Rowena Kemp
New York Medical College
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Featured researches published by Rowena Kemp.
Hypertension | 2007
Harpreet Singh; Jennifer Cheng; Huan Deng; Rowena Kemp; Tsuneo Ishizuka; Alberto Nasjletti; Michal Laniado Schwartzman
Epidemiological evidence suggests a role for sex-dependent mechanisms in the pathophysiology of hypertension. It has been shown that 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) administration (56 mg/kg of body weight per day IP for 14 days) increases blood pressure, cytochrome P450 4A expression, and 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid synthesis in rats. We examined whether increased vascular 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid synthesis underlies endothelial dysfunction and hypertension in DHT-treated male Sprague–Dawley rats by using HET0016, a selective cytochrome P450 4A inhibitor. Coadministration of HET0016 (10 mg/kg per day IP for 14 days) to DHT-treated rats markedly reduced DHT-induced interlobar arterial production of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (14.3±1.5 versus 1.5±0.5 ng/mg of protein per hour; P<0.05), superoxide anion (246±47 versus 31±8 cpm/&mgr;g of protein), and the levels of gp91-phox, p47-phox, and 3-nitrosylated proteins. Moreover, the maximal relaxing response to acetylcholine in phenylephrine-preconstricted renal interlobar arteries from DHT-treated rats (42.8±4.8%) significantly (P<0.05) increased in the presence of HET0016 (81.5±10.8%). Importantly, the administration of HET0016 negated DHT-induced hypertension; systolic blood pressure was reduced from 146±2 mm Hg in DHT-treated rats to 130±1 mm Hg (P<0.05). The results strongly implicate vascular cytochrome P450 4A–derived 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid in the development of androgen-induced endothelial dysfunction and hypertension.
Circulation Research | 2006
Jishi Wang; Harpreet Singh; Frank Fan Zhang; Tsuneo Ishizuka; Huan Deng; Rowena Kemp; Michael S. Wolin; Thomas H. Hintze; Nader G. Abraham; Alberto Nasjletti; Michal Laniado-Schwartzman
Vascular cytochrome P450 (CYP) 4A enzymes catalyze the synthesis of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE), an eicosanoid which participates in the regulation of vascular tone by sensitizing the smooth muscle cells to constrictor and myogenic stimuli. This study was undertaken to investigate the consequences of CYP4A overexpression on blood pressure and endothelial function in rats treated with adenoviral vectors carrying the CYP4A2 construct. Intravenous injection of Adv-CYP4A2 increased blood pressure (from 114±1 to 133±1 mm Hg, P<0.001), and interlobar renal arteries from these rats displayed decreased relaxing responsiveness to acetylcholine, which was offset by treatment with an inhibitor of CYP4A. Relative to data in control rats, arteries from Adv-CYP4A2–transduced rats produced more 20-HETE (129±10 versus 97±7 pmol/mg protein, P<0.01) and less nitric oxide (NO; 4.2±1.6 versus 8.4±1 nmol nitrite+nitrate/mg; P<0.05). They also displayed higher levels of oxidative stress as measured by increased generation of superoxide anion and increased expression of nitrotyrosine and gp91phox. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that augmentation in vascular 20-HETE promotes the development of hypertension and causes endothelial dysfunction, a condition characterized by decreased NO synthesis and/or bioavailability, imbalance in the relative contribution of endothelium-derived relaxing and contracting factors, and enhanced endothelial activation.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2004
Yuan Wei; Dao Hong Lin; Rowena Kemp; Ganesh S S Yaddanapudi; Alberto Nasjletti; John R. Falck; Wen Hui Wang
We used the patch-clamp technique to study the effect of arachidonic acid (AA) on epithelial Na channels (ENaC) in the rat cortical collecting duct (CCD). Application of 10 μM AA decreased the ENaC activity defined by NPo from 1.0 to 0.1. The dose–response curve of the AA effect on ENaC shows that 2 μM AA inhibited the ENaC activity by 50%. The effect of AA on ENaC is specific because neither 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid (ETYA), a nonmetabolized analogue of AA, nor 11,14,17-eicosatrienoic acid mimicked the inhibitory effect of AA on ENaC. Moreover, inhibition of either cyclooxygenase (COX) with indomethacin or cytochrome P450 (CYP) ω-hydroxylation with N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS) failed to abolish the effect of AA on ENaC. In contrast, the inhibitory effect of AA on ENaC was absent in the presence of N-methylsulfonyl-6-(propargyloxyphenyl)hexanamide (MS-PPOH), an agent that inhibits CYP-epoxygenase activity. The notion that the inhibitory effect of AA is mediated by CYP-epoxygenase–dependent metabolites is also supported by the observation that application of 200 nM 11,12-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid (EET) inhibited ENaC in the CCD. In contrast, addition of 5,6-, 8,9-, or 14,15-EET failed to decrease ENaC activity. Also, application of 11,12-EET can still reduce ENaC activity in the presence of MS-PPOH, suggesting that 11,12-EET is a mediator for the AA-induced inhibition of ENaC. Furthermore, gas chromatography mass spectrometry analysis detected the presence of 11,12-EET in the CCD and CYP2C23 is expressed in the principal cells of the CCD. We conclude that AA inhibits ENaC activity in the CCD and that the effect of AA is mediated by a CYP-epoxygenase–dependent metabolite, 11,12-EET.
Hypertension | 2003
Francisca Rodriguez; Rowena Kemp; Michael Balazy; Alberto Nasjletti
Abstract—We examined the effects of heme administration (15 mg/kg IV) on indexes of renal carbon monoxide production and contrasted the renal functional response to heme in anesthetized rats pretreated and not pretreated with stannous mesoporphyrin (40 &mgr;mol/kg IV) to inhibit heme oxygenase or sodium meclofenamate (5 mg/kg IV plus infusion at 10 &mgr;g/kg per minute) to inhibit cyclooxygenase. In rats without drug pretreatment, heme administration decreased renal vascular resistance and increased renal blood flow, urine volume, and sodium excretion associated with augmented urinary excretion of 6-keto-PGF1&agr; and enhanced concentration of carbon monoxide in the renal cortical microdialysate. Pretreatment with stannous mesoporphyrin did not prevent heme from producing renal vasodilation and increasing renal blood flow but abolished the diuretic and natriuretic responses. Conversely, pretreatment with sodium meclofenamate blunted the renal vasodilatory effect of heme but affected neither the diuretic nor the natriuretic effect. We conclude that heme-induced renal vasodilation is a cyclooxygenase-dependent response involving increased synthesis of PGI2, whereas heme-induced diuresis and natriuresis are heme oxygenase-dependent responses involving inhibition of tubular reabsorption of sodium and water through undefined mechanisms.
Circulation Research | 2004
Miao Jiang; Alexandre Mezentsev; Rowena Kemp; Kihwan Byun; John R. Falck; Joseph M. Miano; Alberto Nasjletti; Nader G. Abraham; Michal Laniado-Schwartzman
Abstract— Cytochrome P450 (CYP) 4A1 has been characterized as the most efficient arachidonic acid &ohgr;-hydroxylase catalyzing the formation of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE), a potent constrictor of the renal and cerebral microcirculation and a mitogen for smooth muscle cells. We constructed adenoviruses expressing the CYP4A1 cDNA or LacZ under the control of the smooth muscle cell–specific promoter SM22&agr; (Ad-SM22-4A1 and Ad-SM22-nLacZ, respectively). &bgr;-Galactosidase expression was detected in Ad-SM22-nLacZ–transduced vascular smooth muscle A7r5 and PAC1 cells, but not in Ad-SM22-nLacZ-transduced 3T3 fibroblasts or vascular endothelial cells. Likewise, CYP4A1 mRNA and protein were detected in Ad-SM22-4A1–transduced A7r5 and PAC1 cells. Ad-SM22-4A1–transduced A7r5 cells metabolized lauric acid to 12-hydroxy-lauric acid at a rate 5 times greater than that of cells transduced with Ad-SM22-nLacZ (4.79±1.77 versus 0.97±0.57 nmol 12-hydroxy lauric acid/106 cells per h). Smooth muscle–specific LacZ expression was also detected in microdissected renal interlobar arteries transduced with Ad-SM22-nLacZ. Arteries transduced with Ad-SM22-4A1 produced higher levels of 20-HETE (4.04±0.29 and 13.43±2.84 ng/mg protein in Ad-SM22-nLacZ–transduced and Ad-SM22-4A1–transduced arteries, respectively) and demonstrated a marked angiogenic activity measured as the total length of sprouting neovessels (12.63±3.66 mm in Ad-SM22-4A1–transduced vessels versus 1.79±0.89 mm in Ad-SM22-nLacZ–transduced vessels). This angiogenic activity represented endothelial cell sprouting and was fully blocked by treatment with HET0016, a selective inhibitor of CYP4A-catalyzed reactions. The inhibitory effect of HET0016 was reversed by addition of a 20-HETE agonist. We conclude that Ad-SM22-4A1 drives a smooth muscle–specific functional expression of CYP4A1 and demonstrates increased angiogenesis, presumably via increased production of 20-HETE.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2009
Peng Sun; Wen Liu; Dao-Hong Lin; Peng Yue; Rowena Kemp; Lisa M. Satlin; Wen-Hui Wang
The cortical collecting duct (CCD), which is involved in renal potassium (K) excretion, expresses cytochrome P450 (CYP)-epoxygenase. Here, we examined the effect of high dietary K on renal expression of CYP2C23 and CYP2J2 in the rat, as well as the role of CYP-epoxygenase-dependent metabolism of arachidonic acid in the regulation of Ca(2+)-activated big-conductance K (BK) channels. By Western blot analysis, high dietary K stimulated the expression of CYP2C23 but not CYP2J2 and increased 11,12-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid (11,12-EET) levels in isolated rat CCD tubules. Application of arachidonic acid increased BK channel activity, and this occurred to a greater extent in rats on a high-K diet compared with a normal-K diet. This effect was unlikely due to arachidonic acid-induced changes in membrane fluidity, because 11,14,17-eicosatrienoic acid did not alter BK channel activity. Inhibiting CYP-epoxygenase but not cyclooxygenase- or CYP-omega-hydroxylase-dependent pathways completely abolished the stimulatory effect of arachidonic acid on BK channel activity. In addition, application of 11,12-EET mimicked the effect of arachidonic acid on BK channel activity, even in the presence of CYP-epoxygenase inhibition. This effect seemed specific to 11,12-EET, because both 8,9- and 14,15-EET failed to stimulate BK channels. Finally, inhibition of CYP-epoxygenase abolished iberiotoxin-sensitive and flow-stimulated but not basal net K secretion in isolated microperfused CCD. In conclusion, high dietary K stimulates the renal CYP-epoxygenase pathway, which plays an important role in activating BK channels and flow-stimulated K secretion in the CCD.
Hypertension | 2004
Francisca Rodriguez; Brian D. Lamon; Weiying Gong; Rowena Kemp; Alberto Nasjletti
Abstract—We tested the hypothesis that the status of NO synthesis influences the renal heme-heme oxygenase system. Studies were conducted in untreated rats and rats treated with the NO synthesis inhibitor NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester for 2 days. Treated and untreated rats were contrasted in terms of renal expression of heme oxygenase-1 and -2, renal carbon monoxide (CO)-generating activity, and urinary CO concentration and excretion rate. Heme oxygenase-1 and -2 proteins were similarly expressed in the kidneys of untreated and treated rats. In contrast, the NADPH-dependent component of the CO-generating activity of renal homogenates incubated with heme (a measure of heme oxygenase activity) was higher (P <0.05) in kidneys from rats treated with the NO synthesis inhibitor relative to corresponding data in untreated rats (1015±95 versus 379±111 pmol CO/mg per hour). Similarly, relative to corresponding data in untreated rats, rats treated with the NO synthesis inhibitor displayed increased (P <0.05) urinary CO concentration (920±174 versus 2286±472 pmol/mL) and urinary CO excretion (4.7±0.4 versus 14.3±2.7 pmol/min). This study demonstrates that NO synthesis inhibition upregulates the urinary concentration and excretion rate of CO, and the HO-dependent generation of CO by renal homogenates, without affecting the expression of renal heme oxygenase isoforms. Our findings imply that endogenous NO is an inhibitory regulator of renal CO generation by HO.
Hypertension | 2005
Fan Zhang; Huan Deng; Rowena Kemp; Harpreet Singh; Venkat Raj Gopal; John R. Falck; Michal Laniado-Schwartzman; Alberto Nasjletti
We compared renal interlobar arteries of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) in terms of cytochrome P450 (CYP) 4A and CYP2E1 protein expression; levels of 20-HETE, 19-HETE, and 18-HETE; and responsiveness to phenylephrine in the absence and presence of N-methylsulfonyl-12,12-dibromododec-11-enamide (DDMS; 30 &mgr;mol/L), a CYP4A inhibitor. Relative to data in WKY, arteries of SHR exhibited diminished (P<0.05) CYP2E1 and levels of 19-HETE (66.7±6.0 versus 44.9±2.8 pmol/mg) and 18-HETE (13.8±1.6 versus 7.9±0.5 pmol/mg), whereas CYP4A and 20-HETE levels (99.3±9.1 versus 98.9±12.8 pmol/mg) were unchanged. Phenylephrine contracted vascular rings of SHR and WKY; the Rmax was similar in both strains, but SHR vessels were more sensitive as denoted by the lower (P<0.05) EC50 (0.28±0.07 versus 0.71±0.12 &mgr;mol/L). DDMS decreased 20-HETE and, to a lesser extent, 19-HETE, while increasing (P<0.05) the EC50 for phenylephrine by 475% and 54% in vessels of SHR and WKY, respectively. The desensitizing effect of DDMS was reversed by 20-HETE. Notably, the minimal concentration of 20-HETE that decreased the EC50 for phenylephrine in DDMS-treated vessels was smaller in SHR (0.1 &mgr;mol/L) than WKY (10 &mgr;mol/L), and the sensitizing effect of 20-HETE was blunted (P<0.05) by the (R) stereoisomers of 19-HETE and 18-HETE. We conclude that the increased sensitivity to phenylephrine in arteries of SHR is attributable to a vasoregulatory imbalance produced by a deficit in vascular CYP2E1-derived products, most likely 19(R)-HETE and 18(R)-HETE, which condition amplification of the sensitizing action of 20-HETE.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2006
Peng Sun; Dao-Hong Lin; Tong Wang; Elisa Babilonia; Zhijian Wang; Yan Jin; Rowena Kemp; Alberto Nasjletti; Wen-Hui Wang
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2004
Fan Zhang; Jun Ichi Kaide; Liming Yang; Houli Jiang; Shuo Quan; Rowena Kemp; Weiying Gong; Michael Balazy; Nader G. Abraham; Alberto Nasjletti