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Dive into the research topics where Gary K. Heinemann is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary K. Heinemann.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2014

Placental restriction of fetal growth reduces cutaneous responses to antigen after sensitization in sheep

Amy L. Wooldridge; Robert J. Bischof; Els N.T. Meeusen; Hong Liu; Gary K. Heinemann; Damien S. Hunter; Lynne C. Giles; Karen L. Kind; Julie A. Owens; Vicki L. Clifton; Kathryn L. Gatford

Prenatal and early childhood exposures are implicated as causes of allergy, but the effects of intrauterine growth restriction on immune function and allergy are poorly defined. We therefore evaluated effects of experimental restriction of fetal growth on immune function and allergic sensitization in adolescent sheep. Immune function (circulating total red and white blood cells, neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, and basophils, and the antibody response to Clostridial vaccination) and responses to house dust mite (HDM) allergen and ovalbumin (OVA) antigen sensitization (specific total Ig, IgG1, and IgE antibodies, and cutaneous hypersensitivity) were investigated in adolescent sheep from placentally restricted (PR, n = 23) and control (n = 40) pregnancies. Increases in circulating HDM-specific IgE (P = 0.007) and OVA-specific IgE (P = 0.038) were greater in PR than control progeny. PR did not alter total Ig, IgG1, or IgM responses to either antigen. PR increased OVA-specific but not HDM-specific IgA responses in females only (P = 0.023). Multiple birth increased Ig responses to OVA in a sex-specific manner. PR decreased the proportion of positive cutaneous hypersensitivity responders to OVA at 24 h (P = 0.030) but had no effect on cutaneous responses to HDM. Acute wheal responses to intradermal histamine correlated positively with birth weight in singletons (P = 0.023). Intrauterine growth restriction may suppress inflammatory responses in skin downstream of IgE induction, without impairment in antibody responses to a nonpolysaccharide vaccine. Discord between cutaneous and IgE responses following sensitization suggests new mechanisms for prenatal allergy programming.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Effect of placental restriction and neonatal exendin-4 treatment on postnatal growth, adult body composition, and in vivo glucose metabolism in the sheep.

Hong Liu; Christopher G. Schultz; Miles J. De Blasio; Anita M. Peura; Gary K. Heinemann; Himawan Harryanto; Damien S. Hunter; Amy L. Wooldridge; Karen L. Kind; Lynne C. Giles; Rebecca A. Simmons; Julie A. Owens; Kathryn L. Gatford

Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) increases the risk of adult type 2 diabetes (T2D) and obesity. Neonatal exendin-4 treatment can prevent diabetes in the IUGR rat, but whether this will be effective in a species where the pancreas is more mature at birth is unknown. Therefore, we evaluated the effects of neonatal exendin-4 administration after experimental restriction of placental and fetal growth on growth and adult metabolic outcomes in sheep. Body composition, glucose tolerance, and insulin secretion and sensitivity were assessed in singleton-born adult sheep from control (CON; n = 6 females and 4 males) and placentally restricted pregnancies (PR; n = 13 females and 7 males) and in sheep from PR pregnancies that were treated with exendin-4 as neonates (daily sc injections of 1 nmol/kg exendin-4; PR + exendin-4; n = 11 females and 7 males). Placental restriction reduced birth weight (by 29%) and impaired glucose tolerance in the adult but did not affect adult adiposity, insulin secretion, or insulin sensitivity. Neonatal exendin-4 suppressed growth during treatment, followed by delayed catchup growth and unchanged adult adiposity. Neonatal exendin-4 partially restored glucose tolerance in PR progeny but did not affect insulin secretion or sensitivity. Although the effects on glucose tolerance are promising, the lack of effects on adult body composition, insulin secretion, and insulin sensitivity suggest that the neonatal period may be too late to fully reprogram the metabolic consequences of IUGR in species that are more mature at birth than rodents.


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

Increased Placental Nutrient Transporter Expression at Midgestation after Maternal Growth Hormone Treatment in Pigs: A Placental Mechanism for Increased Fetal Growth

Elena Tung; Claire T. Roberts; Gary K. Heinemann; Miles J. De Blasio; Karen L. Kind; William H.E.J. van Wettere; Julie A. Owens; Kathryn L. Gatford

ABSTRACT Growth hormone (GH) is important in maternal adaptation to pregnancy, and maternal circulating GH concentrations are reduced in human growth-restricted pregnancies. In the pig, maternal GH treatment throughout early to mid pregnancy increases fetal growth, despite constraining effects of adolescent and primiparous pregnancy, high litter size, and restricted maternal nutrition. Because GH cannot cross the placenta and does not increase placental weight, we hypothesized that its effects on fetal growth might be via improved placental structure or function. We therefore investigated effects of maternal GH treatment in pigs on structural correlates of placental function and placental expression of nutrient transporters important to fetal growth. Multiparous (sows) and primiparous pregnant pigs (gilts) were treated with GH (∼15 μg kg−1 day−1) or vehicle from Days 25–50 of gestation (n = 7–8 per group, term ∼115 days). Placentas were collected at Day 50 of gestation, and we measured structural correlates of function and expression of SLC2A1 (previously known as GLUT1) and SLC38A2 (previously known as SNAT2) nutrient transporters. Maternal GH treatment did not alter placental size or structure, increased protein expression of SLC2A1 in trophoblast (+35%; P = 0.037) and on its basal membrane (+44%; P = 0.011), and increased SLC38A2 protein expression in the basal (+44%; P = 0.001) but not the apical cytoplasm of trophoblast. Our findings suggest that maternal GH treatment increases fetal growth, in part, by enhancing placental nutrient transporter protein expression and hence fetal nutrient supply as well as trophoblast proliferation and differentiation and may have the potential to ameliorate intrauterine growth restriction.


Endocrine connections | 2014

Circulating IGF1 and IGF2 and SNP genotypes in men and pregnant and non-pregnant women

Kathryn L. Gatford; Gary K. Heinemann; Steven Thompson; Jamie V. Zhang; Sam Buckberry; Julie A. Owens; Gus Dekker; Claire T. Roberts

Circulating IGFs are important regulators of prenatal and postnatal growth, and of metabolism and pregnancy, and change with sex, age and pregnancy. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes coding for these hormones associate with circulating abundance of IGF1 and IGF2 in non-pregnant adults and children, but whether this occurs in pregnancy is unknown. We therefore investigated associations of plasma IGF1 and IGF2 with age and genotype at candidate SNPs previously associated with circulating IGF1, IGF2 or methylation of the INS – IGF2 – H19 locus in men (n=134), non-pregnant women (n=74) and women at 15 weeks of gestation (n=98). Plasma IGF1 concentrations decreased with age (P<0.001) and plasma IGF1 and IGF2 concentrations were lower in pregnant women than in non-pregnant women or men (each P<0.001). SNP genotypes in the INS – IGF2 – H19 locus were associated with plasma IGF1 (IGF2 rs680, IGF2 rs1004446 and IGF2 rs3741204) and IGF2 (IGF2 rs1004446, IGF2 rs3741204 and H19 rs217727). In single SNP models, effects of IGF2 rs680 were similar between groups, with higher plasma IGF1 concentrations in individuals with the GG genotype when compared with GA (P=0.016), or combined GA and AA genotypes (P=0.003). SNPs in the IGF2 gene associated with IGF1 or IGF2 were in linkage disequilibrium, hence these associations could reflect other genotype variations within this region or be due to changes in INS – IGF2 – H19 methylation previously associated with some of these variants. As IGF1 in early pregnancy promotes placental differentiation and function, lower IGF1 concentrations in pregnant women carrying IGF2 rs680 A alleles may affect placental development and/or risk of pregnancy complications.


Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease | 2017

Small size at birth predicts decreased cardiomyocyte number in the adult ovine heart

S. Vranas; Gary K. Heinemann; Hong Liu; M. J. De Blasio; Julie A. Owens; Kathryn L. Gatford; M. J. Black

Low birth weight is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease in adulthood. Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) hearts have fewer CMs in early postnatal life, which may impair postnatal cardiovascular function and hence, explain increased disease risk, but whether the cardiomyocyte deficit persists to adult life is unknown. We therefore studied the effects of experimentally induced placental restriction (PR) on cardiac outcomes in young adult sheep. Heart size, cardiomyocyte number, nuclearity and size were measured in control (n=5) and PR (n=5) male sheep at 1 year of age. PR lambs were 36% lighter at birth (P=0.007), had 38% faster neonatal relative growth rates (P=0.001) and had 21% lighter heart weights relative to body weight as adults (P=0.024) than control lambs. Cardiomyocyte number, nuclearity and size in the left ventricle did not differ between control and PR adults; hearts of both groups contained cardiomyocytes (CM) with between one and four nuclei. Overall, cardiomyocyte number in the adult left ventricle correlated positively with birth weight but not with adult weight. This study is the first to demonstrate that intrauterine growth directly influences the complement of CM in the adult heart. Cardiomyocyte size was not correlated with cardiomyocyte number or birth weight. Our results suggest that body weight at birth affects lifelong cardiac functional reserve. We hypothesise that decreased cardiomyocyte number of low birth weight individuals may impair their capacity to adapt to additional challenges such as obesity and ageing.


Growth Hormone & Igf Research | 2015

Maternal insulin-like growth factor 1 and 2 differentially affect the renin–angiotensin system during pregnancy in the guinea pig

Prue Standen; Amanda N. Sferruzzi-Perri; Robyn L. Taylor; Gary K. Heinemann; Jamie V. Zhang; Amanda R. Highet; Kirsty G. Pringle; Julie A. Owens; Vasumathy Kumarasamy; Eugenie R. Lumbers; Claire T. Roberts

OBJECTIVE Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) are known to interact with the renin-angiotensin system (RAS). We previously demonstrated that administration of IGF1 to guinea pigs in early to mid pregnancy promotes placental function and fetal growth in mid to late gestation. Early administration of IGF2 had sustained, but not acute, effects on these parameters and also on placental structural differentiation. Here, we aimed to determine whether the IGFs interact with the placental RAS in early to mid gestation to modulate placental development and increase fetal growth and survival, and if IGF2 binding the IGF2R is implicated in the sustained effects of IGF2 treatment. DESIGN At day 20 of pregnancy, guinea pigs were infused with 1m g/kg/day of IGF1, IGF2, (Leu27)IGF2 or vehicle for 18days and sacrificed on either day 62 (late pregnancy) or during the infusion period on day 35 (early-mid pregnancy). Placental structure at day 35 was analyzed using morphometric technique and expression of RAS genes in the placenta and placental and plasma renin activity were measured at both time points. RESULTS Compared with vehicle at day 35 of gestation, IGF1 infusion reduced the total midsagittal cross-sectional area of the placenta (-17%, p = 0.02) and the labyrinth area (-22%, p = 0.014) but did not alter the labyrinth volume nor labyrinth:interlobium ratios. IGF2 treatment did not affect placental structure. IGF1 did not alter placental mRNA for any of the RAS genes quantified at day 35 (AGTR1, ACE, AGT, TGFB1) but increased TGFB1 expression by more than 16-fold (p = 0.005) at day 62. IGF2 increased placental expression of AGTR1 (+88%, p = 0.03) and decreased AGT (-73%, p = 0.01) compared with the vehicle-treated group at day 35, and both IGF2 and (Leu27)IGF2 increased expression of TGFB1 at day 62 by 9-fold (p = 0.016) and 6-fold (p = 0.019) respectively. Both IGFs increased the ratio of active:total placental renin protein (+22% p = 0.026 p = 0.038) compared to vehicle compared to vehicle at day 35 but not 62. At day 62, IGF2-treated mothers showed a marked increase in total plasma renin (+495%) and active renin (+359%) compared to vehicle but decreased the ratio of active to total renin by 41% (p = 0.042). (Leu27)IGF2-treated animals had higher levels of placental active renin (+73%, p = 0.001) and total renin (+71%, p = 0.001) compared with the vehicle control. CONCLUSIONS The data obtained in the current study suggest the potential for alternate roles for the induction of the RAS after IGF treatment. IGF1 and 2 treatments increase the activation of prorenin to renin in the placenta, possibly due to increased protease activity. In addition, IGF2 treatment in early pregnancy may enhance the maternal adaptation to pregnancy through stimulation of renin in the kidney. The sustained effects on placental differentiation and function after IGF2 treatment suggest therapeutic potential for exogenous administration of IGFs in improving pregnancy outcomes.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Early treatment of the pregnant guinea pig with IGFs promotes placental transport and nutrient partitioning near term

Amanda N. Sferruzzi-Perri; Julie A. Owens; Prue Standen; Robyn L. Taylor; Gary K. Heinemann; Jeffrey S. Robinson; Claire T. Roberts


Placenta | 2012

Use of Matrigel in culture affects cell phenotype and gene expression in the first trimester trophoblast cell line HTR8/SVneo.

Amanda R. Highet; V.J. Zhang; Gary K. Heinemann; Claire T. Roberts


Molecular Human Reproduction | 2013

The association of maternal ACE A11860G with small for gestational age babies is modulated by the environment and by fetal sex: a multicentre prospective case–control study

Ang Zhou; Gustaaf A. Dekker; Eugenie R. Lumbers; Shalem Leemaqz; Steven Thompson; Gary K. Heinemann; Lesley McCowan; Claire T. Roberts


Placenta | 2015

The effects of angiogenic growth factors on first trimester trophoblast invasion and proliferation

Prabha Andraweera; Amanda R. Highet; Gary K. Heinemann; Claire T. Roberts

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Hong Liu

University of Adelaide

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Ang Zhou

University of Adelaide

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