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result(s) for
"renal ion transporters"
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Rapid dephosphorylation of the renal sodium chloride cotransporter in response to oral potassium intake in mice
by
Roesinger, Marian
,
Ziegler, Urs
,
Barmettler, Gery
in
Administration, Oral
,
aldosterone
,
Aldosterone - blood
2013
A dietary potassium load induces a rapid kaliuresis and natriuresis, which may occur even before plasma potassium and aldosterone (aldo) levels increase. Here we sought to gain insight into underlying molecular mechanisms contributing to this response. After gastric gavage of 2% potassium, the plasma potassium concentrations rose rapidly (0.25h), followed by a significant rise of plasma aldo (0.5h) in mice. Enhanced urinary potassium and sodium excretion was detectable as early as spot urines could be collected (about 0.5h). The functional changes were accompanied by a rapid and sustained (0.25–6h) dephosphorylation of the NaCl cotransporter (NCC) and a late (6h) upregulation of proteolytically activated epithelial sodium channels. The rapid effects on NCC were independent from the coadministered anion. NCC dephosphorylation was also aldo-independent, as indicated by experiments in aldo-deficient mice. The observed urinary sodium loss relates to NCC, as it was markedly diminished in NCC-deficient mice. Thus, downregulation of NCC likely explains the natriuretic effect of an acute oral potassium load in mice. This may improve renal potassium excretion by increasing the amount of intraluminal sodium that can be exchanged against potassium in the aldo-sensitive distal nephron.
Journal Article
Quercetin regulates organic ion transporter and uromodulin expression and improves renal function in hyperuricemic mice
by
Zhang, Xian
,
Wang, Xing
,
Hu, Qing-Hua
in
Allopurinol - pharmacology
,
Animals
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Background
Renal organic ion transporters and uromodulin (UMOD) play the important roles in renal urate excretion and function. Hyperuricemia is considered as a risk factor for the development of renal dysfunction. The flavonoid quercetin in diets exerts the hypouricemic and nephroprotective effects.
Purposes
To evaluate the effects of quercetin on renal organic ion transporters and UMOD in hyperuricemic mice.
Methods
Kun-Ming mice were divided into normal and hyperuricemic groups receiving water, 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg quercetin, 5 mg/kg allopurinol, respectively. Hyperuricemic mice were orally gavaged with 250 mg/kg oxonate daily for 1 week. Quercetin and allopurinol were orally gavaged on the day when oxonate or water was given 1 h later. After 1 week, serum uric acid, creatinine and blood urea nitrogen concentrations, excretion of urate and creatinine, and fractional excretion of uric acid were measured. The mRNA and protein levels of renal urate transporter 1 (mURAT1), glucose transporter 9 (mGLUT9), organic anion transporter 1 (mOAT1) and organic cation/carnitine transporters (mOCT1, mOCT2, mOCTN1 and mOCTN2) in mice were analyzed. Simultaneously, UMOD levels in serum, urine and kidney, as well as renal UMOD mRNA expression were detected.
Results
Quercetin significantly restored oxonate-induced abnormalities of these biochemical indexes compared with normal vehicle group. Furthermore, it remarkably prevented expression changes of renal organic ion transporters and UMOD, and UMOD level alteration in hyperuricemic mice.
Conclusions
These results suggest that quercetin has the uricosuric and nephroprotective actions mediated by regulating the expression levels of renal organic ion transporters and UMOD.
Journal Article
Fructus Gardenia Extract Ameliorates Oxonate-Induced Hyperuricemia with Renal Dysfunction in Mice by Regulating Organic Ion Transporters and mOIT3
2013
The potent anti-hyperuricemia activities of Fructus Gardenia Extract (FGE) have been well reported. The aim of this study was to evaluate the uricosuric and nephro-protective effects of FGE and explore its possible mechanisms of action in oxonate-induced hyperuricemic mice. FGE was orally administered to hyperuricemic and normal mice for 1 week. Serum and urinary levels of uric acid, creatinine and blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and fractional excretion of uric acid (FEUA) were measured. The mRNA and protein levels of mouse urate transporter 1 (mURAT1), glucose transporter 9 (mGLUT9), ATP-binding cassette, subfamily G, 2 (mABCG2), organic anion transporter 1 (mOAT1), mOAT3, oncoprotein induced transcript 3 (mOIT3), organic cation/carnitine transporters in the kidney were analyzed. Simultaneously, Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein (THP) levels in urine and kidney were detected. FGE significantly reduced serum urate levels and increased urinary urate levels and FEUA in hyperuricemic mice. It could also effectively reverse oxonate-induced alterations in renal mURAT1, mGLUT9, mOAT1 and mOIT3 expressions, as well as THP levels, resulting in the enhancement of renal uric acid excretion. Moreover, FGE decreased serum creatinine and BUN levels, and up-regulated expression of organic cation/carnitine transporters, improving renal dysfunction in this model. Furthermore, FGE decreased renal mABCG2 expressions in hyperuricemic mice, contributing to its beneficial actions. However, further investigation is needed in clinical trials of FGE and its bioactive components.
Journal Article
Beneficial Effect of Rutin on Oxonate-Induced Hyperuricemia and Renal Dysfunction in Mice
by
Zhang, Xian
,
Hu, Qing-Hua
,
Chen, Yu-Sheng
in
Animals
,
Carrier Proteins - metabolism
,
Clinical outcomes
2013
Aims: The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of rutin on potassium oxonate-induced hyperuricemia and renal dysfunction in mice. Methods: Rutin was administered orally 1 h after oxonate at doses of 25, 50 and 100 mg·kg -1 . Serum uric acid levels and kidney function parameters were assayed. Mouse uromodulin levels in serum, urine and kidney were determined by the ELISA method. Simultaneously, the expression levels of renal organic ion transporters were detected. Results: Rutin significantly decreased serum urate, creatinine and blood urea nitrogen, serum and kidney uromodulin levels, and increased urine uromodulin, urate and creatinine excretion in hyperuricemic mice. Rutin at 50 and 100 mg·kg -1 significantly downregulated mRNA and protein levels of mouse glucose transporter 9 and urate transporter 1, and upregulated mRNA and protein levels of organic anion transporter 1 and organic cation/carnitine transporters in the kidney of hyperuricemic mice. Conclusions: Rutin exerted its hypouricemic action and renal function improvement by the regulation of renal organic ion transporters.
Journal Article
SLC2A9 (GLUT9) mediates urate reabsorption in the mouse kidney
2018
Uric acid (UA) is a metabolite of purine degradation and is involved in gout flairs and kidney stones formation. GLUT9 (SLC2A9) was previously shown to be a urate transporter in vitro. In vivo, humans carrying GLUT9 loss-of-function mutations have familial renal hypouricemia type 2, a condition characterized by hypouricemia, UA renal wasting associated with kidney stones, and an increased propensity to acute renal failure during strenuous exercise. Mice carrying a deletion of GLUT9 in the whole body are hyperuricemic and display a severe nephropathy due to intratubular uric acid precipitation. However, the precise role of GLUT9 in the kidney remains poorly characterized. We developed a mouse model in which GLUT9 was deleted specifically along the whole nephron in a tetracycline-inducible manner (subsequently called kidney-inducible KO or kiKO). The urate/creatinine ratio was increased as early as 4 days after induction of the KO and no GLUT9 protein was visible on kidney extracts. kiKO mice are morphologically identical to their wild-type littermates and had no spontaneous kidney stones. Twenty-four-hour urine collection revealed a major increase of urate urinary excretion rate and of the fractional excretion of urate, with no difference in urate concentration in the plasma. Polyuria was observed, but kiKO mice were still able to concentrate urine after water restriction. KiKO mice displayed lower blood pressure accompanied by an increased heart rate. Overall, these results indicate that GLUT9 is a crucial player in renal handling of urate in vivo and a putative target for uricosuric drugs.
Journal Article
SGLT2 inhibitors: how do they affect the cardiac cells
2025
The first sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor (SGLT2I), canagliflozin, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in 2013. Since then, other members of this drug class (such as dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, and ertugliflozin) have become widely used. Unlike classical antidiabetic agents, these drugs do not interfere with insulin secretion or action, but instead promote renal glucose excretion. Since their approval, many preclinical and clinical studies have been conducted to investigate the diverse effects of SGLT2Is. While originally introduced as antidiabetic agents, the SGLT2Is are now recognized as pillars in the treatment of heart failure and chronic kidney disease, in patients with or without diabetes. The beneficial cardiac effects of this class have been attributed to several mechanisms. Among these, SGLT2Is inhibit fibrosis, hypertrophy, apoptosis, inflammation, and oxidative stress. They regulate mitochondrial function and ion transport, and stimulate autophagy through several underlying mechanisms. This review details the potential effects of SGLT2Is on cardiac cells.
Journal Article
The (pro)renin receptor (ATP6ap2) facilitates receptor-mediated endocytosis and lysosomal function in the renal proximal tubule
by
Gabin, Sihn
,
Rouselle Anthony
,
Bader, Michael
in
Acidification
,
Adenosine triphosphatase
,
Animals
2021
The ATP6ap2 (Pro)renin receptor protein associates with H+-ATPases which regulate organellar, cellular, and systemic acid–base homeostasis. In the kidney, ATP6ap2 colocalizes with H+-ATPases in various cell types including the cells of the proximal tubule. There, H+-ATPases are involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis of low molecular weight proteins via the megalin/cubilin receptors. To study ATP6ap2 function in the proximal tubule, we used an inducible shRNA Atp6ap2 knockdown rat model (Kd) and an inducible kidney-specific Atp6ap2 knockout mouse model. Both animal lines showed higher proteinuria with elevated albumin, vitamin D binding protein, and procathepsin B in urine. Endocytosis of an injected fluid-phase marker (FITC- dextran, 10 kDa) was normal whereas processing of recombinant transferrin, a marker for receptor-mediated endocytosis, to lysosomes was delayed. While megalin and cubilin expression was unchanged, abundance of several subunits of the H+-ATPase involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis was reduced. Lysosomal integrity and H+-ATPase function are associated with mTOR signaling. In ATP6ap2, KO mice mTOR and phospho-mTOR appeared normal but increased abundance of the LC3-B subunit of the autophagosome was observed suggesting a more generalized impairment of lysosomal function in the absence of ATP6ap2. Hence, our data suggests a role for ATP6ap2 for proximal tubule function in the kidney with a defect in receptor-mediated endocytosis in mice and rats.
Journal Article
SLC41A1 is essential for magnesium homeostasis in vivo
by
Arjona, Francisco J
,
Jeroen H F de Baaij
,
Hoenderop, Joost G J
in
Cell membranes
,
Danio rerio
,
Homeostasis
2019
Solute carrier family 41 member A1 (SLC41A1) has been suggested to mediate magnesium (Mg2+) transport by several in vitro studies. However, the physiological function of SLC41A1 remains to be elucidated. In this study, cellular Mg2+ transport assays combined with zebrafish slc41a1 knockdown experiments were performed to disclose SLC41A1 function and its physiological relevance. The gene slc41a1 is ubiquitously expressed in zebrafish tissues and is regulated by water and dietary Mg2+ availability. Knockdown of slc41a1 in zebrafish larvae grown in a Mg2+-free medium resulted in a unique phenotype characterized by a decrease in zebrafish Mg content. This decrease shows that SLC41A1 is required to maintain Mg2+ balance and its dysfunction results in renal Mg2+ wasting in zebrafish larvae. Importantly, the Mg content of the larvae is rescued when mouse SLC41A1 is expressed in slc41a1-knockdown zebrafish. Conversely, expression of mammalian SLC41A1-p.Asp262Ala, harboring a mutation in the ion-conducting SLC41A1 pore, did not reverse the renal Mg2+ wasting. 25Mg2+ transport assays in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells overexpressing SLC41A1 demonstrated that SLC41A1 mediates cellular Mg2+ extrusion independently of sodium (Na+). In contrast, SLC41A1-p.Asp262Ala expressing HEK293 cells displayed similar Mg2+ extrusion activities than control (mock) cells. In polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, SLC41A1 localized to the basolateral cell membrane. Our results demonstrate that SLC41A1 facilitates renal Mg2+ reabsorption in the zebrafish model. Furthermore, our data suggest that SLC41A1 mediates both Mg2+ uptake and extrusion.
Journal Article
Renal Transport of Adefovir, Cidofovir, and Tenofovir by SLC22A Family Members (hOAT1, hOAT3, and hOCT2)
by
Uwai, Yuichi
,
Katsura, Toshiya
,
Ida, Hiroki
in
Adenine - analogs & derivatives
,
Adenine - metabolism
,
Antiviral Agents - metabolism
2007
The nephrotoxicity of the nucleotide antivirals adefovir, cidofovir and tenofovir is considered to depend on the renal tubular transport of them. Although it is known that the antivirals are substrates of the human renal organic anion transporter hOAT1 (SLC22A6), there is no information available on other organic ion transporters. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the other renal organic anion transporter hOAT3 (SLC22A8) and organic cation transporter hOCT2 (SLC22A2) transport the antivirals.
Uptake experiments were performed using HEK293 cells transfected with cDNA of the organic ion transporters.
The uptake of adefovir, cidofovir and tenofovir in monolayers stably expressing hOAT3 increased time-dependently, compared with control. Probenecid, a typical inhibitor of organic anion transporters, completely inhibited their transport. The amounts of the antivirals taken up by hOAT3 were much lower than those by hOAT1. The transient expression of hOCT2 did not increase uptake of the antivirals.
These results indicate that adefovir, cidofovir and tenofovir are substrates of hOAT3 as well as hOAT1, but that quantitatively hOAT1 is the major renal transporter for these drugs.
Journal Article
Expression of phosphate and calcium transporters and their regulators in parotid glands of mice
by
Hernando, Nati
,
Haykir, Betül
,
Wagner, Carsten A
in
25-Hydroxyvitamin D
,
Calcitriol
,
Calcium homeostasis
2023
The concentration of inorganic phosphate (Pi) in plasma is under hormonal control, with deviations from normal values promptly corrected to avoid hyper- or hypophosphatemia. Major regulators include parathyroid hormone (PTH), fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF-23), and active vitamin D3 (calcitriol). This control is achieved by mechanisms largely dependent on regulating intestinal absorption and renal excretion, whose combined actions stabilise plasma Pi levels at around 1–2 mM. Instead, Pi concentrations up to 13 and 40 mM have been measured in saliva from humans and ruminants, respectively, suggesting that salivary glands have the capacity to concentrate Pi. Here we analysed the transcriptome of parotid glands, ileum, and kidneys of mice, to investigate their potential differences regarding the expression of genes responsible for epithelial transport of Pi as well as their known regulators. Given that Pi and Ca2+ homeostasis are tightly connected, the expression of genes involved in Ca2+ homeostasis was also included. In addition, we studied the effect of vitamin D3 treatment on the expression of Pi and Ca2+ regulating genes in the three major salivary glands. We found that parotid glands are equipped preferentially with Slc20 rather than with Slc34 Na+/Pi cotransporters, are suited to transport Ca2+ through the transcellular and paracellular route and are potential targets for PTH and vitamin D3 regulation.
Journal Article