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Dive into the research topics where Fiona J. McDonald is active.

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Featured researches published by Fiona J. McDonald.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1995

rENaC Is the Predominant Na + Channel in the Apical Membrane of the Rat Renal Inner Medullary Collecting Duct

Kenneth A. Volk; Rita D. Sigmund; Peter M. Snyder; Fiona J. McDonald; Michael Welsh; John B. Stokes

The terminal nephron segment, the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD), absorbs Na+ by an electrogenic process that involves the entry through an apical (luminal) membrane Na+ channel. To understand the nature of this Na+ channel, we employed the patch clamp technique on the apical membrane of primary cultures of rat IMCD cells grown on permeable supports. We found that all ion channels detected in the cell-attached configuration were highly selective for Na+ (Li+) over K+. The open/closed transitions showed slow kinetics, had a slope conductance of 6-11 pS, and were sensitive to amiloride and benzamil. Nonselective cation channels with a higher conductance (25-30 pS), known to be present in IMCD cells, were not detected in the cell-attached configuration, but were readily detected in excised patches. The highly selective channels had properties similar to the recently described rat epithelial Na+ channel complex, rENaC. We therefore asked whether rENaC mRNA was present in the IMCD. We detected mRNA for all three rENaC subunits in rat renal papilla and also in primary cultures of the IMCD. Either glucocorticoid hormone or mineralocorticoid hormone increased the amount of alpha-rENaC subunit mRNA but had no effect on the mRNA level of the beta-rENaC or gamma-rENaC subunits. From these data, taken in the context of other studies on the characteristics of Na+ selective channels and the distribution of rENaC mRNA, we conclude that steroid stimulated Na+ absorption by the IMCD is mediated primarily by Na+ channels having properties of the rENaC subunit complex.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

Lithium-induced Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus: Renal Effects of Amiloride

Jennifer J. Bedford; Susan Weggery; Gaye Ellis; Fiona J. McDonald; Peter R. Joyce; John P. Leader; Robert J. Walker

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Polyuria, polydipsia, and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus have been associated with use of psychotropic medications, especially lithium. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS The impact of psychotropic medications on urinary concentrating ability and urinary aquaporin 2 (AQP2) excretion was investigated after overnight fluid deprivation, and over 6 h after 40 microg of desmopressin (dDAVP), in patients on lithium (n = 45), compared with those on alternate psychotropic medications (n = 42). RESULTS Those not on lithium demonstrated normal urinary concentrating ability (958 +/- 51 mOsm/kg) and increased urinary excretion of AQP2 (98 +/- 21 fmol/micromol creatinine) and cAMP (410 +/- 15 pmol/micromol creatinine). Participants taking lithium were divided into tertiles according to urinary concentrating ability: normal, >750 mOsm/kg; partial nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), 750 to 300 mOsm/kg; full NDI, <300 mOsm/kg. Urinary AQP2 concentrations were 70.9 +/- 13.6 fmol/micromol creatinine (normal), 76.5 +/- 10.4 fmol/micromol creatinine (partial NDI), and 27.3 fmol/micromol creatinine (full NDI). Impaired urinary concentrating ability and reduced urinary AQP2, cAMP excretion correlated with duration of lithium therapy. Other psychotropic agents did not impair urinary concentrating ability. Eleven patients on lithium were enrolled in a randomized placebo-controlled crossover trial investigating the actions of amiloride (10 mg daily for 6 wk) on dDAVP-stimulated urinary concentrating ability and AQP2 excretion. Amiloride increased maximal urinary osmolality and AQP2 excretion. CONCLUSIONS By inference, amiloride-induced reduction of lithium uptake in the principal cells of the collecting duct improves responsiveness to AVP-stimulated translocation of AQP2 to the apical membrane of the principal cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Identification of Murr1 as a Regulator of the Human δ Epithelial Sodium Channel

Wolfgang Biasio; Tina Chang; C. Joy McIntosh; Fiona J. McDonald

The human δ epithelial sodium channel (δENaC) subunit is related to the α-, β-, and γENaC subunits that control salt homeostasis. δENaC forms an amiloride-sensitive Na+ channel with the β and γ subunits. However, the in vivo function of δENaC is not known. To gain insight into the function of δENaC, a yeast two-hybrid screen of a human brain cDNA library was carried out using the C- and N-terminal domains of δENaC. A novel δENaC-interacting protein called Murr1 (mouse U2af1-rs1 region) was isolated in the C-terminal domain screen. Murr1 is a 21-kDa protein mutated in Bedlington terriers suffering from copper toxicosis. The interaction of Murr1 and δENaC was confirmed by glutathione S-transferase pulldown assay and coimmunoprecipitation. To test the functional significance of the interaction, Murr1 was coexpressed with δβγENaC in Xenopus oocytes. Murr1 inhibited amiloride-sensitive sodium current in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, deletion of the last 59 amino acids of δENaC abolished the inhibition. Murr1 also bound to the β- and γENaC subunits and inhibited αβγENaC sodium current. Therefore, these results suggest that Murr1 is a novel regulator of ENaC.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Human Nedd4 interacts with the human epithelial Na+ channel: WW3 but not WW1 binds to Na+-channel subunits.

Tracy J. Farr; Sarah J. Coddington-Lawson; Peter M. Snyder; Fiona J. McDonald

The epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) regulates Na(+) absorption in epithelial tissues including the lung, colon and sweat gland, and in the distal nephrons of the kidney. When Na(+)-channel function is disrupted, salt and water homoeostasis is affected. The cytoplasmic regions of the Na(+)-channel subunits provide binding sites for other proteins to interact with and potentially regulate Na(+)-channel activity. Previously we showed that a proline-rich region of the alpha subunit of the Na(+) channel bound to a protein of 116 kDa from human lung cells. Here we report the identification of this protein as human Nedd4, a ubiquitin-protein ligase that binds to the Na(+)-channel subunits via its WW domains. Further, we show that WW domains 2, 3 and 4 of human Nedd4 bind to the alpha, beta and gamma Na(+)-channel subunits but not to a mutated beta subunit. In addition, when co-expressed in Xenopus oocytes, human Nedd4 down-regulates Na(+)-channel activity.


Developmental Brain Research | 2000

Serum-free culture of rat post-natal and fetal brainstem neurons.

Bronwyn M. Kivell; Fiona J. McDonald; John H. Miller

Serum-free medium is essential for cell culture studies in which complete control of the environment is required. Primary culture of post-natal brainstem neurons in defined medium has not been described in the literature, and successful culture of primary brainstem neurons is typically restricted to embryonic ages E14-E18. This study describes a method for culture of fetal and post-natal brainstem neurons using a serum-free culture medium. The culture system is based on Neurobasal medium supplemented with antioxidant-rich B27. Media and supplements are commercially available products from Life Technologies. Neuron survival was optimized by replacing glutamine with GlutaMaxI, by matching osmolality with neuronal age, and by using Hibernate medium to increase neuron survival during tissue dissociation. Fetal E14, E16, E20, and post-natal P3 and P6 cultures were examined after 4, 7, and 9 days in culture. Neuron and glial cells present in the cultures were identified using immunocytochemistry with antibodies raised against microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), respectively. Fetal E14 cultures had more bipolar neurons than multipolar neurons compared with developmentally older P6 cultures. Early fetal cultures had a higher percentage of neurons than late fetal and early post-natal cultures. Neuron survival was similar between 4 and 9 days in culture for all age groups tested. This is the first reliable, defined culture medium that supports brainstem neurons from late fetal and early post-natal stages of the rat for up to 6 days post-partum.


Higher Education Research & Development | 2003

Research Collaboration Among University Scientists

Philip S. Morrison; Gill Dobbie; Fiona J. McDonald

Despite the growing importance of collaboration in research there have been very few investigations of the practice of research collaboration itself. The study we report investigated this practice by analysing 444 collaborative projects undertaken by staff in the Science Faculty of a New Zealand university. While the results support the sociology of science model of vertical collaboration up and down the academic hierarchy, we also show that significant collaboration now takes place across levels in the hierarchy, that is among peers, in what we call horizontal collaboration. This shift from vertical to horizontal collaboration has not been readily apparent in bibliographic studies of co-authored papers in top journals. One of the questions this study raises is the often assumed positive association between collaboration, research output and research quality, and the implications such assumptions have on the institutionalisation of research within the university. We end by suggesting that the shift that is occurring in the location of research from conventional departments to research centres within the university may signal an attempt to resurrect the practice of vertical collaboration.


Brain Research Protocols | 2001

Method for serum-free culture of late fetal and early postnatal rat brainstem neurons

Bronwyn M. Kivell; Fiona J. McDonald; John H. Miller

Primary culture of postnatal brainstem neurons in defined medium has not been described in the literature. Successful primary culture of brainstem neurons is typically restricted to embryonic ages E14-E18. This study describes a method for culture of late fetal and early postnatal brainstem neurons using a serum-free culture medium. The culture system is based on Neurobasal medium supplemented with antioxidant-rich B27 (Life Technologies). Neuron survival was optimized by replacing glutamine with GlutaMaxI, by matching osmolality with neuronal age, and by using Hibernate medium to increase neuron survival during tissue dissociation. This paper describes the first reliable method for culturing brainstem neurons from late fetal and early postnatal stages of the rat for up to 6 days postpartum.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

CCDC22 deficiency in humans blunts activation of proinflammatory NF-kappa B signaling

Petro Starokadomskyy; Nathan Gluck; Haiying Li; Baozhi Chen; Mathew Wallis; Gabriel N. Maine; Xicheng Mao; Iram W. Zaidi; Marco Y. Hein; Fiona J. McDonald; Steffen Lenzner; Agnes Zecha; Hans-Hilger Ropers; Andreas W. Kuss; Julie McGaughran; Jozef Gecz; Ezra Burstein

NF-κB is a master regulator of inflammation and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of immune disorders and cancer. Its regulation involves a variety of steps, including the controlled degradation of inhibitory IκB proteins. In addition, the inactivation of DNA-bound NF-κB is essential for its regulation. This step requires a factor known as copper metabolism Murr1 domain-containing 1 (COMMD1), the prototype member of a conserved gene family. While COMMD proteins have been linked to the ubiquitination pathway, little else is known about other family members. Here we demonstrate that all COMMD proteins bind to CCDC22, a factor recently implicated in X-linked intellectual disability (XLID). We showed that an XLID-associated CCDC22 mutation decreased CCDC22 protein expression and impaired its binding to COMMD proteins. Moreover, some affected individuals displayed ectodermal dysplasia, a congenital condition that can result from developmental NF-κB blockade. Indeed, patient-derived cells demonstrated impaired NF-κB activation due to decreased IκB ubiquitination and degradation. In addition, we found that COMMD8 acted in conjunction with CCDC22 to direct the degradation of IκB proteins. Taken together, our results indicate that CCDC22 participates in NF-κB activation and that its deficiency leads to decreased IκB turnover in humans, highlighting an important regulatory component of this pathway.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2010

COMMD1 downregulates the epithelial sodium channel through Nedd4–2

Ying Ke; A. Grant Butt; Marianne Swart; Yong Feng Liu; Fiona J. McDonald

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is important for the long-term control of Na(+) homeostasis and blood pressure. Our previous studies demonstrated that Copper Metabolism Murr1 Domain-containing protein 1 (COMMD1; previously known as Murr1), a protein involved in copper metabolism, inhibited amiloride-sensitive current in Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing ENaC (J Biol Chem 279: 5429, 2004). In this study, we report that COMMD1 inhibits amiloride-sensitive current in mammalian epithelial cells expressing ENaC, that the COMM domain of COMMD1 is sufficient for this effect, and that knockdown of COMMD1 increases amiloride-sensitive current. COMMD1 is coexpressed with ENaC in rat kidney medulla cells. COMMD1 increased ubiquitin modification of ENaC and decreased its cell surface expression. COMMD1 abolished insulin-stimulated amiloride-sensitive current and attenuated the stimulation of current by activated serum and glucocorticoid-regulated kinase (SGK1). COMMD1 was found to interact with both SGK1 and Akt1/protein kinase B, and knockdown of COMMD1 enhanced the stimulatory effect of both SGK1 and Akt1 on amiloride-sensitive current. COMMD1s effects were reduced in the presence of ENaC proteins containing PY motif mutations, abolished in the presence of a dominant negative form of Nedd4-2, and knockdown of COMMD1 reduced the inhibitory effect of Nedd4-2 on ENaC, but did not enhance current when Nedd4-2 was knocked down. These data suggest that COMMD1 modulates Na(+) transport in epithelial cells through regulation of ENaC cell surface expression and this effect is likely mediated via Nedd4-2.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

COMMD1 regulates the delta epithelial sodium channel (δENaC) through trafficking and ubiquitination

Tina Chang; Ying Ke; Kevin Ly; Fiona J. McDonald

The delta subunit of the epithelial sodium channel (δENaC) is a member of the ENaC/degenerin family of ion channels. δENaC is distinct from the related α-, β- and γENaC subunits, known for their role in sodium homeostasis and blood pressure control, as δENaC is expressed in brain neurons and activated by external protons. COMMD1 (copper metabolism Murr1 domain 1) was previously found to associate with and downregulate δENaC activity. Here, we show that COMMD1 interacts with δENaC through its COMM domain. Co-expression of δENaC with COMMD1 significantly reduced δENaC surface expression, and led to an increase in δENaC ubiquitination. Immunocytochemical and confocal microscopy studies show that COMMD1 promoted localization of δENaC to the early/recycling endosomal pool where the two proteins were localized together. These results suggest that COMMD1 downregulates δENaC activity by reducing δENaC surface expression through promoting internalization of surface δENaC to an intracellular recycling pool, possibly via enhanced ubiquitination.

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Bronwyn M. Kivell

Victoria University of Wellington

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