Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carolyn M. Mitchell is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carolyn M. Mitchell.


Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System | 2011

Molecular evidence of a (pro)renin/ (pro)renin receptor system in human intrauterine tissues in pregnancy and its association with PGHS-2

Kirsty G. Pringle; Tamas Zakar; D. M. Yates; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Jonathan J. Hirst; Eugenie R. Lumbers

Prorenin stimulates decidual prostaglandin (PG) production in vitro, the (pro)renin receptor ((P)RR) may mediate this action. The role of prorenin in amnion PG synthesis has not been examined, despite this being the key site of PG synthesis. To determine if (P)RR, prorenin and PGHS-2 are co-localized in gestational tissues and if expression is altered by labour, term amnion, chorion, decidua and placenta were collected during elective caesarean section or after spontaneous labour. Prorenin, (P)RR and PGHS-2 mRNA abundance was determined by real-time RT-PCR. (P)RR protein was examined by immunohistochemistry. The effect of recombinant human (rh) prorenin on PGHS-2 mRNA abundance in amnion explants was determined. Prorenin and (P)RR mRNA were highest in decidua and placenta, respectively. Decidual prorenin, (P)RR and placental (P)RR mRNA abundance decreased with labour. (P)RR protein was present in all gestational tissues. After labour, decidual prorenin was positively correlated with amnion PGHS-2 mRNA and rh-prorenin significantly increased PGHS-2 mRNA abundance in amnion explants. We conclude that the decidua is the principal source of prorenin and is downregulated with labour. All gestational tissues are targets for prorenin. Decidual prorenin may be involved in the labour-associated increase in amnion PGHS-2 abundance via the (P)RR.


The Journal of Physiology | 2005

Prostaglandin H2 synthase-1 and -2 expression in guinea pig gestational tissues during late pregnancy and parturition

Toni Welsh; Carolyn M. Mitchell; William A. W. Walters; Sam Mesiano; Tamas Zakar

Increased intrauterine prostaglandin (PG) production is crucial for the initiation of parturition. To investigate the mechanisms controlling intrauterine PG synthesis, we examined the expression of the key PG biosynthetic isoenzymes, PG‐H2 synthase (PTGS)‐1 and ‐2, in the amnion, visceral yolk sac (VYS), placenta and myo‐endometrium of pregnant guinea pigs. This animal model was chosen because the hormonal milieu of pregnancy and the role of PGs in the hormonal control of parturition are similar to those in the human. PTGS1 mRNA abundance, measured by real‐time RT‐PCR, increased in the amnion and the placenta during the last third of gestation. During labour, PTGS1 mRNA levels decreased precipitously in all four tissues. PTGS1 protein abundance, assessed by immunoblotting, increased to high levels in the amnion and the placenta by the end of pregnancy and remained high during labour. PTGS2 mRNA expression was higher in the placenta than in the other tissues, but did not change before and during labour. PTGS2 protein expression decreased in the placenta and remained low in the other tissues during labour. Immunohistochemistry showed pervasive PTGS1 protein expression in the amnion and strong expression in the parietal yolk sac membrane (PYS) covering the placenta. PTGS2 was expressed in the PYS and the endometrium. The PTGS inhibitor piroxicam, administered in doses that inhibited PTGS1 but not PTGS2, significantly prolonged gestation. These data suggest that PGs generated by intrauterine PTGS1 are involved in the timing of birth in guinea pigs. The induction of PTGS1 in the amnion and the PYS is a critical event leading to labour in guinea pigs and models analogous changes in the human gestational tissues before labour.


Journal of The Society for Gynecologic Investigation | 2003

The control of prostaglandin endoperoxide H-Synthase-2 expression in the human chorion laeve at term.

Renée F. Johnson; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Warwick Giles; William A. W. Walters; Tamas Zakar

Objective: Prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase-2 (PGHS-2), the key enzyme of prostaglandin biosynthesis in gestational tissues, is expressed in the chorion laeve at term. We have determined the mechanisms that control the level of PGHS-2 mRNA in the chorion membrane in order to assess the significance of chorion-derived prostaglandins in term labor. Methods: Chorion membranes were collected after elective cesarean delivery (CD, n = 21) and after spontaneous labor (SL, n = 20) at term. The PGHS-2 gene transcription rate was measured by transcriptional run-on, and PGHS-2 mRNA and heterogeneous RNA (hnRNA) abundance was determined by quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. PGHS-2 mRNA stability, PGHS-2 hnRNA processing rate, and the short-term dynamics of the two RNA species were characterized in 0-24-hour-long tissue incubations. Results: The transcriptional activity of the PGHS-2 gene predicted (P < .02) the abundance of PGHS-2 mRNA and hnRNA in individual tissues. PGHS-2 gene activity and hnRNA processing rate were not different in the CD and SL groups. PGHS-2 mRNA was constitutively stable before and after labor, and its abundance spontaneously increased sixfold in tissues incubated for 24 hours. At the same time, PGHS-2 gene activity decreased by 80% within 2 hours and rebounded to 60% of its initial level by 24 hours. Conclusion: PGHS-2 mRNA is highly stable, and its abundance is transcriptionally controlled in the chorion laeve at term. Labor is not associated with changing PGHS-2 gene activity. Endogenous factors drive PGHS-2 gene transcription in the chorion, and the stable PGHS-2 mRNA accumulates in the tissue at term. This accumulation has little or no impact on the timing of labor.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2013

Inflammatory and steroid receptor gene methylation in the human amnion and decidua.

Carolyn M. Mitchell; Shane D. Sykes; Xin Pan; Kirsty G. Pringle; Eugenie R. Lumbers; Jonathan J. Hirst; Tamas Zakar

Correct timing of parturition requires inflammatory gene activation in the gestational tissues at term and repression during pregnancy. Promoter methylation at CpG dinucleotides represses gene activity; therefore, we examined the possibility that DNA methylation is involved in the regulation of labour-associated genes in human pregnancy. Amnion and decidua were collected at 11-17 weeks of gestation and at term following elective Caesarean delivery or spontaneous labour. Methylation of the inflammatory genes PTGS2, BMP2, NAMPT and CXCL2 was analysed using the Methyl-Profiler PCR System and bisulphite sequencing. Methylation of the glucocorticoid, progesterone and oestrogen receptor genes, involved in the hormonal regulation of gestational tissue function, and the expression of the DNA methyltransferases DNMT1, -3A and -3B were also determined. Variable proportions of inflammatory and steroid receptor gene copies, to a maximum of 50.9%, were densely methylated in both tissues consistent with repression. Densely methylated copy proportions were significantly different between genes showing no relationship with varying expression during pregnancy, between tissues and in individuals. Methylated copy proportions of all genes in amnion and most genes in decidua were highly correlated in individuals. DNMT1 and -3A were expressed in both tissues with significantly higher levels in the amnion at 11-17 weeks than at term. We conclude that the unmethylated portion of gene copies is responsible for the full range of regulated expression in the amnion and decidua during normal pregnancy. Dense methylation of individually variable gene copy proportions happens in the first trimester amnion influenced by sequence context and affected strongly by individual circumstances.


Reproductive Sciences | 2015

Effects of Fetal Sex on Expression of the (Pro)renin Receptor and Genes Influenced by its Interaction With Prorenin in Human Amnion

Kirsty G. Pringle; Alison Conquest; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Tamas Zakar; Eugenie R. Lumbers

Males are more likely to be born preterm than females. The causes are unknown, but it is suggested that intrauterine tissues regulate fetal growth and survival in a sex-specific manner. We postulated that prorenin binding to its prorenin/renin receptor receptor (ATP6AP2) would act in a fetal sex-specific manner in human amnion to regulate the expression of promyelocytic zinc finger, a negative regulator of ATP6AP2 expression as well as 2 pathways that might influence the onset of labor, namely transforming growth factor β1 (TGFB1) and prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2). Our findings demonstrate that there are strong interactions between prorenin, ATP6AP2, and TGFB1 and that this system has a greater capacity in female amnion to stimulate profibrotic pathways, thus maintaining the integrity of the fetal membranes. In contrast, glucocorticoids or other factors independent of the prorenin/prorenin receptor pathway may be important regulators of PTGS2 in human pregnancy.


International Journal of Endocrinology | 2015

Methylation of Promoter Regions of Genes of the Human Intrauterine Renin Angiotensin System and Their Expression

Shane D. Sykes; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Kirsty G. Pringle; Yu Wang; Tamas Zakar; Eugenie R. Lumbers

The intrauterine renin angiotensin system (RAS) is implicated in placentation and labour onset. Here we investigate whether promoter methylation of RAS genes changes with gestation or labour and if it affects gene expression. Early gestation amnion and placenta were studied, as were term amnion, decidua, and placenta collected before labour (at elective caesarean section) or after spontaneous labour and delivery. The expression and degree of methylation of the prorenin receptor (ATP6AP2), angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AGTR1), and two proteases that can activate prorenin (kallikrein, KLK1, and cathepsin D, CTSD) were measured by qPCR and a DNA methylation array. There was no effect of gestation or labour on the methylation of RAS genes and CTSD. Amnion and decidua displayed strong correlations between the percent hypermethylation of RAS genes and CTSD, suggestive of global methylation. There were no correlations between the degree of methylation and mRNA abundance of any genes studied. KLK1 was the most methylated gene and the proportion of hypermethylated KLK1 alleles was lower in placenta than decidua. The presence of intermediate methylated alleles of KLK1 in early gestation placenta and in amnion after labour suggests that KLK1 methylation is uniquely dynamic in these tissues.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2002

The in Vivo Control of Prostaglandin H Synthase-2 Messenger Ribonucleic Acid Expression in the Human Amnion at Parturition

Renée F. Johnson; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Warwick Giles; William A. W. Walters; Tamas Zakar


Prostaglandins & Other Lipid Mediators | 2007

Optimization of a solid phase extraction procedure for prostaglandin E2, F2α and their tissue metabolites

Toni Welsh; Sonya Hubbard; Carolyn M. Mitchell; Sam Mesiano; Paweł K. Zarzycki; Tamas Zakar


Endocrinology | 2011

PTGS2 (Prostaglandin Endoperoxide Synthase-2) expression in term human amnion in vivo involves rapid mRNA turnover, polymerase-II 5'-pausing, and glucocorticoid transrepression

Carolyn M. Mitchell; Renée F. Johnson; Andrew Bisits; Jonathan J. Hirst; Tamas Zakar


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2010

141. METHYLATION OF GENES OF THE RENIN ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEM (RAS) IN EARLY HUMAN AMNION

Carolyn M. Mitchell; Tamas Zakar; Shane D. Sykes; Kirsty G. Pringle; Eugenie R. Lumbers

Collaboration


Dive into the Carolyn M. Mitchell's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tamas Zakar

University of Newcastle

View shared research outputs
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

Warwick Giles

Royal North Shore Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xin Pan

University of Newcastle

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Bisits

Royal Hospital for Women

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge