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Dive into the research topics where Leslie Gewin is active.

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Featured researches published by Leslie Gewin.


Developmental Biology | 2008

β1 integrin expression by podocytes is required to maintain glomerular structural integrity

Ambra Pozzi; George Jarad; Gilbert W. Moeckel; Sergio Coffa; Xi Zhang; Leslie Gewin; Vera Eremina; Billy G. Hudson; Dorin-Bogdan Borza; Raymond C. Harris; Lawrence B. Holzman; Carrie L. Phillips; Reinhard Fässler; Susan E. Quaggin; Jeffrey H. Miner; Roy Zent

Integrins are transmembrane heteromeric receptors that mediate interactions between cells and extracellular matrix (ECM). beta1, the most abundantly expressed integrin subunit, binds at least 12 alpha subunits. beta1 containing integrins are highly expressed in the glomerulus of the kidney; however their role in glomerular morphogenesis and maintenance of glomerular filtration barrier integrity is poorly understood. To study these questions we selectively deleted beta1 integrin in the podocyte by crossing beta1(flox/flox) mice with podocyte specific podocin-cre mice (pod-Cre), which express cre at the time of glomerular capillary formation. We demonstrate that podocyte abnormalities are visualized during glomerulogenesis of the pod-Cre;beta1(flox/flox) mice and proteinuria is present at birth, despite a grossly normal glomerular basement membrane. Following the advent of glomerular filtration there is progressive podocyte loss and the mice develop capillary loop and mesangium degeneration with little evidence of glomerulosclerosis. By 3 weeks of age the mice develop severe end stage renal failure characterized by both tubulointerstitial and glomerular pathology. Thus, expression of beta1 containing integrins by the podocyte is critical for maintaining the structural integrity of the glomerulus.


Development | 2009

β1 integrin is necessary for ureteric bud branching morphogenesis and maintenance of collecting duct structural integrity

Xi Zhang; Glenda Mernaugh; Dong Hua Yang; Leslie Gewin; Manakan B. Srichai; Raymond C. Harris; Juan M. Iturregui; Raoul D. Nelson; Donald E. Kohan; Dale R. Abrahamson; Reinhard Fässler; Ambra Pozzi; Roy Zent

The kidney collecting system develops from branching morphogenesis of the ureteric bud (UB). This process requires signaling by growth factors such as glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) as well as cell extracellular matrix interactions mediated by integrins. The importance of integrin signaling in UB development was investigated by deleting integrin β1 at initiation (E10.5) and late (E18.5) stages of development. Deletion at E10.5 resulted in a severe branching morphogenesis phenotype. Deletion at E18.5 did not alter renal development but predisposed the collecting system to severe injury following ureteric obstruction. β1 integrin was required for renal tubular epithelial cells to mediate GDNF- and FGF-dependent signaling despite normal receptor localization and activation in vitro. Aberrations in the same signaling molecules were present in the β1-null UBs in vivo. Thus β1 integrins can regulate organ branching morphogenesis during development by mediating growth-factor-dependent signaling in addition to their well-defined role as adhesion receptors.


Seminars in Nephrology | 2012

How Does TGF-β Mediate Tubulointerstitial Fibrosis?

Leslie Gewin; Roy Zent

Tubulointerstitial fibrosis mediates the development of end-stage renal disease from renal injuries of all etiologies and is considered an important predictor of renal survival. Transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) is one of the most important growth factors that promotes tubulointerstitial fibrosis, but the mechanisms whereby this occurs are not well defined. This is because TGF-β has pleiotropic effects that depend on the target cell type. This review discusses how TGF-β signaling in each of the relevant cell types (eg, tubular epithelium, fibroblasts) may contribute to tubulointerstitial fibrosis progression and suggests ways in which future research can improve our understanding of TGF-β-mediated tubulointerstitial fibrosis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Integrin-mediated type II TGF-β receptor tyrosine dephosphorylation controls SMAD-dependent profibrotic signaling

Xiwu Chen; Hongtao Wang; Hong Jun Liao; Wen Hu; Leslie Gewin; Glenda Mernaugh; Sheng Zhang; Zhong Yin Zhang; Lorenzo Vega-Montoto; Roberto M. Vanacore; Reinhard Fässler; Roy Zent; Ambra Pozzi

Tubulointerstitial fibrosis underlies all forms of end-stage kidney disease. TGF-β mediates both the development and the progression of kidney fibrosis through binding and activation of the serine/threonine kinase type II TGF-β receptor (TβRII), which in turn promotes a TβRI-mediated SMAD-dependent fibrotic signaling cascade. Autophosphorylation of serine residues within TβRII is considered the principal regulatory mechanism of TβRII-induced signaling; however, there are 5 tyrosine residues within the cytoplasmic tail that could potentially mediate TβRII-dependent SMAD activation. Here, we determined that phosphorylation of tyrosines within the TβRII tail was essential for SMAD-dependent fibrotic signaling within cells of the kidney collecting duct. Conversely, the T cell protein tyrosine phosphatase (TCPTP) dephosphorylated TβRII tail tyrosine residues, resulting in inhibition of TβR-dependent fibrotic signaling. The collagen-binding receptor integrin α1β1 was required for recruitment of TCPTP to the TβRII tail, as mice lacking this integrin exhibited impaired TCPTP-mediated tyrosine dephosphorylation of TβRII that led to severe fibrosis in a unilateral ureteral obstruction model of renal fibrosis. Together, these findings uncover a crosstalk between integrin α1β1 and TβRII that is essential for TβRII-mediated SMAD activation and fibrotic signaling pathways.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2012

Deleting the TGF-β Receptor Attenuates Acute Proximal Tubule Injury

Leslie Gewin; Sangeetha Vadivelu; Surekha Neelisetty; Manakan B. Srichai; Paisit Paueksakon; Ambra Pozzi; Raymond C. Harris; Roy Zent

TGF-β is a profibrotic growth factor in CKD, but its role in modulating the kidneys response to AKI is not well understood. The proximal tubule epithelial cell, which is the main cellular target of AKI, expresses high levels of both TGF-β and its receptors. To determine how TGF-β signaling in this tubular segment affects the response to AKI, we selectively deleted the TGF-β type II receptor in the proximal tubules of mice. This deletion attenuated renal impairment and reduced tubular apoptosis in mercuric chloride-induced injury. In vitro, deficiency of the TGF-β type II receptor protected proximal tubule epithelial cells from hydrogen peroxide-induced apoptosis, which was mediated in part by Smad-dependent signaling. Taken together, these results suggest that TGF-β signaling in the proximal tubule has a detrimental effect on the response to AKI as a result of its proapoptotic effects.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

TGF-β Receptor Deletion in the Renal Collecting System Exacerbates Fibrosis

Leslie Gewin; Nada Bulus; Glenda Mernaugh; Gilbert W. Moeckel; Raymond C. Harris; Harold L. Moses; Ambra Pozzi; Roy Zent

TGF-beta plays a key role in upregulating matrix production in injury-induced renal fibrosis, but how TGF-beta signaling in distinct compartments of the kidney, such as specific segments of the nephron, affects the response to injury is unknown. In this study, we determined the role of TGF-beta signaling both in development of the renal collecting system and in response to injury by selectively deleting the TGF-beta type II receptor in mice at the initiation of ureteric bud development. These mice developed normally but demonstrated a paradoxic increase in fibrosis associated with enhanced levels of active TGF-beta after unilateral ureteral obstruction. Consistent with this observation, TGF-beta type II receptor deletion in cultured collecting duct cells resulted in excessive integrin alphavbeta6-dependent TGF-beta activation that increased collagen synthesis in co-cultured renal interstitial fibroblasts. These results suggest that inhibiting TGF-beta receptor-mediated function in collecting ducts may exacerbate renal fibrosis by enhancing paracrine TGF-beta signaling between epithelial and interstitial cells.


Kidney International | 2015

Renal fibrosis is not reduced by blocking transforming growth factor-β signaling in matrix-producing interstitial cells

Surekha Neelisetty; Catherine E. Alford; Karen Reynolds; Luke Woodbury; Stellor Nlandu-khodo; Haichun Yang; Agnes B. Fogo; Chuan-Ming Hao; Raymond C. Harris; Roy Zent; Leslie Gewin

Transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) strongly promotes renal tubulointerstitial fibrosis, but the cellular target that mediates its profibrotic actions has not been clearly identified. While in vitro data suggest that TGF-β-induced matrix production is mediated by renal fibroblasts, the role of these cells in TGF-β-dependent tubulointerstitial fibrosis following renal injury is not well defined. To address this, we deleted the TGF-β type II receptor in matrix-producing interstitial cells using two different inducible Cre models: COL1A2-Cre with a mesenchymal enhancer element and tenascin-Cre which targets medullary interstitial cells and either the mouse unilateral ureteral obstruction or aristolochic acid renal injury model. Renal interstitial cells lacking the TGF-β receptor had significantly impaired collagen I production, but unexpectedly, overall tissue fibrosis was unchanged in the conditional knockouts after renal injury. Thus, abrogating TGF-β signaling in matrix-producing interstitial cells is not sufficient to reduce fibrosis after renal injury.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2016

Cytometry-based single-cell analysis of intact epithelial signaling reveals MAPK activation divergent from TNF-α-induced apoptosis in vivo.

Alan J. Simmons; Amrita Banerjee; Eliot T. McKinley; Cherie' R Scurrah; Charles A. Herring; Leslie Gewin; Ryota Masuzaki; Seth J. Karp; Jeffrey L. Franklin; Michael J. Gerdes; Jonathan M. Irish; Robert J. Coffey; Ken S. Lau

Understanding heterogeneous cellular behaviors in a complex tissue requires the evaluation of signaling networks at single‐cell resolution. However, probing signaling in epithelial tissues using cytometry‐based single‐cell analysis has been confounded by the necessity of single‐cell dissociation, where disrupting cell‐to‐cell connections inherently perturbs native cell signaling states. Here, we demonstrate a novel strategy (Disaggregation for Intracellular Signaling in Single Epithelial Cells from Tissue—DISSECT) that preserves native signaling for Cytometry Time‐of‐Flight (CyTOF) and fluorescent flow cytometry applications. A 21‐plex CyTOF analysis encompassing core signaling and cell‐identity markers was performed on the small intestinal epithelium after systemic tumor necrosis factor‐alpha (TNF‐α) stimulation. Unsupervised and supervised analyses robustly selected signaling features that identify a unique subset of epithelial cells that are sensitized to TNF‐α‐induced apoptosis in the seemingly homogeneous enterocyte population. Specifically, p‐ERK and apoptosis are divergently regulated in neighboring enterocytes within the epithelium, suggesting a mechanism of contact‐dependent survival. Our novel single‐cell approach can broadly be applied, using both CyTOF and multi‐parameter flow cytometry, for investigating normal and diseased cell states in a wide range of epithelial tissues.


Kidney International | 2017

Progression of chronic kidney disease: too much cellular talk causes damage

Leslie Gewin; Roy Zent; Ambra Pozzi

Tubulointerstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, and peritubular capillary rarefaction are major hallmarks of chronic kidney disease. The tubulointerstitium consists of multiple cell components including tubular epithelial, mesenchymal (fibroblasts and pericytes), endothelial, and inflammatory cells. Crosstalk among these cell components is a key component in the pathogenesis of this complex disease. After severe or recurrent injury, the renal tubular epithelial cells undergo changes in structure and cell cycle that are accompanied by altered expression and production of cytokines. These cytokines contribute to the initiation of the fibrotic response by favoring activation of fibroblasts, recruitment of inflammatory cells, and loss of endothelial cells. This review focuses on how augmented growth factor and cytokine production induces epithelial crosstalk with cells in the interstitium to promote progressive tubulointerstitial fibrosis after renal injury.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013

Role of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) in mediation of dopamine's effects in the kidney

Ming-Zhi Zhang; Yinqiu Wang; Bing Yao; Leslie Gewin; Shouzuo Wei; Jorge H. Capdevila; Raymond C. Harris

We have recently demonstrated that intrarenal dopamine plays an important role in preventing the development of systemic hypertension. Similarly, renal cytochrome P-450 (CYP)-epoxygenase-derived arachidonic acid metabolites, epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs), also are antihypertensive through inhibiting sodium reabsorption and vasodilation. The potential interaction between renal dopamine and epoxygenase systems was investigated. Catechol-O-methyl-transferase (COMT)(-/-) mice with increased intrarenal dopamine levels and proximal tubule deletion of aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (ptAADC(-/-)) mice with renal dopamine deficiency were treated with a low-salt diet or high-salt diet for 2 wk. Wild-type or Cyp2c44(-/-) mice were treated with gludopa, which selectively increased renal dopamine levels. In low salt-treated mice, urinary EET levels were related to renal dopamine levels, being highest in COMT(-/-) mice and lowest in ptAADC(-/-) mice. In high salt-treated mice, total EET and individual EET levels in both the kidney and urine were also highest in COMT(-/-) mice and lowest in ptAADC(-/-) mice. Selective increases in renal dopamine in response to gludopa administration led to marked increases in both total and all individual EET levels in the kidney without any changes in blood levels. qRT-PCR and immunoblotting indicated that gludopa increased renal Cyp2c44 mRNA and protein levels. Gludopa induced marked increases in urine volume and urinary sodium excretion in wild-type mice. In contrast, gludopa did not induce significant increases in urine volume or urinary sodium excretion in Cyp2c44(-/-) mice. These studies demonstrate that renal EET levels are maintained by intrarenal dopamine, and Cyp2c44-derived EETs play an important role in intrarenal dopamine-induced natriuresis and diuresis.

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Roy Zent

Vanderbilt University

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Surekha Neelisetty

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Manakan B. Srichai

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Agnes B. Fogo

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Bing Yao

Vanderbilt University

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