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Dive into the research topics where Deborah R. Davis is active.

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Featured researches published by Deborah R. Davis.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2011

Renal proximal tubule angiotensin AT1A receptors regulate blood pressure

Huiping Li; Eric T. Weatherford; Deborah R. Davis; Henry L. Keen; Justin L. Grobe; Alan Daugherty; Lisa A. Cassis; Andrew M. Allen; Curt D. Sigmund

All components of the renin angiotensin system necessary for ANG II generation and action have been reported to be present in renal proximal convoluted tubules. Given the close relationship between renal sodium handling and blood pressure regulation, we hypothesized that modulating the action of ANG II specifically in the renal proximal tubules would alter the chronic level of blood pressure. To test this, we used a proximal tubule-specific, androgen-dependent, promoter construct (KAP2) to generate mice with either overexpression of a constitutively active angiotensin type 1A receptor transgene or depletion of endogenous angiotensin type 1A receptors. Androgen administration to female transgenic mice caused a robust induction of the transgene in the kidney and increased baseline blood pressure. In the receptor-depleted mice, androgen administration to females resulted in a Cre recombinase-mediated deletion of angiotensin type 1A receptors in the proximal tubule and reduced blood pressure. In contrast to the changes observed at baseline, there was no difference in the blood pressure response to a pressor dose of ANG II in either experimental model. These data, from two separate mouse models, provide evidence that ANG II signaling via the type 1A receptor in the renal proximal tubule is a regulator of systemic blood pressure under baseline conditions.


Hypertension | 2011

Angiotensinergic Signaling in the Brain Mediates Metabolic Effects of Deoxycorticosterone (DOCA)-Salt in C57 Mice

Justin L. Grobe; Beth A. Buehrer; Aline M. Hilzendeger; Xuebo Liu; Deborah R. Davis; Di Xu; Curt D. Sigmund

Low-renin hypertension accounts for ≈25% of essential hypertensive patients. It is modeled in animals by chronic delivery of deoxycorticosterone acetate and excess dietary sodium (the DOCA-salt model). Previous studies have demonstrated that DOCA-salt hypertension is mediated through activation of the brain renin-angiotensin system. Here, we demonstrate robust metabolic phenotypes of DOCA-salt treatment. Male C57BL/6J mice (6 to 8 weeks old) received a subcutaneous pellet of DOCA (50 mg for 21 days) and were offered a 0.15 mol/L NaCl drink solution in addition to regular chow and tap water. Treatment resulted in mild hypertension, a blunting of weight gain, gross polydipsia, polyuria, and sodium intake, alterations in urinary sodium and potassium turnover, and serum sodium retention. Most strikingly, DOCA-salt mice exhibited no difference in food intake but did exhibited a large elevation in basal metabolic rate. Normalization of blood pressure by hydralazine (500 mg/L in drink solutions) attenuated the hydromineral phenotypes and renal renin suppression effects of DOCA-salt but had no effect on the elevated metabolic rate. In contrast, intracerebroventricular infusion of the angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonist losartan (5 &mgr;g/h) attenuated the elevation in metabolic rate with DOCA-salt treatment. Together, these data illustrate the necessity of angiotensinergic signaling within the brain, independent of blood pressure alterations, in the metabolic consequences of DOCA-salt treatment.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Highly regulated cell type-restricted expression of human renin in mice containing 140- or 160-kilobase pair P1 phage artificial chromosome transgenes.

Patrick L. Sinn; Deborah R. Davis; Curt D. Sigmund

We generated transgenic mice with two P1 artificial chromosomes, each containing the human renin (HREN) gene and extending to −35 and −75 kilobase pairs, respectively. HREN protein production was restricted to juxtaglomerular cells of the kidney, and its expression was tightly regulated by angiotensin II and sodium. The magnitude of the up- and down-regulation in HREN mRNA caused by the stimuli tested was identical to the endogenous renin gene, suggesting tight physiological regulation. P1 artificial chromosome mice were mated with transgenic mice overexpressing human angiotensinogen to determine if there was a chronic compensatory down-regulation of the transgene. Despite a 3-fold down-regulation of HREN mRNA, plasma angiotensin II and blood pressure was modestly elevated in the double transgenic mice. Nevertheless, this elevation was significantly less than a different double transgenic model containing a poorly regulated HREN transgene. The increase in blood pressure, despite the decrease in HREN mRNA, suggests that the HREN gene can partially, but not completely, compensate for excess circulating angiotensinogen. These data suggest the possibility that increases in circulating or tissue angiotensinogen may cause an increase in blood pressure in humans, even in the presence of a functionally active servo-mechanism to down-regulate HREN expression.


Hypertension | 2010

Postmenopausal Hypertension Role of the Renin-Angiotensin System

Licy L. Yanes; Damian G. Romero; Radu Iliescu; Huimin Zhang; Deborah R. Davis; Jane F. Reckelhoff

After menopause, blood pressure increases in women. However, the underlying mechanisms responsible for postmenopausal hypertension are not completely understood. This study was conducted to determine the role that the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) plays in post-menopausal hypertension. Post-estrous cycling (postmenopausal) spontaneously hypertensive rats or young female controls were treated with losartan, an angiotensin (Ang) II type 1 receptor blocker, for 25 days. Mean arterial pressure was recorded continuously by radiotelemetry. Losartan significantly decreased blood pressure in postmenopausal rats and young female controls but failed to normalize blood pressure in postmenopausal rats to levels found in young controls. Plasma renin activity and plasma angiotensinogen were significantly elevated, and intrarenal Ang II type 1 receptor and renin mRNA expression were significantly downregulated in postmenopausal rats. Therefore, RAS only partially contributes to hypertension in postcycling spontaneously hypertensive rats, whereas hypertension in young females is mediated mainly by the RAS. The data suggest that other mechanisms besides activation of the RAS are likely involved in postmenopausal hypertension.


Hypertension | 2013

Angiotensin Type 1a Receptors in the Subfornical Organ Are Required for Deoxycorticosterone Acetate-Salt Hypertension

Aline M. Hilzendeger; Martin D. Cassell; Deborah R. Davis; Harald M. Stauss; Allyn L. Mark; Justin L. Grobe; Curt D. Sigmund

Although elevated renin–angiotensin system activity and angiotensinergic signaling within the brain are required for hypertension, polydipsia, and increased metabolic rate induced by deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt, the contribution of specific receptor subtypes and brain nuclei mediating these responses remains poorly defined. We hypothesized that angiotensin type 1a receptors (AT1aR) within the subfornical organ (SFO) mediate these responses. Transgenic mice carrying a conditional allele of the endogenous AT1aR (AT1aRflox) were administered an adenovirus encoding Cre-recombinase and enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) or adenovirus encoding eGFP alone into the lateral cerebral ventricle. Adenovirus encoding Cre-recombinase reduced AT1aR mRNA and induced recombination in AT1aRflox genomic DNA specifically in the SFO, without significant effect in the paraventricular or arcuate nuclei, and also induced SFO-specific recombination in ROSATdTomato reporter mice. The effect of SFO-targeted ablation of endogenous AT1aR was evaluated in AT1aRflox mice at 3 time points: (1) baseline, (2) 1 week after virus injection but before DOCA-salt, and (3) after 3 weeks of DOCA-salt. DOCA-salt–treated mice with deletion of AT1aR in SFO exhibited a blunted increase in arterial pressure. Increased sympathetic cardiac modulation and urine copeptin, a marker of vasopressin release, were both significantly reduced in DOCA-salt mice when AT1aR was deleted in the SFO. Additionally, deletion of AT1aR in the SFO significantly attenuated the polydipsia, polyuria, and sodium intake in response to DOCA-salt. Together, these data highlight the contribution of AT1aR in the SFO to arterial pressure regulation potentially through changes on sympathetic cardiac modulation, vasopressin release, and hydromineral balance in the DOCA-salt model of hypertension.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The human renin kidney enhancer is required to maintain base-line renin expression but is dispensable for tissue-specific, cell-specific, and regulated expression.

Xiyou Zhou; Deborah R. Davis; Curt D. Sigmund

Renin is the rate-limiting enzyme in the renin-angiotensin system and thus dictates the level of the pressor hormone angiotensin-II. The classical site of renin expression and secretion is the renal juxtaglomerular cell, where its expression is tightly regulated by physiological cues. An evolutionarily conserved transcriptional enhancer located 11 kb upstream of the human RENIN gene has been reported to markedly enhance transcription in renin expressing cells in vitro. However, its importance in vivo remains unclear. We tested whether this enhancer is required for appropriate tissue- and cell-specific expression, or for physiological regulation of the human RENIN gene. To accomplish this, we used a retrofitting technique employing homologous recombination in bacteria to delete the enhancer from a 160-kb P1-artificial chromosome containing human RENIN, two upstream genes and one downstream gene, and then generated two lines of transgenic mice. We previously showed that human renin expression in transgenic mice containing the wild type construct is tightly regulated as is expression of the linked genes. Deletion of the enhancer had no effect on tissue-specific expression of human RENIN, but using the downstream gene as an internal control, found that human RENIN mRNA levels were 3-10-fold decreased compared with constructs containing the enhancer. Despite this decrease in expression, renin protein remained localized to renal juxtaglomerular cells and was appropriately regulated by cues that either increase or decrease expression of renin. Our results suggest that sequences other than the enhancer may be necessary for tissue-specific, cell-specific, and regulated expression of human RENIN.


Physiological Reports | 2015

Pregnant mice lacking indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase exhibit preeclampsia phenotypes

Mark Santillan; Christopher J. Pelham; Pimonrat Ketsawatsomkron; Donna A. Santillan; Deborah R. Davis; Eric J. Devor; Katherine N. Gibson-Corley; Sabrina Scroggins; Justin L. Grobe; Baoli Yang; Steven K. Hunter; Curt D. Sigmund

Preeclampsia is a cardiovascular disorder of late pregnancy that is, commonly characterized by hypertension, renal structural damage and dysfunction, and fetal growth restriction. Prevailing etiologic models of this disorder include T‐cell dysfunction as an initiating cause of preeclampsia. Indoleamine 2,3‐dioxygenase (IDO), an enzyme that mediates the conversion of tryptophan to kynurenine, has been linked to preeclampsia in humans, and is known to regulate T‐cell activity and an endothelial‐derived relaxing factor. To test the hypothesis that IDO is causally involved in the pathogenesis of preeclampsia, mice deficient for IDO (IDO‐KO) were generated on a C57BL/6 background. IDO‐KO and wild‐type C57BL/6 mice were bred, and preeclampsia phenotypes were evaluated during pregnancy. Pregnant IDO‐KO mice exhibited pathognomonic renal glomerular endotheliosis, proteinuria, pregnancy‐specific endothelial dysfunction, intrauterine growth restriction, and mildly elevated blood pressure compared to wild‐type mice. Together these findings highlight an important role for IDO in the generation of phenotypes typical of preeclampsia. Loss of IDO function may represent a risk factor for the development of preeclampsia. By extension, increased IDO activity, reductions in IDO reactants, or increases in IDO products may represent novel therapeutic approaches for this disorder.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

An androgen-inducible proximal tubule-specific Cre recombinase transgenic model

Huiping Li; Xiyou Zhou; Deborah R. Davis; Di Xu; Curt D. Sigmund

To facilitate the study of renal proximal tubules, we generated a transgenic mouse strain expressing an improved Cre recombinase (iCre) under the control of the kidney androgen-regulated protein (KAP) promoter. The transgene was expressed in the kidney of male mice but not in female mice. Treatment of female transgenic mice with androgen induced robust expression of the transgene in the kidney. We confirmed the presence of Cre recombinase activity and the cell specificity by breeding the KAP2-iCRE mice with ROSA26 reporter mice. X-Gal staining of kidney sections from male double transgenic mice showed robust staining in the epithelial cells of renal proximal tubules. beta-Gal staining in female mice became evident in proximal tubules after administration of androgen. This model of inducible Cre recombinase in the renal proximal tubule should provide a novel useful tool for studying the physiological significance of genes expressed in the renal proximal tubule. This has advantages over other current models where Cre recombinase expression is constitutive, not inducible.


Circulation Research | 2008

Upstream Stimulatory Factor Is Required for Human Angiotensinogen Expression and Differential Regulation by the A−20C Polymorphism

Matthew E. Dickson; Xin Tian; Xuebo Liu; Deborah R. Davis; Curt D. Sigmund

Among naturally occurring polymorphisms in the 5′ flanking region of the human angiotensinogen (AGT) gene, the −20 and −217 polymorphisms have the strongest effects on AGT regulation in AGT-expressing cells derived from liver, kidney, brain, and fat. These polymorphisms may affect allele-specific transcription factor binding, and the high-expressing alleles are both relatively common. We show herein that the −20C allele has higher transcriptional activity than −20A, and the −20A allele confers no additional transactivation potential beyond that of a mutated vector. Gel-shift assays show that upstream stimulatory factor (USF)1 and USF2 preferentially bind the −20C allele, whereas the −20A allele retains a low affinity USF binding site. Plasmid immunoprecipitation assays confirmed preferential association of USF1 with the −20C allele in transfected HepG2 cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation confirmed that USF1 binds to the endogenous AGT −20C allele in CCF cells, the only cell line tested that carries the −20C allele, and to the human AGT promoter in liver and adipose tissue from transgenic mice. Transduction of AGT-expressing cells with short hairpin RNAs specifically targeting USF1 or USF2, resulted in cell- and allele-specific attenuation of AGT promoter activity. In vivo, knockdown of USF expression in the liver of transgenic mice expressing the −20C allele of AGT resulted in lower AGT expression, a decrease in circulating human AGT protein but no change in expression of GAPDH or hepatocyte nuclear factor-4α. We conclude that USF1 functionally and differentially regulates AGT expression via the −20 polymorphism and that the differential expression exhibited by −20 can be accounted for by differential association with USF1.


Physiological Genomics | 2011

Neuron- or glial-specific ablation of secreted renin does not affect renal renin, baseline arterial pressure, or metabolism

Di Xu; Giulianna R. Borges; Deborah R. Davis; Khristofor Agassandian; Maria Luisa S. Sequeira Lopez; R. Ariel Gomez; Martin D. Cassell; Justin L. Grobe; Curt D. Sigmund

The renin-angiotensin system (RAS), known for its roles in cardiovascular, metabolic, and developmental regulation, is present in both the circulation and in many individual tissues throughout the body. Substantial evidence supports the existence of a brain RAS, though quantification and localization of brain renin have been hampered by its low expression levels. We and others have previously determined that there are two isoforms of renin expressed in the brain. The classical isoform encoding secreted renin (sREN) and a novel isoform encoding intracellular renin (icREN), the product of an alternative promoter and first exon (exon 1b). The differential role that these two isoforms play in cardiovascular and metabolic regulation remains unclear. Here we examined the physiological consequences of neuron- and glia-specific knockouts of sREN by crossing mice in which the sREN promoter and isoform-specific first exon (exon-1a) is flanked by LoxP sequences (sREN(flox) mice) with mice expressing Cre-recombinase controlled by either the neuron-specific Nestin promoter or the glia-specific GFAP promoter. Resulting offspring exhibited selective knockout of sREN in either neurons or glia, while preserving expression of icREN. Consistent with a hypothesized role of icREN in the brain RAS, neuron- and glia-specific knockout of sREN had no effect on blood pressure or heart rate; food, water, or sodium intake; renal function; or metabolic rate. These data demonstrate that sREN is dispensable within the brain for normal physiological regulation of cardiovascular, hydromineral, and metabolic regulation, and thereby indirectly support the importance of icREN in brain RAS function.

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Martin D. Cassell

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Henry L. Keen

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Xuebo Liu

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Chunyan Hu

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Ko-Ting Lu

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Pimonrat Ketsawatsomkron

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Aline M. Hilzendeger

Federal University of São Paulo

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