53 research outputs found

    Regulated acid-base transport in the collecting duct

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    The renal collecting system serves the fine-tuning of renal acid-base secretion. Acid-secretory type-A intercalated cells secrete protons via a luminally expressed V-type H+-ATPase and generate new bicarbonate released by basolateral chloride/bicarbonate exchangers including the AE1 anion exchanger. Efficient proton secretion depends both on the presence of titratable acids (mainly phosphate) and the concomitant secretion of ammonia being titrated to ammonium. Collecting duct ammonium excretion requires the Rhesus protein RhCG as indicated by recent KO studies. Urinary acid secretion by type-A intercalated cells is strongly regulated by various factors among them acid-base status, angiotensin II and aldosterone, and the Calcium-sensing receptor. Moreover, urinary acidification by H+-ATPases is modulated indirectly by the activity of the epithelial sodium channel ENaC. Bicarbonate secretion is achieved by non-type-A intercalated cells characterized by the luminal expression of the chloride/bicarbonate exchanger pendrin. Pendrin activity is driven by H+-ATPases and may serve both bicarbonate excretion and chloride reabsorption. The activity and expression of pendrin is regulated by different factors including acid-base status, chloride delivery, and angiotensin II and may play a role in NaCl retention and blood pressure regulation. Finally, the relative abundance of type-A and non-type-A intercalated cells may be tightly regulated. Dysregulation of intercalated cell function or abundance causes various syndromes of distal renal tubular acidosis underlining the importance of these processes for acid-base homeostasi

    Molecular Pathophysiology of Acid-Base Disorders

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    Acid-base balance is critical for normal life. Acute and chronic disturbances impact cellular energy metabolism, endocrine signaling, ion channel activity, neuronal activity, and cardiovascular functions such as cardiac contractility and vascular blood flow. Maintenance and adaptation of acid-base homeostasis are mostly controlled by respiration and kidney. The kidney contributes to acid-base balance by reabsorbing filtered bicarbonate, regenerating bicarbonate through ammoniagenesis and generation of protons, and by excreting acid. This review focuses on acid-base disorders caused by renal processes, both inherited and acquired. Distinct rare inherited monogenic diseases affecting acid-base handling in the proximal tubule and collecting duct have been identified. In the proximal tubule, mutations of solute carrier 4A4 (SLC4A4) (electrogenic Na/HCO-cotransporter Na/bicarbonate cotransporter e1 [NBCe1]) and other genes such as CLCN5 (Cl/H-antiporter), SLC2A2 (GLUT2 glucose transporter), or EHHADH (enoyl-CoA, hydratase/3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase) causing more generalized proximal tubule dysfunction can cause proximal renal tubular acidosis resulting from bicarbonate wasting and reduced ammoniagenesis. Mutations in adenosine triphosphate ATP6V1 (B1 H-ATPase subunit), ATPV0A4 (a4 H-ATPase subunit), SLC4A1 (anion exchanger 1), and FOXI1 (forkhead transcription factor) cause distal renal tubular acidosis type I. Carbonic anhydrase II mutations affect several nephron segments and give rise to a mixed proximal and distal phenotype. Finally, mutations in genes affecting aldosterone synthesis, signaling, or downstream targets can lead to hyperkalemic variants of renal tubular acidosis (type IV). More common forms of renal acidosis are found in patients with advanced stages of chronic kidney disease and are owing, at least in part, to a reduced capacity for ammoniagenesis

    The phosphate transporter NaPi-IIa determines the rapid renal adaptation to dietary phosphate intake in mouse irrespective of persistently high FGF23 levels

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    Renal reabsorption of inorganic phosphate (Pi) is mediated by the phosphate transporters NaPi-IIa, NaPi-IIc, and Pit-2 in the proximal tubule brush border membrane (BBM). Dietary Pi intake regulates these transporters; however, the contribution of the specific isoforms to the rapid and slow phase is not fully clarified. Moreover, the regulation of PTH and FGF23, two major phosphaturic hormones, during the adaptive phase has not been correlated. C57/BL6 and NaPi-IIa−/− mice received 5days either 1.2% (HPD) or 0.1% (LPD) Pi-containing diets. Thereafter, some mice were acutely switched to LPD or HPD. Plasma Pi concentrations were similar under chronic diets, but lower when mice were acutely switched to LPD. Urinary Pi excretion was similar in C57/BL6 and NaPi-IIa−/− mice under HPD. During chronic LPD, NaPi-IIa−/− mice lost phosphate in urine compensated by higher intestinal Pi absorption. During the acute HPD-to-LPD switch, NaPi-IIa−/− mice exhibited a delayed decrease in urinary Pi excretion. PTH was acutely regulated by low dietary Pi intake. FGF23 did not respond to low Pi intake within 8h whereas the phospho-adaptator protein FRS2α necessary for FGF-receptor cell signaling was downregulated. BBM Pi transport activity and NaPi-IIa but not NaPi-IIc and Pit-2 abundance acutely adapted to diets in C57/BL6 mice. In NaPi-IIa−/−, Pi transport activity was low and did not adapt. Thus, NaPi-IIa mediates the fast adaptation to Pi intake and is upregulated during the adaptation to low Pi despite persistently high FGF23 levels. The sensitivity to FGF23 may be regulated by adapting FRS2α abundance and phosphorylatio

    Colocalization of the (Pro)renin receptor/Atp6ap2 with H+-AT pases in mouse kidney but prorenin does not acutely regulate intercalated cell H+-ATPase activity

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    The (Pro)renin receptor (P)RR/Atp6ap2 is a cell surface protein capable of binding and nonproteolytically activate prorenin. Additionally, (P)RR is associated with H+-ATPases and alternative functions in H+-ATPase regulation as well as inWnt signalling have been reported. Kidneys express very high levels of H+-ATPases which are involved in multiple functions such as endocytosis, membrane protein recycling as well as urinary acidification, bicarbonate reabsorption, and salt absorption. Here, we wanted to localize the (P)RR/Atp6ap2 along the murine nephron, exmaine whether the (P)RR/Atp6ap2 is co

    The rhesus protein RhCG: a new perspective in ammonium transport and distal urinary acidification

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    Urinary acidification is a complex process requiring the coordinated action of enzymes and transport proteins and resulting in the removal of acid and the regeneration of bicarbonate. Proton secretion is mediated by luminal H(+)-ATPases and requires the parallel movement of NH(3), and its protonation to NH(4)(+), to provide sufficient buffering. It has been long assumed that ammonia secretion is a passive process occurring by means of simple diffusion driven by the urinary trapping of ammonium. However, new data indicate that mammalian cells possess specific membrane proteins from the family of rhesus proteins involved in ammonia/μm permeability. Rhesus proteins were first identified in yeast and later also in plants, algae, and mammals. In rodents, RhBG and RhCG are expressed in the collecting duct, whereas in humans only RhCG was detected. Their expression increases with maturation of the kidney and accelerates after birth in parallel with other acid-base transport proteins. Deletion of RhBG in mice had no effect on renal ammonium excretion, whereas RhCG deficiency reduces renal ammonium secretion strongly, causes metabolic acidosis in acid-challenged mice, and impairs restoration of normal acid-base status. Microperfusion experiments or functional reconstitution in liposomes demonstrates that ammonia is the most likely substrate of RhCG. Similarly, crystal structures of human RhCG and the homologous bacterial AmtB protein suggest that these proteins may form gas channels.Kidney International advance online publication, 6 October 2010; doi:10.1038/ki.2010.386

    Mécanismes et déterminants des réabsorptions de bicarbonate et d'ammonium dans la branche large ascendante de rein

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    PARIS-BIUSJ-Thèses (751052125) / SudocPARIS-BIUSJ-Physique recherche (751052113) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Haploinsufficiency of the mouse Atp6v1b1 gene leads to a mild acid-base disturbance with implications for kidney stone disease.

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    BACKGROUND/AIMS: Homozygous mutations or deletion of the ATP6V1B1 gene encoding for the B1 subunit of the vacuolar H+-ATPase leads to distal renal tubular acidosis in man and mice. In humans, heterozygous carriers of B1 mutations can develop incomplete dRTA with nephroclacinosis. Here, we investigated whether Atp6v1b1+/- mice also develop acid-base disturbances during an HCl acid load. METHODS: We subjected Atp6v1b1+/+, Atp6v1b1+/-, Atp6v1b1-/- to an HCl-load for 7 days and investigated acid-base status, kidney function, and expression of renal acid-base transport proteins. RESULTS: Atp6v1b1-/- mice had more alkaline urine and low ammoniuria, whereas Atp6v1b1+/- mice showed no difference in their urine parameters but higher blood chloride and lower blood pCO2 compared to controls. Subcellular localization of a4 and B2 subunits of H+-ATPase were unchanged within the 3 genotypes and Atp6v1b1+/+ and Atp6v1b1+/- mice exhibited a similar luminal localization of B1 subunit in intercalated cells. However, B1, B2 and a4 expression were decreased in renal membrane fractions from Atp6v1b1+/- mice compared to Atp6v1b1+/+ while B2 and a4 were unchanged and B1 protein was reduced in Atp6v1b+-/- kidneys. Compensatory mechanisms of B1 ablation were found only in the collecting duct with a down-regulation of pendrin in Atp6v1b1-/- mice. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, 1) Atp6v1b1+/- mice developed a mild incomplete dRTA. dRTA is partly compensated by respiration. 2) Compensatory mechanisms for the absence of B1 take place only in the collecting duct of Atp6v1b1-/- kidneys

    Regulation of renal pendrin activity by aldosterone

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    PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Pendrin resides on the luminal membrane of type B intercalated cells in the renal collecting tubule system mediating the absorption of chloride in exchange for bicarbonate. In mice or humans lacking pendrin, blood pressure is lower, and pendrin knockout mice are resistant to aldosterone-induced hypertension. Here we discuss recent findings on the regulation of pendrin. RECENT FINDINGS: Pendrin activity is stimulated during alkalosis partly mediated by secretin. Also, angiotensin II and aldosterone stimulate pendrin activity requiring the mineralocorticoid receptor in intercalated cells. Angiotensin II induces dephosphorylation of the mineralocorticoid receptor rendering the receptor susceptible for aldosterone binding. In the absence of the mineralocorticoid receptor in intercalated cells, angiotensin II does not stimulate pendrin. The effect of aldosterone on pendrin expression is in part mediated by the development of hypokalemic alkalosis and blunted by K-supplements or amiloride. Part of the blood pressure-increasing effect of pendrin is also mediated by its stimulatory effect on the epithelial Na-channel in neighbouring principal cells. SUMMARY: These findings identify pendrin as a critical regulator of renal salt handling and blood pressure along with acid--base balance. A regulatory network of hormones fine-tuning activity is emerging. Drugs blocking pendrin are being developed
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