This subproject is one of many research subprojects utilizing the resources provided by a Center grant funded by NIH/NCRR. The subproject and investigator (PI) may have received primary funding from another NIH source, and thus could be represented in other CRISP entries. The institution listed is for the Center, which is not necessarily the institution for the investigator. Gastrointestinal smooth muscles adapt contractile activities in response to continuously changing conditions. Mechanical plasticity, such as hypertrophy, alters the functional capacity of smooth muscles in response to changing demands by reorganizing contractile bundles. The amplitude and frequency of cytosolic Ca 2+ oscillations encodes information that is translated into physiological responses. CaM kinase II has the structural, catalytic, and regulatory properties required of a molecular decoder of Ca 2+ oscillations. Fundus and colon smooth muscles, which exhibit distinct Ca 2? oscillations, express CaM kinase II holoenzymes with tissue-specific enzymatic properties. In situ hybridization, kinase assays, Western blotting, and ratiometric Ca 2? imaging will be used to investigate how CaM kinase II responds to cytosolic Ca 2? transients in order to understand how it modulates smooth muscle contractile activity. Hypertrophy of gastrointestinal smooth muscles due to obstructions of the digestive tract resulting from congenital or acquired defects is associated with pathologies that lead to several motility disorders. Part of the cell volume increase results from elevated transcription and expression of contractile proteins under the control of serum response factor. Serum response factor is activated by CaM kinase II phosphorylation. Fundus and colon smooth muscles express CaM kinase II splice variants containing a nuclear localization signal. Cellular fractionation, Western blotting, kinase assays, Q-PCR, phosphopeptide mapping, and expression proteomics will be used to elucidate the role of CaM kinase II in the activation of contractile protein gene transcription by serum response factor. Gastrointestinal smooth muscle hypertrophy is important in normal physiology and disease. This project will explore the regulation and physiological roles of CaM kinase II in normal agonist-stimulated, and abnormal hypertrophied gastrointestinal smooth muscles. Determining the enzymatic characteristics of gastrointestinal smooth muscle CaM kinase II and investigating the modulation of gastrointestinal smooth muscle contraction by CaM kinase II will provide additional information for developing better therapeutics aimed at treating the myogenic component of the altered motility patterns that underlie digestive tract motility disorders.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Exploratory Grants (P20)
Project #
2P20RR018751-06A1
Application #
7960565
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1-RI-B (01))
Project Start
2009-09-30
Project End
2010-07-31
Budget Start
2009-09-30
Budget End
2010-07-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$175,621
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Nevada Reno
Department
Physiology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
146515460
City
Reno
State
NV
Country
United States
Zip Code
89557
Heredia, Dante J; Feng, Cheng-Yuan; Agarwal, Andrea et al. (2018) Postnatal Restriction of Activity-Induced Ca2+ Responses to Schwann Cells at the Neuromuscular Junction Are Caused by the Proximo-Distal Loss of Axonal Synaptic Vesicles during Development. J Neurosci 38:8650-8665
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Heredia, Dante J; Schubert, Douglas; Maligireddy, Siddhardha et al. (2016) A Novel Striated Muscle-Specific Myosin-Blocking Drug for the Study of Neuromuscular Physiology. Front Cell Neurosci 10:276
Schuster, Andrew; Skinner, Michael K; Yan, Wei (2016) Ancestral vinclozolin exposure alters the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of sperm small noncoding RNAs. Environ Epigenet 2:
Scurry, Alexandra N; Heredia, Dante J; Feng, Cheng-Yuan et al. (2016) Structural and Functional Abnormalities of the Neuromuscular Junction in the Trembler-J Homozygote Mouse Model of Congenital Hypomyelinating Neuropathy. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 75:334-46
Bao, Jianqiang; Tang, Chong; Yuan, Shuiqiao et al. (2015) UPF2, a nonsense-mediated mRNA decay factor, is required for prepubertal Sertoli cell development and male fertility by ensuring fidelity of the transcriptome. Development 142:352-62
Park, C; Lee, M Y; Slivano, O J et al. (2015) Loss of serum response factor induces microRNA-mediated apoptosis in intestinal smooth muscle cells. Cell Death Dis 6:e2011
Winbush, Ari; Gruner, Matthew; Hennig, Grant W et al. (2015) Long-term imaging of circadian locomotor rhythms of a freely crawling C. elegans population. J Neurosci Methods 249:66-74
Lee, Moon Young; Park, Chanjae; Berent, Robyn M et al. (2015) Smooth Muscle Cell Genome Browser: Enabling the Identification of Novel Serum Response Factor Target Genes. PLoS One 10:e0133751
Yuan, Shuiqiao; Stratton, Clifford J; Bao, Jianqiang et al. (2015) Spata6 is required for normal assembly of the sperm connecting piece and tight head-tail conjunction. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 112:E430-9

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