39 research outputs found

    Extra-renal locations of the a4 subunit of H+ATPase

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    Abstract Background Vacuolar-type proton pumps help maintain acid–base homeostasis either within intracellular compartments or at specialised plasma membranes. In mammals they are made up of 13 subunits, which form two functional domains. A number of the subunits have variants that display tissue restricted expression patterns such that in specialised cell types they replace the generic subunits at some sub-cellular locations. The tissue restricted a4 subunit has previously been reported at the plasma membrane in the kidney, inner ear, olfactory epithelium and male reproductive tract. Results In this study novel locations of the a4 subunit were investigated using an Atp6v0a4 knockout mouse line in which a LacZ reporter cassette replaced part of the gene. The presence of a4 in the olfactory epithelium was further investigated and the additional presence of C2 and d2 subunits identified. The a4 subunit was found in the uterus of pregnant animals and a4 was identified along with d2 and C2 in the embryonic visceral yolk sac. In the male reproductive tract a4 was seen in the novel locations of the prostatic alveoli and the ampullary glands as well as the previously reported epididymis and vas deferens. Conclusions The identification of novel locations for the a4 subunit and other tissue-restricted subunits increases the range of unique subunit combinations making up the proton pump. These studies suggest additional roles of the proton pump, indicating a further range of homologue-specific functions for tissue-restricted subunits

    Renal peroxiredoxin 6 interacts with anion exchanger 1 and plays a novel role in pH homeostasis.

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    Peroxiredoxin 6 (PRDX6) is one of the six members of the PRDX family, which have peroxidase and antioxidant activity. PRDX6 is unique, containing only one conserved cysteine residue (C47) rather than the two found in other PRDXs. A yeast two-hybrid screen found PRDX6 to be a potential binding partner of the C-terminal tail of anion exchanger 1 (AE1), a Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger basolaterally expressed in renal α-intercalated cells. PRDX6 immunostaining in human kidney was both cytoplasmic and peripheral and colocalized with AE1. Analysis of native protein showed that it was largely monomeric, whereas expressed tagged protein was more dimeric. Two methionine oxidation sites were identified. In vitro and ex vivo pull-downs and immunoprecipitation assays confirmed interaction with AE1, but mutation of the conserved cysteine resulted in loss of interaction. Prdx6 knockout mice had a baseline acidosis with a major respiratory component and greater AE1 expression than wild-type animals. After an oral acid challenge, PRDX6 expression increased in wild-type mice, with preservation of AE1. However, AE1 expression was significantly decreased in knockout animals. Kidneys from acidified mice showed widespread proximal tubular vacuolation in wild-type but not knockout animals. Knockdown of PRDX6 by siRNA in mammalian cells reduced both total and cell membrane AE1 levels. Thus, PRDX6-AE1 interaction contributes to the maintenance of AE1 during cellular stress such as during metabolic acidosis.Human kidney sections were prepared by Suzy Haward, Addenbrooke's Human Research Tissue Bank, which is supported by the Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. We thank Dr. Aron Fisher (Institute for Environmental Science, University of Pennsylvania) for the kind gift of Prdx6−/− mice and reagents, Carsten Wagner (Zurich) for antisera, Jane Clarke (University of Cambridge) for modified pRSET-A vector, and Kamburapola Jayawardena for mass spectrometry (CIMR). This work was funded by the Wellcome Trust (award 088489/Z/09/Z to FEKF and Strategic award 100140/Z/12/Z to the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research), and the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation (scholarship to SLS).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Publishing Group via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ki.2015.27

    Accuracy of urine pH testing in a regional metabolic renal clinic: is the dipstick accurate enough?

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    Urine pH is a useful marker for assessing treatment need and efficacy in patients with nephrolithiasis. Though the gold standard of measurement is with a pH electrode, dipsticks offer the convenience of cost, ease of use, and the possibility of patients measuring their own values outside the clinic. The aim of this study was to determine whether dipsticks offer the same accuracy as the electrode. Paired measurements of freshly voided urine pH with both electrode and dipstick were analysed in a multidisciplinary renal clinic. We found that although there was a high Pearson correlation between the samples (0.89, p = 0.001), urine dipstick measurements carried an approximately 1 in 4 risk of producing clinically significant differences (pH differences  > 0.5 pH unit) from meter values. We also found that at high and low urine pH, the dipstick tended to over- and underestimate true pH readings, respectively. Examining the values in the 98 patients where a need for pharmacological urinary pH manipulation was indicated by the true pH, we found 14 who would not have been appropriately treated, and 5 who would have been unnecessarily medicated, if the stick pH value had been used. We conclude that dipstick pH measurement is insufficiently reliable for guiding clinical decision-making

    Clinical utility of PKD2 mutation testing in a polycystic kidney disease cohort attending a specialist nephrology out-patient clinic.

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    BACKGROUND: ADPKD affects approximately 1:1000 of the worldwide population. It is caused by mutations in two genes, PKD1 and PKD2. Although allelic variation has some influence on disease severity, genic effects are strong, with PKD2 mutations predicting later onset of ESRF by up to 20 years. We therefore screened a cohort of ADPKD patients attending a nephrology out-patient clinic for PKD2 mutations, to identify factors that can be used to offer targeted gene testing and to provide patients with improved prognostic information. METHODS: 142 consecutive individuals presenting to a hospital nephrology out-patient service with a diagnosis of ADPKD and CKD stage 4 or less were screened for mutations in PKD2, following clinical evaluation and provision of a detailed family history (FH). RESULTS: PKD2 mutations were identified in one fifth of cases. 12% of non-PKD2 patients progressed to ESRF during this study whilst none with a PKD2 mutation did (median 38.5 months of follow-up, range 16-88 months, p < 0.03). A significant difference was found in age at ESRF of affected family members (non-PKD2 vs. PKD2, 54 yrs vs. 65 yrs; p < 0.0001). No PKD2 mutations were identified in patients with a FH of ESRF occurring before age 50 yrs, whereas a PKD2 mutation was predicted by a positive FH without ESRF. CONCLUSIONS: PKD2 testing has a clinically significant detection rate in the pre-ESRF population. It did not accurately distinguish those individuals with milder renal disease defined by stage of CKD but did identify a group less likely to progress to ESRF. When used with detailed FH, it offers useful prognostic information for individuals and their families. It can therefore be offered to all but those whose relatives have developed ESRF before age 50

    Pathogenic uromodulin mutations result in premature intracellular polymerization

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    AbstractSeveral renal diseases involve mutations in the gene encoding uromodulin, the predominant protein in urine. We investigated the intracellular processing of wild-type uromodulin, and three mutants: p.V93_G97del/ins AASC; C155R; and C150S. A renal biopsy from a patient harboring the C155R mutation revealed intracellular protein accumulation. Wild-type uromodulin was efficiently trafficked to the cell surface in transfected tsA 201 cells, whereas the mutants were partially retained within the cell, and incompletely processed. Atomic force microscopy imaging revealed that the intracellular mutant proteins contained fibrillar structures similar to urinary uromodulin. We suggest that premature intracellular polymerization underlies the pathology of uromodulin diseases

    PDLIM5 links kidney anion exchanger 1 (kAE1) to ILK and is required for membrane targeting of kAE1.

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    Anion exchanger 1 (AE1) mediates Cl-/HCO3- exchange in erythrocytes and kidney intercalated cells where it functions to maintain normal bodily acid-base homeostasis. AE1's C-terminal tail (AE1C) contains multiple potential membrane targeting/retention determinants, including a predicted PDZ binding motif, which are critical for its normal membrane residency. Here we identify PDLIM5 as a direct binding partner for AE1 in human kidney, via PDLIM5's PDZ domain and the PDZ binding motif in AE1C. Kidney AE1 (kAE1), PDLIM5 and integrin-linked kinase (ILK) form a multiprotein complex in which PDLIM5 provides a bridge between ILK and AE1C. Depletion of PDLIM5 resulted in significant reduction in kAE1 at the cell membrane, whereas over-expression of kAE1 was accompanied by increased PDLIM5 levels, underscoring the functional importance of PDLIM5 for proper kAE1 membrane residency, as a crucial linker between kAE1 and actin cytoskeleton-associated proteins in polarized cells.This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (grant ref: 088489/Z/09/Z and Strategic award 100140/Z/12/Z to the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research), and the British Heart Foundation (grant ref: SBAG/120). The Addenbrooke's Human Research Tissue Bank is supported by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Nature Publishing Group via https://doi.org/10.1038/srep3970

    Developing a patient-centred tool for pain measurement and evaluation in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease.

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    BACKGROUND: Pain affects 60% of the autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) population. Despite being an early and debilitating symptom, it is poorly characterized and management is suboptimal. This study aimed to develop an ADPKD-specific pain assessment tool (APAT) to facilitate pain research. METHODS: Following a systematic review of PATs used in ADPKD studies and against international recommendations for pain trials, our multi-disciplinary team of clinical experts and patients constructed an ADPKD-pain conceptual framework of key pain evaluation themes. We compiled a new APAT covering domains prioritized within our framework using components of questionnaires validated in other chronic pain disorders. The APAT was administered longitudinally within a randomized high-water intake trial (NCT02933268) to ascertain feasibility and provide pilot data on ADPKD pain. RESULTS: Thirty-nine ADPKD participants with chronic kidney disease Stages 1-4 provided 129 APAT responses. Each participant completed a median of 3 (range 1-10) assessments. Respondents' mean ± standard deviation age was 47 ± 13 years; 59% (23) were female; and 69% (27) had enlarged kidneys with median time from diagnosis 14.2 (interquartile range 7.0-25.9) years. Pain (52%) and associated analgesic use (29%) were common. Pain severity was associated with increasing age [odds ratio (OR) = 1.07, P = 0.009], female gender (OR = 4.34, P = 0.018), estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/min/1.73 m2 (OR = 5.45, P = 0.021) and hypertension (OR = 12.11, P = 0.007), but not with kidney size (P = 0.23). The APAT achieved good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha coefficient = 0.91) and test-retest reliability (domain intra-class correlation coefficients ranging from 0.62 to 0.90). CONCLUSIONS: The APAT demonstrated good acceptability and reliability, and following further validation in a larger cohort could represent an invaluable tool for future ADPKD pain studies.Addenbrookes Charitable Trust Kidney Care UK British Renal Society Kidney Research U

    Randomised controlled trial of high versus ad libitum water intake in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease: rationale and design of the DRINK feasibility trial.

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    Introduction Vasopressin stimulates cyst growth in Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD) leading to enlarged kidneys, hypertension and renal failure. Vasopressin receptor blockade slows disease progression. Physiological suppression of vasopressin secretion through high water intake could achieve a similar effect, necessitating a definitive large-scale trial of high water intake in ADPKD. The objective of the DRINK trial is to answer the key design and feasibility questions required to deliver a successful definitive water intake trial. Methods and Analysis We describe the design of a single-centre, open label, prospective, randomised controlled trial. DRINK aims to enroll 50 ADPKD patients, over the age 16years with an eGFR≥20ml/min/1.73m2. Participants will be randomised 1:1 to high water (HW) intake based on an individualised water intake prescription, or to ad libitum(AW) water intake. The HW group will aim for a dilute urine (urine osmolality≤270mOsmo/kg) as a surrogate marker of vasopressin suppression, and those in the AW group will target more concentrated urine. Participants will have an 8week treatment period, and will be seen at week 0, 2,4 and 8, undergoing assessments of fluid status, renal function and serum and urine osmolalities. They will receive dietary advice, and self-monitor urine specific gravity and fluid intake. The trial employs smartphone technology to permit home monitoring and remote direct data capture. The primary feasibility endpoints are recruitment rate and separation between arms in measured urinary osmolality. Key secondary assessments include acceptability, adherence, health-related quality of life, acute effects of high water intake on measured (51Cr-EDTA) and estimated glomerular filtration rate, and ADPKD-related pain. Ethics and Dissemination Ethical approval was awarded by the East of England Essex Research Ethics Committee (16/EE/0026). The results of DRINK will be submitted to peer reviewed journals, and presented to patients via the PKD Charity. Trial Registration Details: NCT02933268 and ISCRTN1679495
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