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Dive into the research topics where Eric P. Widmaier is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric P. Widmaier.


Endocrinology | 2000

Impaired Basal and Restraint-Induced Epinephrine Secretion in Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone- Deficient Mice1

Kyeong-Hoon Jeong; Lauren Jacobson; Karel Pacak; Eric P. Widmaier; David S. Goldstein; Joseph A. Majzoub

CRH is thought to play a role in responses of the adrenocortical and adrenomedullary systems during stress. To investigate the role of CRH in stress-induced secretions of corticosterone and epinephrine, we subjected wild-type (WT) and CRH-deficient (knockout, KO) mice to restraint, and analyzed plasma corticosterone, plasma catecholamines, and adrenal phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) gene expression and activity before and during 3 h of restraint. Plasma corticosterone increased over 40-fold in WT mice, but minimally in CRH KO mice. Adrenal corticosterone content tended to increase in CRH KO mice, although to levels 5-fold lower than that in WT mice. CRH KO mice had significantly lower plasma epinephrine and higher norepinephrine than WT mice at baseline, and delayed epinephrine secretion during restraint. Adrenal PNMT messenger RNA content in CRH KO mice tended to be lower than that in WT mice, though the degree of induction was similar in both genotypes. PNMT enzyme activity was significant...


Biology of Reproduction | 2004

The Effect of Leptin on Mouse Trophoblast Cell Invasion

Laura C. Schulz; Eric P. Widmaier

Abstract The hormone leptin is produced by adipose tissue and can function as a signal of nutritional status to the reproductive system. The expression of leptin receptor and, in some species, leptin, in the placenta suggests a role for leptin in placental development, but this role has not been elucidated. Leptin is required at the time of embryo implantation in the leptin-deficient ob/ ob mouse and has been shown to upregulate expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), enzymes involved in trophoblast invasion, in cultured human trophoblast cells. This led us to the hypothesis that leptin promotes the invasiveness of trophoblast cells crucial to placental development. We found that leptin stimulated mouse trophoblast cell invasion through a matrigel-coated insert on Day 10, but not Day 18 of pregnancy. Optimal stimulation occurred at a concentration of 50 ng/ml leptin, similar to the peak plasma leptin concentration during pregnancy in the mouse. Leptin treatment did not stimulate proliferation of mouse trophoblast cells in primary culture. Leptin stimulation of invasion was prevented by 25 μM GM6001, an inhibitor of MMP activity. Our results suggest that leptin may play a role in the establishment of the placenta during early pregnancy and that this function is dependent on MMP activity. This effect of leptin may represent one mechanism by which body condition affects placental development.


British Journal of Dermatology | 1982

Glucocorticoid action: A mechanism involving nuclear and non-nuclear pathways

L. K. Johnson; J. P. Longenecker; J. D. Baxter; M. F. Dallman; Eric P. Widmaier; N. L. Eberhardt

Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of McJicme, and the Geriatric Research. Education and Clinica! Center, P3I0 Alto Veterans Adminiscratjon Medical Center, Palo Alto. California 94304. ^Metabolic Research Unit and I loward Hughes Medical Institute Laboratories. University of California, San Francisco. California 94143. and ^Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, U.S.A.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 1993

Steroidogenesis in isolated adrenocortical cells during development in rats

Maya Arai; Eric P. Widmaier

After postnatal day 1 (d1), the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis of neonatal rats becomes less responsive to certain stimuli for up to 2 weeks. The present study was designed to quantify the development of adrenocortical cell responsiveness to its normal secretagogue, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and to better localize intracellular sites of adrenal cell hyporesponsivity. Maximum steroidogenic responses of collagenase-dispersed adrenocortical cells (using two isolation methods) to ACTH varied significantly in the order adult > d1 > d10. The response pattern to dibutyryl cAMP ((Bu)2cAMP) was identical to that observed for ACTH (adult > d1 > d10), suggesting that neonatal adrenal responsiveness is limited by a site distal to cAMP formation. Sensitivity (EC50) of adult cells to ACTH was approximately 3-fold greater than in neonatal cells, but there was no age-dependent shift in sensitivity to (Bu)2cAMP. 20 alpha-Hydroxycholesterol (20 alpha-OHCHOL), a membrane permeable analog of cholesterol, also failed to normalize the d10 adrenal response to ACTH. This result indicates that one site of refractoriness is apparently distal to cholesterol transport, and strongly suggests possible differential cytochrome P450 enzyme expression or activity in neonatal rat adrenal cells. Finally, although stimulated secretion was lower in neonatal cells, basal corticosterone secretion was significantly greater in neonatal adrenals, suggesting that constitutive activity of neonatal adrenal cells is high compared to that of adult cells.


Biology of Reproduction | 2000

Steroid-Dependent Up-Regulation of Adipose Leptin Secretion In Vitro During Pregnancy in Mice

Noga Kronfeld-Schor; Jing Zhao; Brian A. Silvia; Elad Bicer; Patrick T. Mathews; Renata Urban; Stefan Zimmerman; Thomas H. Kunz; Eric P. Widmaier

Abstract Circulating leptin levels are elevated during the later stages of pregnancy in mammals, suggesting that maternal leptin may play a role in maintenance of pregnancy and/or preparation for parturition and lactation. The regulation and source of circulating leptin during pregnancy remains undetermined, but leptin mRNA levels increase in adipose tissue during this time in some species. Considerable controversy exists whether placenta is also a leptin-secreting tissue during pregnancy. Here, we directly demonstrate that leptin secretion rates from mouse adipose tissue in vitro are decreased during early pregnancy and up-regulated during late pregnancy and lactation. Changes in leptin secretion rates in vitro paralleled those of circulating leptin in vivo during gestation. Subcutaneous implants of estradiol or corticosterone into lactating mice for 48 h stimulated adipose leptin secretion rates in vitro to the level of that in pregnant mice. However, corticosterone, but not estradiol, increased leptin secretion when added to isolated adipose tissue in vitro. Placentae obtained at two stages of pregnancy did not secrete leptin in vitro, either when acutely isolated or when dissociated into cells for long-term cultures. Placental tissue (or cells) secreted progesterone, however, demonstrating placental viability. We conclude that hyperleptinemia during late pregnancy in mice primarily results from corticosterone-dependent up-regulation of leptin secretion from adipose tissue, and that the placenta does not contribute to leptin secretion. The initial decrease in leptin secretory rates from adipose tissue during early pregnancy may facilitate energy storage for the subsequent, increased metabolic demands of later pregnancy and lactation.


Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 1999

Plasma leptin decreases during lactation in insectivorous bats

Thomas H. Kunz; E. Bicer; Wendy R. Hood; Michael J. Axtell; W. R. Harrington; Brian A. Silvia; Eric P. Widmaier

Abstract We previously demonstrated high leptin levels during late pregnancy in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus). We now extend these observations to a second species, the big brown bat (Eptesicus fuscus), and also report that leptin increases after the first trimester of pregnancy. Leptin decreased to baseline 1 week following parturition, with a half-time decay of 2 days. During lactation, leptin was significantly correlated with body mass in E. fuscus, but not in M. lucifugus. No circadian pattern of leptin was observed in M. lucifugus. The decrease in post-partum leptin in bats may be partly explained by loss of putative placental leptin. The continued decrease may reflect depletion of body fat during this energy demanding period, at least in Eptesicus. Changes in leptin during lactation appeared to be independent of circadian effects and time of sampling. Our study provides additional evidence that leptin increases during pregnancy and declines during lactation in a free-ranging mammal, supporting the hypothesis that leptin plays important but yet undetermined roles in reproduction.


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

Interactions between CD36 and global intestinal alkaline phosphatase in mouse small intestine and effects of high-fat diet.

Matthew D. Lynes; Sonoko Narisawa; José Luis Millán; Eric P. Widmaier

The mechanisms of the saturable component of long-chain fatty acid (LCFA) transport across the small intestinal epithelium and its regulation by a high-fat diet (HFD) are uncertain. It is hypothesized here that the putative fatty acid translocase/CD36 and intestinal alkaline phosphatases (IAPs) function together to optimize LCFA transport. Phosphorylated CD36 (pCD36) was expressed in mouse enterocytes and dephosphorylated by calf IAP (CIAP). Uptake of fluorescently tagged LCFA into isolated enteroctyes was increased when cells were treated with CIAP; this was blocked with a specific CD36 inhibitor. pCD36 colocalized in enterocytes with the global IAP (gIAP) isozyme and, specifically, coimmunoprecipitated with gIAP, but not the duodenal-specific isozyme (dIAP). Purified recombinant gIAP dephosphorylated immunoprecipitated pCD36, and antiserum to gIAP decreased initial LCFA uptake in enterocytes. Body weight, adiposity, and plasma leptin and triglycerides were significantly increased in HFD mice compared with controls fed a normal-fat diet. HFD significantly increased immunoreactive CD36 and gIAP, but not dIAP, in jejunum, but not duodenum. Uptake of LCFA was increased in a CD36-dependent manner in enterocytes from HFD mice. It is concluded that CD36 exists in its phosphorylated and dephosphorylated states in mouse enterocytes, that pCD36 is a substrate of gIAP, and that dephosphorylation by IAPs results in increased LCFA transport capability. HFD upregulates CD36 and gIAP in parallel and enhances CD36-dependent fatty acid uptake. The interactions between these proteins may be important for efficient fat transport in mouse intestine, but whether the changes in gIAP and CD36 in enterocytes contribute to HFD-induced obesity remains to be determined.


Endocrine | 1997

Leptin, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in free-ranging pregnant bats

Eric P. Widmaier; Jennifer Long; Beth Cadigan; Susan Gurgel; Thomas H. Kunz

Leptin, the product of the obese gene first identified in mice, restores fertility in obese mice, and accelerates puberty in mice. We hypothesized that leptin’s putative role in reproduction may extend to pregnancy and lactation. Leptin levels were determined inMyotis lucifugus, the little brown bat, a free-ranging mammal with a seasonal breeding cycle. The present study shows that plasma levels of leptin progressively rise during pregnancy, supporting a potential role for leptin in the maintenancy of pregnancy. In contrast, leptin was significantly lower during lactation, a time when most mammals, including bats, demonstrate reduced fertility. In addition to its possible roles in reproduction, leptin appears important in regulation of energy balance.M. lucifugus spontaneously fasts for up to 16 h each day during the active season, which allowed us to test the hypothesis that acute fasting was associated with decreased leptin. Leptin was significantly lower in fasted (lactating) bats, compared to those that recently returned from nightly foraging. Although postprandial lactating bats had a significantly higher fat index than fasted bats, plasma leptin and body fat were not significantly correlated, and were only weakly correlated (r2=0.26) when both pregnant and lactating females were included in the analysis. Similar changes during pregnancy, lactation, and the daily feeding cycle were observed in the hypothalamic neuropeptide, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), which is believed to play an important role in energy balance and reproduction. By contrast, neuropeptide Y (NPY) increased during pregnancy but did not change during fasting. These results suggest that leptin’s putative role in reproduction may extend to pregnancy and lactation, and that spontaneous, acute fasting results in decreased circulating levels of leptin inM. lucifugus.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 1995

Ontogeny of immunoreactive and bioactive microsomol steroidogenic enzymes during adrenocortical development in rats

Marie Nagaya; Maya Arai; Eric P. Widmaier

The functional development of the neonatal rat adrenal cortex is characterized by a triphasic response to adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), with a nadir in responsiveness around neonatal day 10 (d10). In this study, the hypothesis was tested that hyporesponsiveness to ACTH partly results from deficiencies in steroidogenic enzyme content. Immunoreactive (ir) levels of mitochondrial cytochrome P450 enzymes (side chain cleavage (P450scc) and 11 beta-hydroxylase (P450c11)) did not change during neonatal development. Immunoreactive levels of microsomal 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase/isomerase (3 beta-HSD), however, were significantly and comparably lower in both day 1 (d1) and d10 neonates compared to adult rats. Activity of 3 beta-HSD did not parallel changes in ir 3 beta-HSD content. Enzyme activity was low on d1 (approximately 39% of adult activity), but by d10 was statistically equivalent to that of microsomes from adult adrenal glands. Immunoreactive levels of microsomal cytochrome P450 21 alpha-hydroxylase (P450c21) were significantly lower in d1 glands than in adult glands (by approximately 50%), but by d10 were statistically indistinguishable from adults. On the other hand, P450c21 activity was equivalent on d1 and d10 and both were significantly lower compared to adults (approximately 62% of adult activity). ACTH injections from d3-d10 facilitated the adrenocortical steroidogenic response to ACTH on d10. This treatment increased levels of ir 3 beta-HSD, but not ir P450c21. The results suggest that rat adrenocortical 3 beta-HSD and P450c21 are developmentally and differentially regulated, and that ir levels of the proteins are not correlated with enzyme activity during the neonatal period. One possible explanation for these observations is that multiple isoforms of the two enzymes, with different antigenic and enzymatic properties, may be expressed during development at different times. In addition, the combined decreased activities of these two enzymes can almost entirely account for the decreased steroidogenic output of rat adrenocortical cells on d1, but not during the later neonatal period.


Life Sciences | 2011

Involvement of CD36 and intestinal alkaline phosphatases in fatty acid transport in enterocytes, and the response to a high-fat diet.

Matthew D. Lynes; Eric P. Widmaier

The vertebrate intestine is notable for its plasticity in response to environmental, pathologic, reproductive, and dietary challenges. The molecular mechanisms of intestinal adaptations typically involve both morphologic and functional changes. In response to chronic ingestion of a high-fat diet, for example, the mammalian small intestine quickly adapts to efficiently accommodate increased transport of long-chain fatty acids across the mucosa. Whereas this may be adaptive in the short term, in the long term it may contribute to the pathologies associated with chronic high-fat diets in humans and other mammals. This review focuses on some of the known and putative mechanisms by which fatty acids are transported across the intestinal epithelium in addition to simple diffusion, and how these mechanisms may be regulated in part by a high-fat diet. A model is proposed in which two key proteins, CD36 and the enzyme intestinal alkaline phosphatase, work in a coordinated manner to optimize fatty acid transport across enterocytes in mice.

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Hershel Raff

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Joseph A. Majzoub

Boston Children's Hospital

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