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Dive into the research topics where Nicole K. Littlejohn is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole K. Littlejohn.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2015

Opposing tissue-specific roles of angiotensin in the pathogenesis of obesity, and implications for obesity-related hypertension

Nicole K. Littlejohn; Justin L. Grobe

Metabolic disease, specifically obesity, has now become the greatest challenge to improving cardiovascular health. The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) exists as both a circulating hormone system and as a local paracrine signaling mechanism within various tissues including the brain, kidney, and adipose, and this system is strongly implicated in cardiovascular health and disease. Growing evidence also implicates the RAS in the control of energy balance, supporting the concept that the RAS may be mechanistically involved in the pathogenesis of obesity and obesity hypertension. Here, we review the involvement of the RAS in the entire spectrum of whole organism energy balance mechanisms, including behaviors (food ingestion and spontaneous physical activity) and biological processes (digestive efficiency and both aerobic and nonaerobic resting metabolic rates). We hypothesize that opposing, tissue-specific effects of the RAS to modulate these various components of energy balance can explain the apparently paradoxical results reported by energy-balance studies that involve stimulating, versus disrupting, the RAS. We propose a model in which such opposing and tissue-specific effects of the RAS can explain the failure of simple, global RAS blockade to result in weight loss in humans, and hypothesize that obesity-mediated uncoupling of endogenous metabolic rate control mechanisms can explain the phenomenon of obesity-related hypertension.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Angiotensin AT1A receptors on leptin receptor–expressing cells control resting metabolism

Kristin E. Claflin; Jeremy A. Sandgren; Allyn M. Lambertz; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Colin M.L. Burnett; Nicole A. Pearson; Donald A. Morgan; Katherine N. Gibson-Corley; Kamal Rahmouni; Justin L. Grobe

Leptin contributes to the control of resting metabolic rate (RMR) and blood pressure (BP) through its actions in the arcuate nucleus (ARC). The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) and angiotensin AT1 receptors within the brain are also involved in the control of RMR and BP, but whether this regulation overlaps with leptin’s actions is unclear. Here, we have demonstrated the selective requirement of the AT1A receptor in leptin-mediated control of RMR. We observed that AT1A receptors colocalized with leptin receptors (LEPRs) in the ARC. Cellular coexpression of AT1A and LEPR was almost exclusive to the ARC and occurred primarily within neurons expressing agouti-related peptide (AgRP). Mice lacking the AT1A receptor specifically in LEPR-expressing cells failed to show an increase in RMR in response to a high-fat diet and deoxycorticosterone acetate–salt (DOCA-salt) treatments, but BP control remained intact. Accordingly, loss of RMR control was recapitulated in mice lacking AT1A in AgRP-expressing cells. We conclude that angiotensin activates divergent mechanisms to control BP and RMR and that the brain RAS functions as a major integrator for RMR control through its actions at leptin-sensitive AgRP cells of the ARC.


Cell Reports | 2016

Suppression of Resting Metabolism by the Angiotensin AT2 Receptor

Nicole K. Littlejohn; Henry L. Keen; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Kristin E. Claflin; Kevin V. Tobin; Kathleen R. Markan; Sungmi Park; Meghan C. Naber; Francoise A. Gourronc; Nicole A. Pearson; Xuebo Liu; Donald A. Morgan; Aloysius J. Klingelhutz; Matthew J. Potthoff; Kamal Rahmouni; Curt D. Sigmund; Justin L. Grobe

Activation of the brain renin-angiotensin system (RAS) stimulates energy expenditure through increasing of the resting metabolic rate (RMR), and this effect requires simultaneous suppression of the circulating and/or adipose RAS. To identify the mechanism by which the peripheral RAS opposes RMR control by the brain RAS, we examined mice with transgenic activation of the brain RAS (sRA mice). sRA mice exhibit increased RMR through increased energy flux in the inguinal adipose tissue, and this effect is attenuated by angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2) activation. AT2 activation in inguinal adipocytes opposes norepinephrine-induced uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1) production and aspects of cellular respiration, but not lipolysis. AT2 activation also opposes inguinal adipocyte function and differentiation responses to epidermal growth factor (EGF). These results highlight a major, multifaceted role for AT2 within inguinal adipocytes in the control of RMR. The AT2 receptor may therefore contribute to body fat distribution and adipose depot-specific effects upon cardio-metabolic health.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Dietary Sodium Suppresses Digestive Efficiency via the Renin-Angiotensin System.

Benjamin J. Weidemann; Susan Voong; Fabiola I. Morales-Santiago; Michael Z. Kahn; Jonathan Ni; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Kristin E. Claflin; Colin M.L. Burnett; Nicole A. Pearson; Michael L. Lutter; Justin L. Grobe

Dietary fats and sodium are both palatable and are hypothesized to synergistically contribute to ingestive behavior and thereby obesity. Contrary to this hypothesis, C57BL/6J mice fed a 45% high fat diet exhibited weight gain that was inhibited by increased dietary sodium content. This suppressive effect of dietary sodium upon weight gain was mediated specifically through a reduction in digestive efficiency, with no effects on food intake behavior, physical activity, or resting metabolism. Replacement of circulating angiotensin II levels reversed the effects of high dietary sodium to suppress digestive efficiency. While the AT1 receptor antagonist losartan had no effect in mice fed low sodium, the AT2 receptor antagonist PD-123,319 suppressed digestive efficiency. Correspondingly, genetic deletion of the AT2 receptor in FVB/NCrl mice resulted in suppressed digestive efficiency even on a standard chow diet. Together these data underscore the importance of digestive efficiency in the pathogenesis of obesity, and implicate dietary sodium, the renin-angiotensin system, and the AT2 receptor in the control of digestive efficiency regardless of mouse strain or macronutrient composition of the diet. These findings highlight the need for greater understanding of nutrient absorption control physiology, and prompt more uniform assessment of digestive efficiency in animal studies of energy balance.


Hypertension | 2017

Selective Deletion of Renin-b in the Brain Alters Drinking and MetabolismNovelty and Significance

Keisuke Shinohara; Pablo Nakagawa; Javier Gomez; Donald A. Morgan; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Matthew D. Folchert; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Xuebo Liu; Susan A. Walsh; Laura L. Ponto; Kamal Rahmouni; Justin L. Grobe; Curt D. Sigmund

The brain-specific isoform of renin (Ren-b) has been proposed as a negative regulator of the brain renin–angiotensin system (RAS). We analyzed mice with a selective deletion of Ren-b which preserved expression of the classical renin (Ren-a) isoform. We reported that Ren-bNull mice exhibited central RAS activation and hypertension through increased expression of Ren-a, but the dipsogenic and metabolic effects in Ren-bNull mice are unknown. Fluid intake was similar in control and Ren-bNull mice at baseline and both exhibited an equivalent dipsogenic response to deoxycorticosterone acetate–salt. Dehydration promoted increased water intake in Ren-bNull mice, particularly after deoxycorticosterone acetate–salt. Ren-bNull and control mice exhibited similar body weight when fed a chow diet. However, when fed a high-fat diet, male Ren-bNull mice gained significantly less weight than control mice, an effect blunted in females. This difference was not because of changes in food intake, energy absorption, or physical activity. Ren-bNull mice exhibited increased resting metabolic rate concomitant with increased uncoupled protein 1 expression and sympathetic nerve activity to the interscapular brown adipose tissue, suggesting increased thermogenesis. Ren-bNull mice were modestly intolerant to glucose and had normal insulin sensitivity. Another mouse model with markedly enhanced brain RAS activity (sRA mice) exhibited pronounced insulin sensitivity concomitant with increased brown adipose tissue glucose uptake. Altogether, these data support the hypothesis that the brain RAS regulates energy homeostasis by controlling resting metabolic rate, and that Ren-b deficiency increases brain RAS activity. Thus, the relative level of expression of Ren-b and Ren-a may control activity of the brain RAS.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2013

Hypertension in mice with transgenic activation of the brain renin-angiotensin system is vasopressin dependent

Nicole K. Littlejohn; Rick B. Siel; Pimonrat Ketsawatsomkron; Christopher J. Pelham; Nicole A. Pearson; Aline M. Hilzendeger; Beth A. Buehrer; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Huiping Li; Deborah R. Davis; Anthony P. Thompson; Xuebo Liu; Martin D. Cassell; Curt D. Sigmund; Justin L. Grobe


Hypertension | 2017

Selective Deletion of Renin-b in the Brain Alters Drinking and Metabolism

Keisuke Shinohara; Pablo Nakagawa; Javier Gomez; Donald A. Morgan; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Matthew D. Folchert; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Xuebo Liu; Susan A. Walsh; Laura L. Ponto; Kamal Rahmouni; Justin L. Grobe; Curt D. Sigmund


Hypertension | 2015

Abstract P072: Adipocyte AT2 Receptor Suppresses UCP1 Transcription and Thereby Resting Metabolic Rate

Nicole K. Littlejohn; Benjamin J. Weidemann; Nicole A. Pearson; Meghan C. Naber; Matthew J. Potthoff; Aloysius J. Klingelhutz; Curt D. Sigmund; Justin L. Grobe


The FASEB Journal | 2014

The brain renin-angiotensin system suppresses digestive efficiency (1126.13)

Benjamin J. Weidemann; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Renée S. Cole; Justin L. Grobe


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Brain ACE2 overexpression stimulates food intake and promotes glucose intolerance in mice (1126.15)

Huijing Xia; Kavaljit H. Chhabra; Nicole K. Littlejohn; Nicole A. Pearson; Justin L. Grobe; Eric Lazartigues

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Xuebo Liu

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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Matthew J. Potthoff

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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