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1.
Regulation of renal urea transporters   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Urea is important for the conservation of body water due to its role in the production of concentrated urine in the renal inner medulla. Physiologic data demonstrate that urea is transported by facilitated and by active urea transporter proteins. The facilitated urea transporter (UT-A) in the terminal inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) permits very high rates of transepithelial urea transport and results in the delivery of large amounts of urea into the deepest portions of the inner medulla where it is needed to maintain a high interstitial osmolality for concentrating the urine maximally. Four isoforms of the UT-A urea transporter family have been cloned to date. The facilitated urea transporter (UT-B) in erythrocytes permits these cells to lose urea rapidly as they traverse the ascending vasa recta, thereby preventing loss of urea from the medulla and decreasing urine-concentrating ability by decreasing the efficiency of countercurrent exchange, as occurs in Jk null individuals (who lack Kidd antigen). In addition to these facilitated urea transporters, three sodium-dependent, secondary active urea transport mechanisms have been characterized functionally in IMCD subsegments: (1) active urea reabsorption in the apical membrane of initial IMCD from low-protein fed or hypercalcemic rats; (2) active urea reabsorption in the basolateral membrane of initial IMCD from furosemide-treated rats; and (3) active urea secretion in the apical membrane of terminal IMCD from untreated rats. This review focuses on the physiologic, biophysical, and molecular evidence for facilitated and active urea transporters, and integrative studies of their acute and long-term regulation in rats with reduced urine-concentrating ability.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Gene knockout mice have been created for the collecting duct urea transporters UT-A1 and UT-A3, the descending thin-limb urea transporter UT-A2 and the descending vasa recta isoform, UT-B. In this brief review, the new insights in our understanding of the role of urea in the urinary concentrating mechanism and kidney function resulting from studies in these mice are discussed. RECENT FINDINGS: The major findings in studies on urea transporter knockout mice are as follows: rapid transport of urea from the inner medulla collecting duct lumen via UT-A1 or UT-A3 is essential for urea accumulation in the inner medullary interstitium; inner medulla collecting duct urea transporters are essential in water conservation by preventing urea-induced osmotic diuresis; an absence of inner medulla collecting duct urea transport does not prevent the concentration of sodium chloride in the inner medulla interstitium; deletion of the vasa recta isoform UT-B has a much greater effect on urinary concentration than deleting the descending limb isoform UT-A2. SUMMARY: Multiple urea transport mechanisms within the kidney are essential for producing maximally concentrated urine.  相似文献   

3.
Urea plays a critical role in the urine-concentrating mechanism in the inner medulla. Physiologic data provided evidence that urea transport in red blood cells and kidney inner medulla was mediated by specific urea transporter proteins. Molecular approaches during the past decade resulted in the cloning of two gene families for facilitated urea transporters, UT-A and UT-B, encoding several urea transporter cDNA isoforms in humans, rodents, and several nonmammalian species. Polyclonal antibodies have been generated to the cloned urea transporter proteins, and the use of these antibodies in integrative animal studies has resulted in several novel findings, including: (1) the surprising finding that UT-A1 protein abundance and urea transport are increased in the inner medulla during conditions in which urine concentrating ability is reduced; (2) vasopressin increases UT-A1 phosphorylation in rat inner medullary collecting duct; (3) UT-A protein abundance is upregulated in uremia in both liver and heart; and (4) UT-B is expressed in many nonrenal tissues and endothelial cells. This review will summarize the knowledge gained from using molecular approaches to perform integrative studies into urea transporter protein regulation, both in normal animals and in animal models of human diseases, including studies of uremic rats in which urea transporter protein is upregulated in liver and heart.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Since the turn of the 21st century, gene knockout mice have been created for all major urea transporters that are expressed in the kidney: the collecting duct urea transporters UT-A1 and UT-A3, the descending thin limb isoform UT-A2, and the descending vasa recta isoform UT-B. This article discusses the new insights that the results from studies in these mice have produced in the understanding of the role of urea in the urinary concentrating mechanism and kidney function. Following is a summary of the major findings: (1) Urea accumulation in the inner medullary interstitium depends on rapid transport of urea from the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) lumen via UT-A1 and/or UT-A3; (2) as proposed by Robert Berliner and colleagues in the 1950s, the role of IMCD urea transporters in water conservation is to prevent a urea-induced osmotic diuresis; (3) the absence of IMCD urea transport does not prevent the concentration of NaCl in the inner medulla, contrary to what would be predicted from the passive countercurrent multiplier mechanism in the form proposed by Kokko and Rector and Stephenson; (4) deletion of UT-B (vasa recta isoform) has a much greater effect on urinary concentration than deletion of UT-A2 (descending limb isoform), suggesting that the recycling of urea between the vasa recta and the renal tubules quantitatively is less important than classic countercurrent exchange; and (5) urea reabsorption from the IMCD and the process of urea recycling are not important elements of the mechanism of protein-induced increases in GFR. In addition, the clinical relevance of these studies is discussed, and it is suggested that inhibitors that specifically target collecting duct urea transporters have the potential for clinical use as potassium-sparing diuretics that function by creation of urea-dependent osmotic diuresis.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Our goal is to suggest how the renal concentrating mechanism is regulated in vivo. RECENT FINDINGS: The majority of descending thin limbs of the loop of Henle lack aquaporin-1 water channels, and loops of Henle in the inner medulla lack urea transporters. SUMMARY: Lack of water permeability in the descending thin limbs of the loop of Henle offers several advantages. First, since much less water is added to the outer medullary interstitial compartment, inhibitory control mechanisms on sodium and chloride reabsorption from the medullary thick ascending of loop of Henle initiated by water addition from the medullary collecting duct can be effective. Second, recycling of urea is efficient, as little urea will be washed out of the medulla. Third, delivery of a larger volume of filtrate to the medullary thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle permits both an appreciable reabsorption of sodium along with only a small fall in the luminal concentration of sodium in each of these liters. Hence there need be only a small lumen positive voltage in the medullary thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle. The absence of urea transporters in the loop of Henle in the inner medulla is required for a passive mechanism of sodium and chloride reabsorption in the inner medulla. Control of urea reabsorption from the medullary collecting duct is needed to prevent excessive oliguria in electrolyte-poor urine.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to examine urinary concentrating ability and protein expression of renal aquaporins and ion transporters in glucocorticoid-deficient (GD) rats in response to water deprivation as compared with control rats. Rats underwent bilateral adrenalectomies, followed only by aldosterone replacement (GD) or both aldosterone and dexamethasone replacement (control). As compared with control rats, the GD rats demonstrated a decrease in cardiac output and mean arterial pressure. In response to 36-h water deprivation, GD rats demonstrated significantly greater urine flow rate and decreased urine osmolality as compared with control rats at comparable serum osmolality and plasma vasopressin concentrations. The initiator of the countercurrent concentrating mechanism, the sodium-potassium-2 chloride co-transporter, was significantly decreased, as was the medullary osmolality in the GD rats versus control rats. There was also a decrease in inner medulla aquaporin-2 (AQP2) and urea transporter A1 (UT-A1) in GD rats as compared with control rats. There was a decrease in outer medulla Gsalpha protein, an important factor in vasopressin-mediated regulation of AQP2. Immunohistochemistry studies confirmed the decreased expression of AQP2 and UT-A1 in kidneys of GD rats as compared with control. In summary, impairment in the urinary concentrating mechanism was documented in GD rats in association with impaired countercurrent multiplication, diminished osmotic equilibration via AQP2, and diminished urea equilibration via UT-A1. These events occurred primarily in the relatively oxygen-deficient medulla and may have been initiated, at least in part, by the decrease in mean arterial pressure and thus renal perfusion pressure in this area of the kidney.  相似文献   

8.
The role of the collecting duct in urinary concentration   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In summary, the three major segments of the collecting duct subserve three different functions in the urinary concentrating mechanism. The main function of the cortical collecting tubule is to raise the fractional solute contribution and absolute concentration of urea in fluid that it delivers to the outer medullary collecting duct. The function of the outer medullary collecting duct is to raise further the absolute intraluminal urea concentration. Finally, the inner medullary collecting duct has two major functions in urinary concentration: first, it adds net urea to the papillary interstitium, and second, it allows the generation of maximally concentrated urine due to osmotic water equilibration. Indeed, the urine osmolality can rise to levels higher than the papillary interstitial osmolality as a consequence of inequalities of the reflection coefficients of urea and sodium chloride.  相似文献   

9.
Renal phenotype of UT-A urea transporter knockout mice   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The urea transporters UT-A1 and UT-A3 mediate rapid transepithelial urea transport across the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD). In a previous study, using a new mouse model in which both UT-A1 and UT-A3 were genetically deleted from the IMCD (UT-A1/3(-/-) mice), we investigated the role of these transporters in the function of the renal inner medulla. Here the authors report a new series of studies investigating more generally the renal phenotype of UT-A1/3(-/-) mice. Pathologic screening of 33 tissues revealed abnormalities in both the testis (increased size) and kidney (decreased size and vascular congestion) of UT-A1/3(-/-) mice. Total urinary nitrate and nitrite (NOx) excretion rates in UT-A1/3(-/-) mice were more than double those in wild-type mice. Total renal blood flow was not different between UT-A1/3(-/-) and wild-type mice but underwent a greater percentage decrease in response to NG-Nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride (L-NAME) infusion. Whole kidney GFR (FITC-inulin clearance) was not different in UT-A1/3(-/-) mice compared with controls and underwent a similar increase in response to a greater dietary protein intake. Fractional urea excretion was markedly elevated in UT-A1/3(-/-) mice on a 40% protein diet, reaching 102.4 +/- 8.8% of the filtered load, suggesting that there may be active urea secretion somewhere along the renal tubule. Although there was a marked urinary concentrating defect in UT-A1/3(-/-) mice, there was no decrease in aquaporin 2 or aquaporin 3 expression. Furthermore, although urea accumulation in the inner medulla was markedly attenuated, there was no decrease in sodium ion concentration in tissue from outer medulla or two levels of the inner medulla. These results support our conclusion that the urinary concentrating defect in UT-A1/3(-/-) mice is caused by a failure of urea transport from the IMCD lumen to the inner medullary interstitium, resulting in osmotic diuresis.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Lithium is commonly used to treat bipolar psychiatric disorders but can cause reduced urine concentrating ability. METHODS: To test whether lithium alters UT-A1 or UT-B urea transporter protein abundance or UT-A1 phosphorylation, rats were fed a standard diet supplemented with LiCl for 10 or 25 days, and then compared to pair-fed control rats. To investigate another potential mechanism for decreased urea transport, inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) suspensions from lithium-fed or control rats were incubated with 32P-orthophosphate to measure the phosphorylation of UT-A1. RESULTS: In lithium-fed rats (25 days), UT-A1 abundance was reduced to 50% of control rats in IM tip and to 25% in IM base, and UT-B abundance was reduced to 40% in IM base. Aquaporin-2 (AQP2) protein abundance was reduced in both IM regions. Vasopressin (100 pmol/L) increased UT-A1 phosphorylation in IMCD suspensions from control but not from lithium-fed rats; a higher vasopressin concentration (100 nmol/L) increased UT-A1 phosphorylation in control and lithium-fed rats. CONCLUSIONS: Decreases in UT-A1, UT-B, and AQP2 protein abundance, and/or vasopressin-stimulated phosphorylation of UT-A1, can contribute to the reduced urine concentrating ability that occurs in lithium-treated rats.  相似文献   

11.
Renal medullary circulation: hormonal control   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
It is now becoming apparent that the medullary circulation in the kidney can be regulated separately from overall renal blood flow. This characteristic of the medullary circulation plays an important role in the kidney's ability to excrete a dilute or concentrated urine in concert with changes in water and sodium transport in the distal nephron secondary to the action of vasopressin, prostaglandins, the renal nerves, and other hormones without significant other renal hemodynamic changes. There is strong evidence that renal autocoids such as angiotensin II and prostaglandins uniquely affect regional blood flow in the inner medulla because of the special structure and organization of the microvasculature in this region. There is also evidence that this regional blood flow is in part regulated by circulating hormones, such as vasopressin and atrial natriuretic peptide, which are released in response to changes in extracellular fluid volume or osmolality. In addition, data are emerging to suggest that the kallikrein-kinin system, acetylcholine, the renal nerves and adenosine participate in this regulation. In addition to the role of the medullary circulation in the urinary concentrating operation, there are data to suggest that the medullary circulation either directly (by changes in physical forces) or indirectly (by regulating medullary toxicity) may influence sodium excretion in a variety of conditions. In this regard, activation of the renin-angiotensin system locally reduces blood flow in the papilla which may be necessary before sodium retention is fully expressed in salt retaining states. Future research looking at the microvasculature of the medulla and papilla and those factors that control the contractility of these vessels are necessary before a clearer picture emerges. Nevertheless, from the data already available it seems reasonable to suggest that the medullary circulation may be as important to kidney function during physiological and pathophysiological states as is the cortical circulation.  相似文献   

12.
Renal urea transporters   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: The facilitated urea transporters (UT), UT-A1, UT-A2, and UT-B1, are involved in intrarenal recycling of urea, an essential feature of the urinary concentrating mechanism, which is impaired in chronic renal failure (CRF). In this study, the expression of these UTs was examined in experimentally induced CRF. METHODS: The abundance of mRNA was measured by Northern analysis and that of corresponding proteins by Western blotting in rats one and five weeks after 5/6 nephrectomy (Nx). RESULTS: At five weeks, urine output was enhanced threefold with a concomitant decrease in urine osmolality. The marked rise in plasma urea concentration and fall in urinary urea concentration resulted in a 30-fold decrease in the urine/plasma (U/P) urea concentration ratio, while the U/P osmoles ratio fell only fourfold. A dramatic decrease in mRNA abundance for the three UTs was observed, bringing their level at five weeks to 1/10th or less of control values. Immunoblotting showed complete disappearance of the 97 and 117 kD bands of UT-A1, and considerable reduction of UT-A2 and UT-B1 in the renal medulla. Similar, but less intense, changes were observed at one-week post-Nx. In addition to the kidney, UT-B1 is also normally expressed in brain and testis. In the brain, its mRNA expression remained normal one-week post-Nx, but decreased to about 30% of normal at five-weeks post-Nx, whereas no change was seen in testis. CONCLUSIONS: (1) The decline in urinary concentrating ability seen in CRF is largely due to a major reduction of UTs involved in the process of urea concentration in the urine, while factors enabling the concentration of other solutes are less intensely affected. (2) The marked reduction of brain UT expression in CRF may be responsible for brain edema of dialysis disequilibrium syndrome observed in some patients after fast dialysis.  相似文献   

14.
To define the role of medullary damage and the influence of solute load and blood pressure (BP) in impairing urinary concentration, patients with chronic glomerulonephritis were investigated by histological and functional studies. In 59 biopsy specimens, the degree of medullary fibrosis was correlated inversely with urinary specific gravity and was significantly greater in hypertensive than in normotensive subjects. The following clearance studies were carried out in patients with a GFR of 15 to 40 ml/min in maximal antidiuresis: (1) Eight patients were studied while receiving a high sodium and protein diet and then after 1 week of low sodium, low protein diet; (2) ten patients were loaded with hypertonic saline (3%) to increase urine volume up to 25 to 30% of GFR; (3) the concentrating ability was compared in 15 normotensives and 15 hypertensives with comparable GFR; (4) the concentrating ability was studied in nine hypertensive patients before and after drug-induced normalization of BP. In (1) no change occurred in maximal urine osmolality (UOsm) even if fractional sodium excretion and filtered load of urea were reduced. In (2), values of UOsm fell below those of plasma osmolality. In (3), UOsm and negative free-water generation were lower in hypertensive than in normotensive subjects. In (4), normalization of BP was not associated with any change in UOsm. These results indicate that osmotic diuresis does not play a critical role in reducing urinary concentration. This defect is better accounted for by an intrinsic medullary damage, enhanced in hypertensive patients, which may impair the permeability of collecting ducts to water.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were performed on rats to investigate the significance of the medullary hyperemia known to follow renal ischemia. To this end, its frequency was determined, its severity was quantified, and its relation to renal function was examined early (1 to 3 hr) and later (18 hr) after 45 min of warm ischemia. All kidneys were found to have a hyperemic outer medulla early after ischemia, which was shown to develop during the period of ischemia itself, but which was found to be highly variable in its severity. The degree of hyperemia was assessed both subjectively by grading and by histometric determinations of inner stripe capillary volume. One to hours after ischemia, the severity of medullary hyperemia was reflected in all indices of renal function, the least congested kidneys showing the best function. Eighteen hours after ischemia, the degree of medullary hyperemia was reflected in all indices of renal function, except urine flow rate; the non-congested kidneys showed functional recovery and the still-congested kidneys showed worsening function. Glomerular blood flow, known to be preferentially reduced in deep nephrons 1 to 3 hr after ischemia, had normalized 18 hr after ischemia in the non-congested kidneys but was still severely and unevenly depressed in the congested kidneys. It is concluded that congestion of the outer medulla is a key event in ischemic renal failure, its occurrence is coincidental with the reduction in deep nephron perfusion and urinary concentrating power in the early and maintenance phase and its disappearance heralds the restoration of deep nephron perfusion and urinary concentrating ability in the recovery phase.  相似文献   

16.
This study tested whether glucocorticoids regulate tubular urea transport. Urea permeability was measured in perfused inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) subsegments from rats that underwent adrenalectomy, adrenalectomy plus replacement with a physiologic dose of glucocorticoid (dexamethasone), or sham operation. Compared with sham rats, basal urea permeability in terminal IMCD was significantly increased in adrenalectomized rats and reduced in dexamethasone-treated rats. Vasopressin significantly increased urea permeability in all three groups. In contrast, there was no difference in basal or vasopressin-stimulated urea permeability in initial IMCD between the three groups. Next, membrane and vesicle fraction proteins were isolated from inner medullary tip or base and Western analysis was performed by use of an antibody to the rat vasopressin-regulated urea transporter. Vasopressin-regulated urea transporter protein was significantly increased in both membrane and vesicle fractions from the inner medullary tip of adrenalectomized rats. There was no change in vasopressin-regulated urea transporter protein in the inner medullary base, and Northern analysis showed no change in urea transporter mRNA abundance in either inner medullary region. It was concluded that glucocorticoids can downregulate function and expression of the vasopressin-regulated urea transporter in rat terminal IMCD.  相似文献   

17.
P2Y12 receptor (P2Y12-R) signaling is mediated through Gi, ultimately reducing cellular cAMP levels. Because cAMP is a central modulator of arginine vasopressin (AVP)-induced water transport in the renal collecting duct (CD), we hypothesized that if expressed in the CD, P2Y12-R may play a role in renal handling of water in health and in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. We found P2Y12-R mRNA expression in rat kidney, and immunolocalized its protein and aquaporin-2 (AQP2) in CD principal cells. Administration of clopidogrel bisulfate, an irreversible inhibitor of P2Y12-R, significantly increased urine concentration and AQP2 protein in the kidneys of Sprague–Dawley rats. Notably, clopidogrel did not alter urine concentration in Brattleboro rats that lack AVP. Clopidogrel administration also significantly ameliorated lithium-induced polyuria, improved urine concentrating ability and AQP2 protein abundance, and reversed the lithium-induced increase in free-water excretion, without decreasing blood or kidney tissue lithium levels. Clopidogrel administration also augmented the lithium-induced increase in urinary AVP excretion and suppressed the lithium-induced increase in urinary nitrates/nitrites (nitric oxide production) and 8-isoprostane (oxidative stress). Furthermore, selective blockade of P2Y12-R by the reversible antagonist PSB-0739 in primary cultures of rat inner medullary CD cells potentiated the expression of AQP2 and AQP3 mRNA, and cAMP production induced by dDAVP (desmopressin). In conclusion, pharmacologic blockade of renal P2Y12-R increases urinary concentrating ability by augmenting the effect of AVP on the kidney and ameliorates lithium-induced NDI by potentiating the action of AVP on the CD. This strategy may offer a novel and effective therapy for lithium-induced NDI.  相似文献   

18.
Bankir L  Yang B 《Kidney international》2012,81(12):1179-1198
The mechanism by which urine is concentrated in the mammalian kidney remains incompletely understood. Urea is the dominant urinary osmole in most mammals and may be concentrated a 100-fold above its plasma level in humans and even more in rodents. Several facilitated urea transporters have been cloned. The phenotypes of mice with deletion of the transporters expressed in the kidney have challenged two previously well-accepted paradigms regarding urea and sodium handling in the renal medulla but have provided no alternative explanation for the accumulation of solutes that occurs in the inner medulla. In this review, we present evidence supporting the existence of an active urea secretion in the pars recta of the proximal tubule and explain how it changes our views regarding intrarenal urea handling and UT-A2 function. The transporter responsible for this secretion could be SGLT1, a sodium-glucose cotransporter that also transports urea. Glucagon may have a role in the regulation of this secretion. Further, we describe a possible transfer of osmotic energy from the outer to the inner medulla via an intrarenal Cori cycle converting glucose to lactate and back. Finally, we propose that an active urea transporter, expressed in the urothelium, may continuously reclaim urea that diffuses out of the ureter and bladder. These hypotheses are all based on published findings. They may not all be confirmed later on, but we hope they will stimulate further research in new directions.  相似文献   

19.
Aquaporin-1 (AQP1) water channels are expressed widely in microvascular endothelia outside of the central nervous system, including renal vasa recta and tumor microvessels, as well as in non-vascular endothelia in pleura, peritoneum, cornea, and lymphatics. In kidney, AQP1-facilitated water transport in outer medullary descending vasa recta is likely an important component of the urinary concentrating mechanism. However, in most vascular endothelia outside of kidney, it remains uncertain whether AQP1 expression and high water permeability are physiologically important. AQP1 in non-vascular endothelia at the inner corneal surface is involved in the maintenance of corneal transparency. Recently, a new role of AQP1 in endothelial cell migration was discovered in analyzing the cause of defective tumor angiogenesis in AQP1-deficient mice. AQP1 facilitates endothelial cell migration by a mechanism that may involve facilitated water transport across cell protrusions (lamellipodia). AQP1 inhibitors may thus have aquaretic and antiangiogenic activity.  相似文献   

20.
Hypothyroidism is associated with impaired urinary concentrating ability in humans and animals. The purpose of this study was to examine protein expression of renal sodium chloride and urea transporters and aquaporins in hypothyroid rats (HT) with diminished urinary concentration as compared with euthyroid controls (CTL) and hypothyroid rats replaced with L-thyroxine (HT+T). Hypothyroidism was induced by aminotriazole administration. Body weight, water intake, urine output, solute and urea excretion, serum and urine osmolality, serum creatinine, 24-h creatinine clearance, and fractional excretion of sodium were comparable among the three groups. However, with 36 h of water deprivation, HT rats demonstrated significantly greater urine flow rates and decreased urine and medullary osmolality as compared with CTL and HT+T rats at comparable plasma vasopressin concentrations. Western blot analyses revealed decreased renal protein abundance of transporters, including Na-K-2Cl, Na-K-ATPase, and NHE3, in HT rats as compared with CTL and HT+T rats. Protein abundance of renal AQP1 and urea transporters UTA(1) and UTA(2) did not differ significantly among study groups. There was however a significant decrease in protein abundance of AQP2, AQP3, and AQP4 in HT rats as compared with CTL and HT+T rats. These findings demonstrate a decrease in the medullary osmotic gradient secondary to impaired countercurrent multiplication and downregulation of aquaporins 2, 3, and 4 as contributors to the urinary concentrating defect in the hypothyroid rat.  相似文献   

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