bone formation, whereas heterozygous Pkd1m1Bei mutant mice had osteopenia caused by reduced osteoblastic function. Heterozygous and homozygous Pkd1m1Bei mutant mice displayed a gene dose-dependent decrease in the expression of Runx2 and osteoblast-related genes. In addition, overexpression of constitutively active PC1 C-terminal constructs in MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts resulted in an increase in Runx2 P1 promoter activity and endogenous Runx2 expression as well as an increase in osteoblast differentiation markers. Conversely, osteoblasts derived from Pkd1m1Bei homozygous mutant mice had significant reductions in endogenous Runx2 expression, osteoblastic markers, and differentiation capacity ex vivo. Co-expression of constitutively active PC1 C-terminal construct into Pkd1m1Bei homozygous osteoblasts was sufficient to normalize Runx2 P1 promoter activity. These findings are consistent with a possible functional role of cilia and PC1 in anabolic signaling in osteoblasts/osteocytes.
Nature Medicine | 2008
Xiaogang Li; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Sheng Xia; Teri Johnson; Darren P. Wallace; James P. Calvet; Rong Li
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is caused by heterozygous mutations in either PKD1 or PKD2, genes that encode polycystin-1 and polycystin-2, respectively. We show here that tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), an inflammatory cytokine present in the cystic fluid of humans with ADPKD, disrupts the localization of polycystin-2 to the plasma membrane and primary cilia through a scaffold protein, FIP2, which is induced by TNF-α. Treatment of mouse embryonic kidney organ cultures with TNF-α resulted in formation of cysts, and this effect was exacerbated in the Pkd2+/− kidneys. TNF-α also stimulated cyst formation in vivo in Pkd2+/− mice. In contrast, treatment of Pkd2+/− mice with the TNF-α inhibitor etanercept prevented cyst formation. These data reveal a pathway connecting TNF-α signaling, polycystins and cystogenesis, the activation of which may reduce functional polycystin-2 below a critical threshold, precipitating the ADPKD cellular phenotype.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006
Brenda S. Magenheimer; Patricia L. St. John; Kathryn Isom; Dale R. Abrahamson; Robert C. De Lisle; Darren P. Wallace; Robin L. Maser; Jared J. Grantham; James P. Calvet
Metanephric organ culture has been used to determine whether embryonic kidney tubules can be stimulated by cAMP to form cysts. Under basal culture conditions, wild-type kidneys from embryonic day 13.5 to 15.5 mice grow in size and continue ureteric bud branching and tubule formation over a 4- to 5-d period. Treatment of these kidneys with 8-Br-cAMP or the cAMP agonist forskolin induced the formation of dilated tubules within 1 h, which enlarged over several days and resulted in dramatically expanded cyst-like structures of proximal tubule and collecting duct origin. Tubule dilation was reversible upon withdrawal of 8-Br-cAMP and was inhibited by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor H89 and the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) inhibitor CFTR(inh)172. For further testing of the role of CFTR, metanephric cultures were prepared from mice with a targeted mutation of the Cftr gene. In contrast to kidneys from wild-type mice, those from Cftr -/- mice showed no evidence of tubular dilation in response to 8-Br-cAMP, indicating that CFTR Cl(-) channels are functional in embryonic kidneys and are required for cAMP-driven tubule expansion. A requirement for transepithelial Cl(-) transport was demonstrated by inhibiting the basolateral Na(+),K(+),2Cl(-) co-transporter with bumetanide, which effectively blocked all cAMP-stimulated tubular dilation. For determination of whether cystic dilation occurs to a greater extent in PKD kidneys in response to cAMP, Pkd1(m1Bei) -/- embryonic kidneys were treated with 8-Br-cAMP and were found to form rapidly CFTR- and Na(+),K(+),2Cl(-) co-transporter-dependent cysts that were three- to six-fold larger than those of wild-type kidneys. These results suggest that cAMP can stimulate fluid secretion early in renal tubule development during the time when renal cysts first appear in PKD kidneys and that PKD-deficient renal tubules are predisposed to abnormally increased cyst expansion in response to elevated levels of cAMP.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Zhousheng Xiao; Shiqin Zhang; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Junming Luo; L. Darryl Quarles
Polycystin-1 (PC1) may play an important role in skeletogenesis through regulation of the bone-specific transcription factor Runx2-II. In the current study we found that PC1 co-localizes with the calcium channel polycystin-2 (PC2) in primary cilia of MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts. To establish the role of Runx2-II in mediating PC1 effects on bone, we crossed heterozygous Pkd1m1Bei and Runx2-II mice to create double heterozygous mice (Pkd1+/m1Bei/Runx2-II+/-) deficient in both PC1 and Runx2-II. Pkd1+/m1Bei/Runx2-II+/- mice exhibited additive reductions in Runx2-II expression that was associated with impaired endochondral bone development, defective osteoblast-mediated bone formation, and osteopenia. In addition, we found that basal intracellular calcium levels were reduced in homozygous Pkd1m1Bei osteoblasts. In contrast, overexpression of a PC1 C-tail construct increased intracellular calcium and selectively stimulated Runx2-II P1 promoter activity in osteoblasts through a calcium-dependent mechanism. Site-directed mutagenesis of critical amino acids in the coiled-coil domain of PC1 required for coupling to PC2 abolished PC1-mediated Runx2-II P1 promoter activity. Additional promoter analysis mapped the PC1-responsive region to the “osteoblast-specific” enhancer element between -420 and -350 bp that contains NFI and AP-1 binding sites. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays confirmed the calcium-dependent binding of NFI to this region. These findings indicate that PC1 regulates osteoblast function through intracellular calcium-dependent control of Runx2-II expression. The overall function of the primary cilium-polycystin complex may be to sense and transduce environmental clues into signals regulating osteoblast differentiation and bone development.
Kidney International | 2012
Lucy X. Fan; Xinjian Li; Brenda S. Magenheimer; James P. Calvet; Xiaogang Li
The pan-histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor, trichostatin A, was found to reduce cyst progression and slow the decline of kidney function in Pkd2 knockout mice, model of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Here we determine whether HDAC inhibition acts by regulating cell proliferation to prevent cyst formation, or by other mechanisms. The loss of Pkd1 caused an upregulation of the inhibitor of differentiation 2 (Id2), a transcription regulator, triggering an Id2-mediated downregulation of p21 in mutant mouse embryonic kidney cells in vitro. Using mouse embryonic kidney cells, mutant for Pkd1, we found that trichostatin A decreased Id2, which resulted in upregulation of p21. Further, phosphorylated retinoblastoma (Rb), usually regulated by Cdk2/Cdk4 activity, was also reduced in these cells. Since these latter enzymes are under the control of p21, these studies suggest that the proliferation of cyst epithelial cells that is reduced by trichostatin A might result from p21 upregulation, or alternatively through the Rb-E2F pathway. Additional studies showed that Id2 directly bound to Rb, releasing the transcription activator E2F from transcriptionally inactive Rb-E2F complexes. HDAC inhibition was able to reverse this process by downregulation of Id2. Furthermore, treatment of pregnant Pkd1 mice with trichostatin A prevented cyst formation in the developing embryonic kidneys, showing that this inhibition is effective in vivo during early cyst formation. Thus, HDAC inhibition targets Id2-mediated pathways to downregulate cystic epithelial cell proliferation and hence cystogenesis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Diederik Van Bodegom; Zubaida Saifudeen; Susana Dipp; Sanjeev Puri; Brenda S. Magenheimer; James P. Calvet; Samir S. El-Dahr
This study provides evidence that the tumor suppressor protein, p53, is a transcriptional repressor of PKD1. Kidneys of p53-null mice expressed higher Pkd1 mRNA levels than wild-type littermates; γ-irradiation suppressed PKD1 gene expression in p53+/+ but not p53–/– cells; and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated the binding of p53 to the PKD1 promoter in vivo. In transient transfection assays, p53 repressed PKD1 promoter activity independently of endogenous p21. Deletion analysis mapped p53-mediated repression to the proximal promoter region of PKD1. Mutations of the DNA binding or C-terminal minimal repression domains of p53 abolished its ability to repress PKD1. Moreover, trichostatin A, an inhibitor of histone deacetylase activity, attenuated p53-induced repression of the PKD1 promoter. These findings, together with previous reports showing that dedifferentiated Pkd1-deficient cells express lower p53 and p21 levels, suggest a model whereby PKD1 signaling activates the p53-p21 differentiation pathway. In turn, p53 cooperates with histone deacetylases to repress PKD1 gene transcription. Loss of a p53-mediated negative feedback loop in PKD1 mutant cells may therefore contribute to deregulated PKD1 expression and cystogenesis.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2012
Kyle Jansson; Anh-Nguyet T. Nguyen; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Gail A. Reif; Lavakumar Reddy Aramadhaka; Elsa Bello-Reuss; Darren P. Wallace; James P. Calvet; Gustavo Blanco
In autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), renal cysts develop by aberrant epithelial cell proliferation and transepithelial fluid secretion. We previously showed that ouabain increases proliferation of cultured human ADPKD cells via stimulation of the EGF receptor (EGFR)-Src-MEK/ERK signaling pathway. We examined whether ouabain affects fluid secretion and in vitro cyst growth of human ADPKD cell monolayers, ADPKD cell microcysts cultured in a three-dimensional collagen matrix, and metanephric organ cultures from Pkd1(m1Bei) mice. Physiological concentrations of ouabain alone did not affect net transepithelial basal-to-apical fluid transport in ADPKD monolayers or growth of cultured ADPKD microcysts. In contrast, in the presence of forskolin or 8-bromo-cAMP, ouabain significantly enhanced ADPKD fluid secretion and microcyst expansion. Ouabain exerted this effect by enhancing cAMP-dependent Cl(-) secretion via the CFTR. Similarly, ouabain accelerated cAMP-dependent cyst enlargement in Pkd1(m1Bei) mice metanephroi, with a more prominent response in homozygous than heterozygous mice. Ouabain had no effect on fluid secretion and cystogenesis of normal human kidney cells and caused only slight cystic dilations in wild-type mouse kidneys. The effects of ouabain in ADPKD cells and Pkd1(m1Bei) metanephroi were prevented by inhibitors of EGFR (AG1478), Src (PP2), and MEK (U0126). Together, our results show that ouabain, used in physiological concentrations, has synergistic effects on cAMP-mediated fluid secretion and cyst growth, via activation of the EGFR-Src-MEK pathway. These data provide important evidence for the role of ouabain as an endogenous hormone that exacerbates ADPKD cyst progression.
Gene | 1996
Xiaoying Hou; Robin L. Maser; Brenda S. Magenheimer; James P. Calvet
To investigate abnormalities in gene expression associated with cyst formation in polycystic kidney disease, differential cDNA library screening was carried out using RNA from normal and cystic kidneys of the C57BL/6J-cpk mouse. Among a number of genes found to be abnormally expressed was one (cDNA clone 56-1) that was significantly underexpressed in cystic kidneys. Hybridization analyses revealed that the 56-1 mRNA is expressed primarily in kidney and liver, and that the kidney expression begins postnatally and continues in the adult. Expression of this mRNA was found to be significantly decreased upon acute renal injury induced by a single intraperitoneal injection of folic acid, and to return to normal levels upon recovery of kidney function. Analysis of the cDNA sequence predicted a protein of 349 amino acids (aa), which was confirmed by in vitro translation of a sense-strand transcript, producing a protein of approx. 39 kDa. The aa sequence shows similarity to Flavobacterium sp. and Pseudomonas diminuta parathion hydrolase (phosphotriesterase or PTE), an enzyme that hydrolyzes toxic organophosphates and other phosphotriesters, and to the predicted product of an Escherichia coli open reading frame of unknown function (phosphotriesterase homology protein or PHP). Use of optimal alignment programs demonstrated a significant overall homology between the bacterial and mouse sequences, with greater than 50% aa sequence similarity. This cDNA represents the first eukaryotic sequence showing similarity to these prokaryotic genes. Based on this apparent homology, it has been named mpr56-1 (for mouse phosphotriesterase-related 56-1).
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
M. Rafiq Islam; Tamara Jimenez; Christopher J. Pelham; Marianna Rodova; Sanjeev Puri; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Robin L. Maser; Christian Widmann; James P. Calvet
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades regulate a wide variety of cellular processes that ultimately depend on changes in gene expression. We have found a novel mechanism whereby one of the key MAP3 kinases, Mekk1, regulates transcriptional activity through an interaction with p53. The tumor suppressor protein p53 down-regulates a number of genes, including the gene most frequently mutated in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (PKD1). We have discovered that Mekk1 translocates to the nucleus and acts as a co-repressor with p53 to down-regulate PKD1 transcriptional activity. This repression does not require Mekk1 kinase activity, excluding the need for an Mekk1 phosphorylation cascade. However, this PKD1 repression can also be induced by the stress-pathway stimuli, including TNFα, suggesting that Mekk1 activation induces both JNK-dependent and JNK-independent pathways that target the PKD1 gene. An Mekk1-p53 interaction at the PKD1 promoter suggests a new mechanism by which abnormally elevated stress-pathway stimuli might directly down-regulate the PKD1 gene, possibly causing haploinsufficiency and cyst formation.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008
M. Rafiq Islam; Sanjeev Puri; Marianna Rodova; Brenda S. Magenheimer; Robin L. Maser; James P. Calvet
The retinoic acids all-trans retinoic acid (AT-RA) and 9-cis retinoic acid (9C-RA) and the retinoic acid receptors RAR and RXR significantly induce transcriptional activity from a 200-bp PKD1 proximal promoter in transfected mammalian cells. This PKD1 promoter region contains Ets, p53, and GC box motifs, but lacks a canonical RAR/RXR motif. Mutagenesis of the Ets sites did not affect RA induction. In contrast, GC box mutations completely blocked stimulation by AT-RA and by RXRbeta or RARbeta. Mithramycin A, which prevents Sp1 binding, significantly reduced basal promoter activity and suppressed upregulation by AT-RA and RXR. The 200-bp proximal promoter could not be induced by AT-RA in Drosophila SL2 cells, which lack Sp1, but could be activated in these cells transfected with exogenous Sp1. Small interfering RNA knockdown of Sp1 in mammalian cells completely blocked RXRbeta upregulation of the promoter. These data indicate that induction of the PKD1 promoter by retinoic acid is mediated through Sp1 elements. RT-PCR showed that AT-RA treatment of HEK293T cells increased the levels of endogenous PKD1 RNA, and chromatin immunoprecipitation showed the presence of both RXR and Sp1 at the PKD1 proximal promoter. These results suggest that retinoids and their receptors may play a role in PKD1 gene regulation.