Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Semiquantitative immunoblotting was used to investigate the expression levels of the four major renal aquaporins, the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter of the thick ascending limb, the type 3 Na-H exchanger, and the Na-K-ATPase in kidneys from rats with cirrhosis secondary to common bile duct ligation (CBDL). These rats had significant water retention and hyponatremia. In contrast to models of cirrhosis induced by carbon tetrachloride, aquaporin-2 expression in CBDL-induced cirrhosis was decreased. Thus, these results show that in the setting of extracellular fluid volume expansion, excessive water retention with hyponatremia can occur in the absence of increases in aquaporin-2 abundance. In addition, the expression levels of the two basolateral collecting duct aquaporins (aquaporin-3 and -4) were decreased in CBDL rats relative to sham-operated control rats. Similarly, the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter of the thick ascending limb and the type 3 Na-H exchanger showed decreases in expression. In contrast, the expression levels of aquaporin-1 and the all subunit of the Na-K-ATPase were not decreased. Thus, dysregulation of multiple water channels and ion transporters may play a role in water balance abnormalities associated with CBDL-induced cirrhosis in rats.
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PMID:Renal expression of aquaporins in liver cirrhosis induced by chronic common bile duct ligation in rats. 1047 47

Absorption of NH(4)(+) by the medullary thick ascending limb (MTAL) is a key event in the renal handling of NH(4)(+), leading to accumulation of NH(4)(+)/NH(3) in the renal medulla, which favors NH(4)(+) secretion in medullary collecting ducts and excretion in urine. The Na(+)-K(+)(NH(4)(+))-2Cl(-) cotransporter (BSC1/NKCC2) ensures approximately 50-65% of MTAL active luminal NH(4)(+) uptake under basal conditions. Apical barium- and verapamil-sensitive K(+)/NH(4)(+) antiport and amiloride-sensitive NH(4)(+) conductance account for the rest of active luminal NH(4)(+) transport. The presence of a K(+)/NH(4)(+) antiport besides BSC1 allows NH(4)(+) and NaCl absorption by MTAL to be independently regulated by vasopressin. At the basolateral step, the roles of NH(3) diffusion coupled to Na(+)/H(+) exchange or Na(+)/NH(4)(+) exchange, which favors NH(4)(+) absorption, and of Na(+)/K(+)(NH(4)(+))-ATPase, NH(4)(+)-Cl(-) cotransport, and NH(4)(+) conductance, which oppose NH(4)(+) absorption, have not been quantitatively defined. The increased ability of the MTAL to absorb NH(4)(+) during chronic metabolic acidosis involves an increase in BSC1 expression, but fine regulation of MTAL NH(4)(+) transport probably requires coordinated effects on various apical and basolateral MTAL carriers.
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PMID:Ammonium carriers in medullary thick ascending limb. 1113 9

The activities of Na-K-ATPase and Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (NKCC1) were studied in the aorta, heart, and skeletal muscle of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats and control rats. In the aortic rings of STZ rats, the Na-K-ATPase-dependent (86)Rb/K uptake was reduced to 60.0 +/- 5.5% of the control value (P < 0.01). However, Na-K-ATPase activity in soleus skeletal muscle fibers of STZ rats and paired control rats was similar, showing that the reduction of Na-K-ATPase activity in aortas of STZ rats is tissue specific. To functionally distinguish the contributions of ouabain-resistant (alpha(1)) and ouabain-sensitive (alpha(2) and alpha(3)) isoforms to the Na-K-ATPase activity in aortic rings, we used either a high (10(-3) M) or a low (10(-5) M) ouabain concentration during (86)Rb/K uptake. We found that the reduction in total Na-K-ATPase activity resulted from a dramatic decrement in ouabain-sensitive mediated (86)Rb/K uptake (26.0 +/- 3.9% of control, P < 0.01). Western blot analysis of membrane fractions from aortas of STZ rats demonstrated a significant reduction in protein levels of alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-catalytic isoforms (alpha(1) = 71.3 +/- 9.8% of control values, P < 0.05; alpha(2) = 44.5 +/- 11.3% of control, P < 0.01). In contrast, aortic rings from the STZ rats demonstrated an increase in NKCC1 activity (172.5 +/- 9.5%, P < 0.01); however, in heart tissue no difference in NKCC1 activity was seen between control and diabetic animals. Transport studies of endothelium-denuded or intact aortic rings demonstrated that the endothelium stimulates both Na-K-ATPase and Na-K-2Cl dependent (86)Rb/K uptake. The endothelium-dependent stimulation of Na-K-ATPase and Na-K-2Cl was not hampered by diabetes. We conclude that abnormal vascular vessel tone and function, reported in STZ-induced diabetic rats, may be related to ion transport abnormalities caused by changes in Na-K-ATPase and Na-K-2Cl activities.
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PMID:Reduced Na-K pump but increased Na-K-2Cl cotransporter in aorta of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat. 1115 86

Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with osmotic diuresis and natriuresis. At day 15, rats with DM induced by streptozotocin (n = 13) had severe hyperglycemia (27.1 +/- 0.4 vs. 4.7 +/- 0.1 mM in controls) and had a fivefold increase in water intake (123 +/- 5 vs. 25 +/- 2 ml/day) and urine output. Semiquantitative immunoblotting revealed a significant increase in inner medullary AQP2 (201 +/- 12% of control rats, P < 0.05) and phosphorylated (Ser(256)) AQP2 (p-AQP2) abundance (299 +/- 32%) in DM rats. Also, the abundance of inner medullary AQP3 was markedly increased to 171 +/- 19% of control levels (100 +/- 4%, n = 7, P < 0.05). In contrast, the abundance of whole kidney AQP1 (90 +/- 3%) and inner medullary AQP4 (121 +/- 16%) was unchanged in rats with DM. Immunoelectron microscopy further revealed an increased labeling of AQP2 in the apical plasma membrane of collecting duct principal cells (with less labeling in the intracellular vesicles) of DM rats, indicating enhanced trafficking of AQP2 to the apical plasma membrane. There was a marked increase in urinary sodium excretion in DM. Only Na(+)/H(+) exchanger NHE3 was downregulated (67 +/- 10 vs. 100 +/- 11%) whereas there were no significant changes in abundance of type 2 Na-phosphate cotransporter (128 +/- 6 vs. 100 +/- 10%); the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (125 +/- 19 vs. 100 +/- 10%); the thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter (121 +/- 9 vs. 100 +/- 10%); the alpha(1)-subunit of the Na-K-ATPase (106 +/- 7 vs. 100 +/- 5%); and the proximal tubule Na-HCO(3) cotransporter (98 +/- 16 vs. 100 +/- 7%). In conclusion, DM rats had an increased AQP2, p-AQP2, and AQP3 abundance as well as high AQP2 labeling of the apical plasma membrane, which is likely to represent a vasopressin-mediated compensatory increase in response to the severe polyuria. In contrast, there were no major changes in the abundance of AQP1, AQP4, and several major proximal and distal tubule Na(+) transporters except NHE3 downregulation, which may participate in the increased sodium excretion.
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PMID:Compensatory increase in AQP2, p-AQP2, and AQP3 expression in rats with diabetes mellitus. 1124 63

The rectal gland of the dogfish shark is a model system for active transepithelial transport of chloride. It has been shown previously that mercuric chloride, one of the toxic environmental pollutants, inhibits chloride secretion in this organ. In order to investigate the mechanism of action of HgCl(2) at a membrane-molecular level, plasma membrane vesicles were isolated from the rectal gland and the effect of mercury on the activity of the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter was investigated in isotope flux studies. During a 30 s exposure HgCl(2) inhibited cotransport activity in a dose-dependent manner with an apparent K(i) of approx. 50 microM. The inhibition was complete after 15 s, partly reversible by dilution of the incubation medium and completely attenuated upon addition of reduced glutathione. The extent of inhibition by mercury depended on the ionic composition of the medium. The sensitivity of the cotransporter was highest when only the high affinity binding sites for sodium and chloride were saturated. Organic mercurials such as p-chloromercuribenzoic acid and p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid at 100 microM did not inhibit the cotransporter, similarly exposure of the vesicles to 10 mM H(2)O(2) or 1 mM dithiothreitol for 30 min at 15 degrees C did not change cotransport activity. Transport activity was, however, reduced by 45.9+/-2.5% after an incubation with 3 mM N-ethylmaleimide for 20 min. Blocking free amino groups by N-hydroxysuccinimide or biotinamidocapronate-N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide had no effect. Investigations on the sidedness of the plasma membrane vesicles, employing the asymmetry of the (Na+K)-ATPase, demonstrated a right-side-out orientation in which the former extracellular face of the membrane is exposed to the incubation medium. In addition, extracellular mercury (5x10(-5) M) inhibited bumetanide-sensitive rubidium uptake into T84 cells by 48.5+/-7.1% after a 2 min incubation period. This inhibition was reversible in a manner similar to that observed in the plasma membrane vesicles. These studies suggest that in isolated rectal gland plasma membrane vesicles the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (sNKCC1) exposes functionally relevant mercury binding sites at its external surface. These sites represent probably cysteines, the accessibility and/or sensitivity of which depends on the functional state of the transporter.
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PMID:Inhibition by mercuric chloride of Na-K-2Cl cotransport activity in rectal gland plasma membrane vesicles isolated from Squalus acanthias. 1134 78

Essential hypertension is a common disease the genetic determinants of which have been difficult to unravel because of its clinical heterogeneity and complex, multifactorial, polygenic etiology. Based on our observations that alpha(1)-Na,K-ATPase (ATP1A1) and renal-specific, bumetanide-sensitive Na,K,2Cl-cotransporter (NKCC2) genes interactively increase susceptibility to hypertension in the Dahl salt-sensitive hypertensive (Dahl S) rat model, we investigated whether parallel molecular genetic mechanisms might exist in human essential hypertension in a relatively genetic homogeneous cohort in northern Sardinia. Putative ATP1A1-NKCC2 gene interaction was tested by comparing hypertensive patients (blood pressure [BP] >165/95 mm Hg) with normotensive controls age >60 years with BP <140/85 mm Hg. Genotype analysis with microsatellite markers revealed conformation to Hardy-Weinberg proportions for 6 alleles of both ATP1A1 (D1S453) and NKCC2 (NKCGT7) markers, respectively. Two-by-six chi(2) analysis of alleles identified overrepresentation of ATP1A1 No. 4 and NKCC2 No. 4 alleles, respectively, in hypertensives compared with controls. With a qualitative trait framework, single-gene analysis detected association of both the ATP1A1 No. 4 allele (P=0.004, chi(2)=8.094, df=1) and the NKCC2 No. 4 allele (P=0.0002, chi(2)=14.279, df=1) with moderate to severe hypertension. Digenic analysis revealed that ATP1A1 No. 4-NKCC2 No. 4 allele interaction increases susceptibility to hypertension (P<0.0001, chi(2)=22.3, df=1) beyond levels obtained in single-gene analysis. Analysis was also performed in a quantitative trait framework with BP as the continuous trait parameter. Digenic analysis of ATP1A1 No. 4-NKCC2 No. 4 allele interaction revealed significant association with systolic (1-way ANOVA, P=0.000076) and diastolic (P=0.00099) BP. Interaction was corroborated by 2x2 factorial ANOVA for interaction (systolic BP interaction term, P<0.05, diastolic BP interaction term, P=0.035). The data are compelling that ATP1A1 and NKCC2 genes are candidate interacting hypertension-susceptibility loci in human essential hypertension and affirm gene interaction as an important genetic mechanism underlying hypertension susceptibility. Although corroboration in other cohorts and identification of functionally significant mutations are imperative next steps, the data provide a genotype-stratification scheme, with 4-fold predictive value (odds ratio, 4.28; 95% confidence interval, 2.29 to 8.0), which could help decipher the complex genetics of essential hypertension.
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PMID:Interaction of alpha(1)-Na,K-ATPase and Na,K,2Cl-cotransporter genes in human essential hypertension. 1150 77

Renal sodium retention, as a result of increased abundance of sodium transporters, may play a role in the development and/or maintenance of the increased blood pressure in obesity. To address this hypothesis, we evaluated the relative abundances of renal sodium transporters in lean and obese Zucker rats at 2 and 4 mo of age by semiquantitative immunoblotting. Mean systolic blood pressure was higher in obese rats relative to lean at 3 mo, P < 0.02. Furthermore, circulating insulin levels were 6- or 13-fold higher in obese rats compared with lean at 2 or 4 mo of age, respectively. The abundances of the alpha(1)-subunit of Na-K-ATPase, the thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter (NCC or TSC), and the beta-subunit of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) were all significantly increased in the obese rats' kidneys. There were no differences for the sodium hydrogen exchanger (NHE3), the bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (NKCC2 or BSC1), the type II sodium-phosphate cotransporter (NaPi-2), or the alpha-subunit of ENaC. These selective increases could possibly increase sodium retention by the kidney and therefore could play a role in obesity-related hypertension.
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PMID:Increased renal Na-K-ATPase, NCC, and beta-ENaC abundance in obese Zucker rats. 1155 10

Vasopressin plays a role in both salt and water balance in the kidney. Classic studies, utilizing isolated perfused tubules, have revealed that vasopressin increases sodium reabsorption in the kidney thick ascending limb and the collecting duct. Furthermore, the activity of several sodium transport proteins expressed in these segments, such as the bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (NKCC2) and the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), have been shown to be directly increased by vasopressin. Increased protein abundance might be one means through which sodium transporter and channel activity is enhanced. We have used immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry in order to investigate the regulation of abundance of the major sodium transporters and channels expressed along the renal tubule in response to vasopressin. Chronic (7-day) studies were performed in which vasopressin levels were elevated either endogenously by water restriction of Sprague-Dawley rats or exogenously through infusion of the vasopressin V2-receptor-selective agonist, dDAVP (1-deamino-8d-arginine-vasopressin), to Brattleboro rats. We found a significant increase in protein abundance for NKCC2 and the beta- and gamma-subunits of ENaC with either water restriction or dDAVP infusion. The alpha-subunit of Na-K-ATPase was increased by water restriction, but not by dDAVP infusion, and alpha-ENaC and the thiazide-sensitive cotransporter (NCC) were increased by dDAVP infusion but not by water restriction. Acute (60-min) in vivo exposure to dDAVP led to an increase in both beta- and gamma-ENaC abundance in kidney cortex homogenates, displaying the rapid nature of some of these changes. Overall these increases in sodium transporter and channel abundances likely contribute to both the antidiuretic and antinatriuretic actions of vasopressin.
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PMID:Regulation of the abundance of renal sodium transporters and channels by vasopressin. 1157 75

Nitric oxide (NO) plays an important role in various physiological processes in the kidney. In vivo experiments first suggested that the natriuretic and diuretic effects caused by NO may be due to decreased NaCl and fluid absorption by the nephron. In the last 10 years, several reports have directly demonstrated a role for NO in modulating transport in different tubule segments. The effects of NO on proximal tubule transport are still controversial. Both stimulation and inhibition of net fluid and bicarbonate have been reported in this segment, whereas only inhibitory effects of NO have been found in Na/H exchanger and Na/K-ATPase activity. The effects of NO in the thick ascending limb are more homogeneous than in the proximal tubule. In this segment, NO decreases net Cl and bicarbonate absorption. A direct inhibitory effect of NO on the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter and the Na/H exchanger has been reported, while NO was found to stimulate apical K channels in this segment. In the collecting duct, NO inhibits Na absorption and vasopressin-stimulated osmotic water permeability. An inhibitory effect of NO on H-ATPase has also been reported in intercalated cells of the collecting duct. Overall, the reported effects of NO in the different nephron segments mostly agree with the natriuretic and diuretic effects observed in vivo. However, the net effect of NO on transport is still controversial in some segments, and in cases like the distal tubule, it has not been studied.
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PMID:Role of nitric oxide in the regulation of nephron transport. 1193 86

ACE.2 mice lack all tissue angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) but have 33% of normal plasma ACE activity. They exhibit the urine-concentrating defect and hyperkalemia present in mice that lack all ACE, but in contrast to the complete knockout, ACE.2 mice have normal medullary histology and creatinine clearance. To explore the urine-concentrating defect in ACE.2 mice, renal medullary transport proteins were analyzed using Western blot analysis. In the inner medulla, UT-A1, ClC-K1, and aquaporin-1 (AQP1) were significantly reduced to 28 +/- 5, 6 +/- 6, and 39 +/- 5% of the level in wild-type mice, respectively, whereas AQP2 and UT-B were unchanged. In the outer medulla, Na(+)-K(+)-2Cl(-) cotransporter (NKCC2/BSC1) and AQP1 were significantly reduced to 56 +/- 11 and 29 +/- 6%, respectively, whereas Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, UT-A2, UT-B, and AQP2 were unchanged, and renal outer medullary potassium channel was significantly increased to 711 +/- 187% of the level in wild-type mice. The abnormal expression of these transporters was similar in ACE.2 mice backcrossed onto a C57BL/6 or a Swiss background and was not rescued by ANG II infusion. We conclude that the urine-concentrating defect in ACE.2 mice is associated with, and may result from, downregulation of some or all of these key urea, salt, and water transport proteins.
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PMID:Impaired urine concentration and absence of tissue ACE: involvement of medullary transport proteins. 1216 3


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