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Dive into the research topics where Timothy J. Stodola is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy J. Stodola.


Hypertension | 2011

Creation and Characterization of a Renin Knockout Rat

Carol Moreno; Mathew Hoffman; Timothy J. Stodola; Daniela N. Didier; Jozef Lazar; Aron M. Geurts; Paula E. North; Howard J. Jacob; Andrew S. Greene

The renin-angiotensin system plays an important role in the control of blood pressure (BP) and renal function. To illuminate the importance of renin in the context of a disease background in vivo, we used zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) designed to target the renin gene and create a renin knockout in the SS/JrHsdMcwi (SS) rat. ZFN against renin caused a 10-bp deletion in exon 5, resulting in a frameshift mutation. Plasma renin activity was undetectable in the Ren−/− rat, and renin protein was absent from the juxtaglomerular cells in the kidney. Body weight was lower in the Ren−/− rats (than in the Ren+/− or wild-type littermates), and conscious BP on low-salt diet (0.4% NaCl) was 58±2 mm Hg in the Ren−/− male rats versus 117 mm Hg in the Ren+/− littermates, a reduction of almost 50 mm Hg. Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and plasma creatinine levels were elevated in the Ren−/− strain (BUN 112±7 versus 23±2 mg/dL and creatinine 0.53±0.02 versus 0.26±0.02 mg/dL), and kidney morphology was abnormal with a rudimentary inner renal medulla, cortical interstitial fibrosis, thickening of arterial walls, and abnormally shaped glomeruli. The development of the first rat knockout in the renin-angiotensin system demonstrates the efficacy of the ZFN technology for creating knockout rats for cardiovascular disease on any genetic background and emphasizes the role of renin in BP regulation and kidney function even in the low-renin SS rat.


Physiological Genomics | 2010

Role of the renin angiotensin system on bone marrow-derived stem cell function and its impact on skeletal muscle angiogenesis

Micheline Resende; Timothy J. Stodola; Andrew S. Greene

Autologous bone marrow cell (BMC) transplantation has been shown as a potential approach to treat various ischemic diseases. However, under many conditions BMC dysfunction has been reported, leading to poor cell engraftment and a failure of tissue revascularization. We have previously shown that skeletal muscle angiogenesis induced by electrical stimulation (ES) is impaired in the SS/Mcwi rats and that this effect is related to a dysregulation of the renin angiotensin system (RAS) that is normalized by the replacement of chromosome 13 derived from the Brown Norway rat (SS-13(BN)/Mcwi consomic rats). The present study explored bone marrow-derived endothelial cell (BM-EC) function in the SS/Mcwi rat and its impact on skeletal muscle angiogenesis induced by ES. SS/Mcwi rats were randomized to receive BMC from: SS/Mcwi; SS-13(BN)/Mcwi; SS/Mcwi rats infused with saline or ANG II (3 ng kg(-1) min(-1)). BMC were injected in the stimulated tibialis anterior muscle of SS/Mcwi rats. Vessel density was evaluated in unstimulated and stimulated muscles after 7 days of ES. BMC isolated from SS/Mcwi or SS/Mcwi rats infused with saline failed to restore angiogenesis induced by ES. However, BMC isolated from SS-13(BN)/Mcwi and SS/Mcwi rats infused with ANG II effectively restored the angiogenesis response in the SS/Mcwi recipient. Furthermore, ANG II infusion increased the capacity of BM-EC to induce endothelial cell tube formation in vitro and slightly increased VEGF protein expression. This study suggests that dysregulation of the RAS in the SS/Mcwi rat contributes to impaired BM-EC function and could impact the angiogenic therapeutic potential of BMC.


Physiological Genomics | 2012

Bone marrow mononuclear cells induce beneficial remodeling and reduce diastolic dysfunction in the left ventricle of hypertensive SS/MCWi rats.

Sarah J. Parker; Daniela N. Didier; Jamie R. Karcher; Timothy J. Stodola; Bradley T. Endres; Andrew S. Greene

Bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMNCs) increase capillary density and reduce fibrosis in rodents after myocardial infarction, resulting in an overall improvement in left ventricular function. Little is known about the effectiveness of BMMNC therapy in hypertensive heart disease. In the current study, we show that delivery of BMMNCs from hypertension protected SS-13(BN)/MCWi donor rats, but not BMMNC from hypertension susceptible SS/MCWi donor rats, resulted in 57.2 and 83.4% reductions in perivascular and interstitial fibrosis, respectively, as well as a 60% increase in capillary-to-myocyte count in the left ventricles (LV) of hypertensive SS/MCWi recipients. These histological changes were associated with improvements in LV compliance and relaxation (103 and 46.4% improvements, respectively). Furthermore, improved diastolic function in hypertensive SS/MCWi rats receiving SS-13(BN)/MCWi derived BMMNCs was associated with lower clinical indicators of heart failure, including reductions in end diastolic pressure (65%) and serum brain natriuretic peptide levels (49.9%) with no improvements observed in rats receiving SS/MCWi BMMNCs. SS/MCWi rats had a lower percentage of endothelial progenitor cells in their bone marrow relative to SS-13(BN)/MCWi rats. These results suggest that administration of BMMNCs can prevent or reverse pathological remodeling in hypertensive heart disease, which contributes to ameliorating diastolic dysfunction and associated symptomology. Furthermore, the health and hypertension susceptibility of the BMMNC donor are important factors influencing therapeutic efficacy, possibly via differences in the cellular composition of bone marrow.


Physiological Genomics | 2011

Characterization of the genomic structure and function of regions influencing renin and angiogenesis in the SS rat

Timothy J. Stodola; Micheline Resende; Allison B. Sarkis; Daniela N. Didier; Howard J. Jacob; Norbert Huebner; Oliver Hummel; Kathrin Saar; Carol Moreno; Andrew S. Greene

Impaired regulation of renin in Dahl salt-sensitive rats (SS/JRHsdMcwi, SS) contributes to attenuated angiogenesis in this strain. This study examined angiogenic function and genomic structure of regions surrounding the renin gene using subcongenic strains of the SS and BN/NHsdMcwi (BN) rat to identify important genomic variations between SS and BN involved in angiogenesis. Three candidate regions on Chr 13 were studied: two congenic strains containing 0.89 and 2.62 Mb portions of BN Chr 13 that excluded the BN renin allele and a third strain that contained a 2.02 Mb overlapping region that included the BN renin allele. Angiogenesis induced by electrical stimulation of the tibialis anterior muscle was attenuated in the SS compared with the BN. Congenics carrying the SS renin allele had impaired angiogenesis, while strains carrying the BN renin allele had angiogenesis restored. The exception was a congenic including a region of BN genome 0.4 Mb distal to renin that restored both renin regulation and angiogenesis. This suggests that there is a distant regulatory element in the BN capable of restoring normal regulation of the SS renin allele. The importance of ANG II in the restored angiogenic response was demonstrated by blocking with losartan. Sequencing of the 4.05 Mb candidate region in SS and BN revealed a total of 8,850 SNPs and other sequence variants. An analysis of the genes and their variants in the region suggested a number of pathways that may explain the impaired regulation of renin and angiogenesis in the SS rat.


Hypertension | 2016

Breaking the Cycle: Estrous Variation Does Not Require Increased Sample Size in the Study of Female Rats.

Alex Dayton; Eric C. Exner; John D. Bukowy; Timothy J. Stodola; Theresa Kurth; Meredith M. Skelton; Andrew S. Greene; Allen W. Cowley

Despite the striking differences between male and female physiology, female physiology is understudied. In response, the National Institutes of Health is promulgating new policies to increase the use of female organisms in preclinical research. Females are commonly believed to have greater variability than males because of the estrous cycle, but recent studies call this belief into question. Effects of estrous cycling on mean arterial pressure were assessed in female Dahl S rats using telemetry and vaginal cytometry and found that estrous cycling did not affect mean arterial pressure magnitude or variance. Data from the PhysGen arm of the Program for Genomic Applications was used to compare male and female variance and coefficient of variation in 142 heart, lung, vascular, kidney, and blood phenotypes, each measured in hundreds to thousands of individual rats from over 50 inbred strains. Seventy-four of 142 phenotypes from this data set demonstrated a sex difference in variance; however, 59% of these phenotypes exhibited greater variance in male rats rather than female. Remarkably, a retrospective power analysis demonstrated that only 16 of 74 differentially variable phenotypes would be detected when using an experimental cohort large enough to detect a difference in magnitude. No overall difference in coefficient of variation between male and female rats was detected when analyzing these 142 phenotypes. We conclude that variability of 142 traits in male and female rats is similar, suggesting that differential treatment of males and females for the purposes of experimental design is unnecessary until proven otherwise, rather than the other way around.


Hypertension | 2016

Breaking the Cycle

Alex Dayton; Eric C. Exner; John D. Bukowy; Timothy J. Stodola; Theresa Kurth; Meredith M. Skelton; Andrew S. Greene; Allen W. Cowley

Despite the striking differences between male and female physiology, female physiology is understudied. In response, the National Institutes of Health is promulgating new policies to increase the use of female organisms in preclinical research. Females are commonly believed to have greater variability than males because of the estrous cycle, but recent studies call this belief into question. Effects of estrous cycling on mean arterial pressure were assessed in female Dahl S rats using telemetry and vaginal cytometry and found that estrous cycling did not affect mean arterial pressure magnitude or variance. Data from the PhysGen arm of the Program for Genomic Applications was used to compare male and female variance and coefficient of variation in 142 heart, lung, vascular, kidney, and blood phenotypes, each measured in hundreds to thousands of individual rats from over 50 inbred strains. Seventy-four of 142 phenotypes from this data set demonstrated a sex difference in variance; however, 59% of these phenotypes exhibited greater variance in male rats rather than female. Remarkably, a retrospective power analysis demonstrated that only 16 of 74 differentially variable phenotypes would be detected when using an experimental cohort large enough to detect a difference in magnitude. No overall difference in coefficient of variation between male and female rats was detected when analyzing these 142 phenotypes. We conclude that variability of 142 traits in male and female rats is similar, suggesting that differential treatment of males and females for the purposes of experimental design is unnecessary until proven otherwise, rather than the other way around.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2017

Mechanisms of Mas1 Receptor-Mediated Signaling in the Vascular EndotheliumHighlights

Brian R. Hoffmann; Timothy J. Stodola; Jordan R. Wagner; Daniela N. Didier; Eric C. Exner; Julian H. Lombard; Andrew S. Greene

Objective— Angiotensin II (AngII) has been shown to regulate angiogenesis and at high pathophysiological doses to cause vasoconstriction through the AngII receptor type 1. Angiotensin 1 to 7 (Ang-(1–7)) acting through the Mas1 receptor can act antagonistically to high pathophysiological levels of AngII by inducing vasodilation, whereas the effects of Ang-(1–7) signaling on angiogenesis are less defined. To complicate the matter, there is growing evidence that a subpressor dose of AngII produces phenotypes similar to Ang-(1–7). Approach and Results— This study shows that low-dose Ang-(1–7), acting through the Mas1 receptor, promotes angiogenesis and vasodilation similar to a low, subpressor dose of AngII acting through AngII receptor type 1. In addition, we show through in vitro tube formation that Ang-(1–7) augments the angiogenic response in rat microvascular endothelial cells. Using proteomic and genomic analyses, downstream components of Mas1 receptor signaling were identified, including Rho family of GTPases, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, protein kinase D1, mitogen-activated protein kinase, and extracellular signal–related kinase signaling. Further experimental antagonism of extracellular signal–related kinases 1/2 and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling inhibited endothelial tube formation and vasodilation when stimulated with equimolar, low doses of either AngII or Ang-(1–7). Conclusions— These results significantly expand the known Ang-(1–7)/Mas1 receptor signaling pathway and demonstrate an important distinction between the pathological effects of elevated and suppressed AngII compared with the beneficial effects of AngII normalization and Ang-(1–7) administration. The observed convergence of Ang-(1–7)/Mas1 and AngII/AngII receptor type 1 signaling at low ligand concentrations suggests a nuanced regulation in vasculature. These data also reinforce the importance of mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal–related kinase signaling in maintaining vascular function.


Stem Cells | 2016

Tumor Necrosis Factor α Regulates Endothelial Progenitor Cell Migration via CADM1 and NF‐kB

Anthony R. Prisco; Brian R. Hoffmann; Catherine C. Kaczorowski; Chris McDermott-Roe; Timothy J. Stodola; Eric C. Exner; Andrew S. Greene

Shortly after the discovery of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) in 1997, many clinical trials were conducted using EPCs as a cellular based therapy with the goal of restoring damaged organ function by inducing growth of new blood vessels (angiogenesis). Results were disappointing, largely because the cellular and molecular mechanisms of EPC‐induced angiogenesis were not clearly understood. Following injection, EPCs must migrate to the target tissue and engraft prior to induction of angiogenesis. In this study EPC migration was investigated in response to tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα), a pro‐inflammatory cytokine, to test the hypothesis that organ damage observed in ischemic diseases induces an inflammatory signal that is important for EPC homing. In this study, EPC migration and incorporation were modeled in vitro using a coculture assay where TNFα treated EPCs were tracked while migrating toward vessel‐like structures. It was found that TNFα treatment of EPCs increased migration and incorporation into vessel‐like structures. Using a combination of genomic and proteomic approaches, NF‐kB mediated upregulation of CADM1 was identified as a mechanism of TNFα induced migration. Inhibition of NF‐kB or CADM1 significantly decreased migration of EPCs in vitro suggesting a role for TNFα signaling in EPC homing during tissue repair. Stem Cells 2016;34:1922–1933


Physiological Genomics | 2018

Genome-wide map of proximity linkage to renin proximal promoter in rat

Timothy J. Stodola; Pengyuan Liu; Yong Liu; Andrew Vallejos; Aron M. Geurts; Andrew S. Greene; Mingyu Liang

A challenge to understanding enhancer-gene relationships is that enhancers are not always sequentially close to the gene they regulate. Physical proximity mapping through sequencing can provide an unbiased view of the chromatin close to the proximal promoter of the renin gene ( Ren). Our objective was to determine genomic regions that physically interact with the renin proximal promoter, using two different genetic backgrounds, the Dahl salt sensitive and normotensive SS-13BN, which have been shown to have different regulation of plasma renin in vivo. The chromatin conformation capture method with sequencing focused at the Ren proximal promoter in rat-derived cardiac endothelial cells was used. Cells were fixed, chromatin close to the Ren promoter was captured, and fragments were sequenced. The clustering of mapped reads produced a genome-wide map of chromatin in contact with the Ren promoter. The largest number of contacts was found on chromosome 13, the chromosome with Ren, and contacts were found on all other chromosomes except chromosome X. These contacts were significantly enriched with genes positively correlated with Ren expression and with mapped quantitative trait loci associated with blood pressure, cardiovascular, and renal phenotypes. The results were reproducible in an independent biological replicate. The findings reported here represent the first map between a critical cardiovascular gene and physical interacting loci throughout the genome and will provide the basis for several new directions of research.


Stem Cells | 2016

TNFα Regulates Endothelial Progenitor Cell Migration via CADM1 and NF‐kB

Anthony R. Prisco; Brian R. Hoffmann; Catherine C. Kaczorowski; Chris McDermott-Roe; Timothy J. Stodola; Eric C. Exner; Andrew S. Greene

Shortly after the discovery of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) in 1997, many clinical trials were conducted using EPCs as a cellular based therapy with the goal of restoring damaged organ function by inducing growth of new blood vessels (angiogenesis). Results were disappointing, largely because the cellular and molecular mechanisms of EPC‐induced angiogenesis were not clearly understood. Following injection, EPCs must migrate to the target tissue and engraft prior to induction of angiogenesis. In this study EPC migration was investigated in response to tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα), a pro‐inflammatory cytokine, to test the hypothesis that organ damage observed in ischemic diseases induces an inflammatory signal that is important for EPC homing. In this study, EPC migration and incorporation were modeled in vitro using a coculture assay where TNFα treated EPCs were tracked while migrating toward vessel‐like structures. It was found that TNFα treatment of EPCs increased migration and incorporation into vessel‐like structures. Using a combination of genomic and proteomic approaches, NF‐kB mediated upregulation of CADM1 was identified as a mechanism of TNFα induced migration. Inhibition of NF‐kB or CADM1 significantly decreased migration of EPCs in vitro suggesting a role for TNFα signaling in EPC homing during tissue repair. Stem Cells 2016;34:1922–1933

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Andrew S. Greene

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Brian R. Hoffmann

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Daniela N. Didier

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Eric C. Exner

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Anthony R. Prisco

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Howard J. Jacob

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Jamie R. Karcher

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Mingyu Liang

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Pengyuan Liu

Medical College of Wisconsin

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