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6340B
Medical Biomolecular Research Bldg (MBRB)
(919) 966-5215 (office)
(919) 966-5193 (lab)
(919) 966-5230 (fax)
kathleen_caron@med.unc.edu |
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Center
& Program Memberships: |
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Kathleen
Caron, PhD
Assistant
Professor
Education:
BS,
BA Emory University 1992
PhD, Duke University 1997
Genetically
Engineered Animal Models in Study of Human Disease
The overall
scientific goal of our laboratory is to develop and use genetically engineered
animal models to better understand and treat human disease. We are currently
investigating the physiological role of a newly identified peptide vasodilator
called adrenomedullin (Adm) and its associated receptor and signaling
proteins. Adm has been implicated in a wide variety of normal physiological
processes, including maintenance of basal vascular tone, regulation of
salt and water appetite, cellular proliferation and anti-microbial defense.
Most noteworthy is the finding that plasma levels of Adm are elevated
in patients with many types of diseases, including essential hypertension
and sepsis, suggesting that elevations in Adm are compensatory to other
primary cardiovascular stresses. Recently, it has become clear that Adm
is also important in pregnancy (another form of cardiovascular stress)
since circulating levels of Adm are five fold higher during normal pregnancy
and fall back to non-pregnant values within 48 hours after delivery. Furthermore,
the pattern of Adm expression suggests an important role for this peptide
in the establishment of maternal/fetal circulation and the maintenance
of pregnancy. The vasodilatory properties of Adm coupled with its expression
in fetoplacental tissues have led to the suggestion that decreased Adm
levels may contribute to the development of preeclampsia, a common and
severe pregnancy-induced hypertensive condition. Thus, Adm is quickly
becoming recognized as a broadly expressed peptide hormone that impacts
on many systems under normal and pathological conditions.
To elucidate
the physiological functions of Adm as they relate to blood pressure regulation
and reproduction we have used gene targeting methods to generate a series
of mouse lines that have
0 through 4 copies of the Adm gene and therefore have decreased and increased
levels of Adm peptide. We find that although changes in Adm gene expression
do not alter basal BP, there is an effect on the ability to compensate
for pharmacologically-induced changes in BP. The Adm null animals are
not viable and die in utero from extreme hydrops fetalis (see figure)
and unusual cardiovascular defects. These findings consequently demonstrate
an essential rfor Adm in embryonic development and suggest that absence
of Adm may be a cause of nonimmune hydrops fetalis in humans.
Clinical
studies have suggested that decreased levels of Adm from fetoplacental
tissues may be a cause of preeclampsia, a systemic maternal disease that
originates from shallow trophoblast cell invasion and placentation. Preliminary
studies using the Adm+/- female mice have revealed several pathological
features associated with preeclampsia in humans. For example, Adm+/- females
show reduced fertility, intrauterine growth retardation, twinning and
aberrant trophoblast cell migration- an essential component of placentogenesis.
These findings suggest that a reduction in Adm, either systemically or
in the placenta, may affect normal placental development and eventually
compromise the ability to compensate for physiologically-induced changes
in BP, such as those that occur during pregnancy.
Current
and Future Projects
1. Define the role of Adm in pregnancy and placental development. In doing so, develop new methods for high-throughput screening of placental
defects by gene expression analysis. We are currently performing breeding
schemes and embryo transfer experiments to determine if the placental
defects described above are due to decreased Adm levels from the maternal
or fetal compartment. However, it is likely that both sources of Adm contribute
to establishing the appropriate local concentration of Adm required for
effective maternal/fetal circulation. Therefore, in addition to using
classical qualitative methods for characterizing placental defects (histology
and immunohistochemistry) we plan to develop a quantitative approach that
uses real-time RT-PCR to examine numerous genetic markers of placental
function. Assessing placental development and function through a panel
of quantitative gene expression analysis is a novel approach that will
greatly advance the current repertoire of tools for phenotyping placental
defects. In the future, we plan to use this approach to perform high-throughput
mutagenesis screening for genetic mouse models with defects in placental
development and function that may be related to preeclampsia in humans.
2. Use gene targeting techniques to modulate endogenous gene expression
in a manner that more closely recapitulates quantitative physiological
changes in gene expression. One of our major goals will be to design
and implement generally applicable principles of gene regulation in order
to improve targeted transgenics and eventually precisely regulate endogenous
gene expression through homologous recombination. In collaboration with
other laboratories at UNC-CH, we have developed a "gene titration"
vector that can be used to alter the mRNA stability (and consequently,
protein levels) of any given gene through homologous recombination (see
figure). For exa mple,
replacement of the 3UTR of the Adm gene with that of bovine growth
hormone (a long-lived mRNA) or c-fos (a short-lived mRNA) will result
in mouse lines with markedly varied levels of Adm expression. The first
model, with increased Adm expression, is in many respects superior to
conventional transgenic approaches because the endogenous promoter remains
functionally intact. The second model, with decreased (but not absent)
Adm expression, has the added potential of being generated in a tissue-specific
manner by breeding to transgenic mice expressing cre recombinase. With
these models we expect to exacerbate the Adm+/- reproductive defects and
further explore the protective cardiovascular functions of the Adm peptide.
Of greater significance, however, will be the application of these principles
to endogenously targeted genes, resulting in new and improved methods
for generating physiologically relevant, genetic mouse models of human
disease.
3. Explore the mechanisms of Adm G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR)
signaling. Recent studies have revealed that Adm mediates its physiological
effects through a novel paradigm in signal transduction. In 1998,
a new class of proteins, called receptor activity modifying proteins (RAMPs),
were identified and shown to impose specificity to a common calcitonin-receptor-like
receptor (CRLR). As depicted in the cartoon, association of CRLR with
RAMP1 causes the receptor to function as a CGRP receptor, whereas association
with RAMP2/3 makes it an Adm receptor. Moreover, the cell-specific expression
of the RAMPs determines a cell's fate to respond to either Adm or CGRP.
Using conventional targeted disruption and the quantitative gene targeting
approaches described above, we will examine the physiological role of
CRLR and its associated RAMPs in relation to cardiovascular and reproductive
physiology. Questions we plan to address are: 1. Do the RAMPs govern the
specificity of other GPCRs? 2. Do RAMP2 and RAMP3 have distinct or overlapping
biological functions? 3. Do quantitative changes in the levels of RAMP
expression alter a cells affinity for Adm or CGRP signaling? and
4. Do the RAMPs associate or function with other G-proteins (studied by
biochemical and in vitro reconstitution approaches)?
Recent
Publications:
Fritz-Six KL, Dunworth WP, Li M, Caron KM. Adrenomedullin signaling is necessary for murine lymphatic vascular development. J Clin Invest. 2008 Jan;118(1):40-50.
Gibbons C, Dackor R, Dunworth W, Fritz-Six K, Caron KM. Receptor activity-modifying proteins: RAMPing up adrenomedullin signaling. Mol Endocrinol. 2007 Apr;21(4):783-96.
Li M, Yee D, Magnuson TR, Smithies O, Caron KM. Reduced maternal expression of adrenomedullin disrupts fertility, placentation, and fetal growth in mice. J Clin Invest.116(10):2653-62.
Dackor RT, Fritz-Six K, Dunworth WP, Gibbons CL, Smithies O, Caron KM. (2006) Hydrops fetalis, cardiovascular defects, and embryonic lethality in mice lacking the calcitonin receptor-like receptor gene. Mol Cell Biol. 26(7):2511-8.
Lee G, Makhanova N, Caron K, Lopez ML, Gomez RA, Smithies O, Kim HS. (2005) Homeostatic responses in the adrenal cortex to the absence of aldosterone in mice. Endocrinology. 146(6):2650-6.
Caron KM, James LR, Lee G, Kim HS, Smithies O. (2005) Lifelong "Genetic Minipumps". Physiol
Genomics.
20(2):203-9.
Caron KM, James LR, Kim HS, Knowles J, Uhlir R, Mao L, Hagaman J, Cascio W, Rockman
HA and Smithies O. (2004) Cardiac hypertrophy and sudden death in mice
with a genetically clamped renin transgene. Proc
Natl Acad Sci USA 101(9):3106-3111.
Caron KM and Smithies O. (2002) Multiple roles of adrenomedullin revealed by animal
models. Micros
Resch Tech 57:55-59. 2
Caron KM, James LR, Kim HS, Morham SG, Lopez MS, Gomez RA, Reudelhuber TL and Smithies
O. (2002) A genetically clamped renin transgene for the induction of hypertension. Proc
Natl Acad Sci USA 99(12):8248-8252.
Caron KM and Smithies O. (2001) Extreme hydrops fetalis and cardiovascular abnormalities
in mice lacking a functional Adrenomedullin gene. Proc
Natl Acad Sci USA 98(2):615-619.
Hasegawa
T, Zhao L, Caron KM, Majdic G, Suzuki T, Shizawa S, Sasano H, Parker KL.
(2000)
Developmental roles of the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR)
as revealed by StAR knockout mice. Mol
Endocrinol. 14(9):1462-71.
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