Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (hypercalciuria)
2,502 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nephrolithiasis is one of the most common diseases in the Western world. The disease manifests itself with intensive pain, sporadic infections, and, sometimes, renal failure. The symptoms are due to the appearance of urinary stones (calculi) which are formed mainly by calcium salts. These calcium salts precipitate in the renal papillae and/or within the collecting ducts. Inherited forms of nephrolithiasis related to chromosome X (X-linked hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis or XLN) have been recently described. Hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and male predominance are the major characteristics of these diseases. The gene responsible for the XLN forms of kidney stones was cloned and characterized as a chloride channel called ClC-5. The ClC-5 chloride channel belongs to a superfamily of voltage-gated chloride channels, whose physiological roles are not completely understood. The objective of the present review is to identify recent advances in the molecular pathology of nephrolithiasis, with emphasis on XLN. We also try to establish a link between a chloride channel like ClC-5, hypercalciuria, failure in urine acidification and protein endocytosis, which could explain the symptoms exhibited by XLN patients.
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PMID:ClC-5 chloride channel and kidney stones: what is the link? 1126 81

Mice homozygous for the disrupted type-II Na/P(i) cotransporter gene ( Npt2(-/-)) exhibit hypophosphataemia, increased serum concentration of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25-(OH)(2)D) and calcium (Ca) and elevated urinary Ca excretion. To determine whether the hypercalcaemia and hypercalciuria are secondary to 1,25-(OH)(2)D-stimulated intestinal Ca absorption, we examined the effect of Npt2 gene disruption on serum Ca and urinary Ca excretion after an overnight fast, and on duodenal Ca absorption. We also compared the duodenal expression of the epithelial Ca channels, ECaC1 and ECaC2, and calbindinD(9K) mRNAs, relative to that of beta-actin mRNA, in Npt2(+/+) and Npt2(-/-) mice. Both serum Ca and urine Ca/creatinine were significantly decreased in Npt2(-/-) mice after an overnight fast and were no longer different from that in wild-type mice. Absorption of (45)Ca from isolated duodenal segments in vivo and (45)Ca appearing in the plasma were significantly increased in Npt2(-/-) compared with Npt2(+/+) mice. In addition, the duodenal abundance of ECaC1, ECaC2 and calbindinD(9K) mRNAs was significantly elevated in mutant mice relative to that in wild-type mice. In contrast, both duodenal Ca absorption and ECaC1 and ECaC2 mRNA abundance were lower in mice with X-linked hypophosphataemia ( Hyp) than in normal littermates. In summary, we provide evidence for increased duodenal Ca absorption in Npt2(-/-) mice and suggest a role for ECaC1, ECaC2 and calbindinD(9K) in mediating this response.
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PMID:Na/P(i) cotransporter ( Npt2) gene disruption increases duodenal calcium absorption and expression of epithelial calcium channels 1 and 2. 1219 21

Dent's disease, an X-linked tubulopathy secondary to defects in chloride channel CLC-5, is characterised by low molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal stones. Mechanisms leading to nephrocalcinosis are unknown. Using a murine collecting duct cell line (mIMCD-3), we confirm endogenous expression of mCLC-5. During transfection of antisense CLC-5, we observe a reduction in CLC-5 protein expression that correlates with a reduction in the number of acidic endosomal compartments, as determined by quantitative analysis of confocal microscope images using LysoTracker Red. Using wheat germ agglutinin-lectin as an endocytic marker, an arrest of endocytosis is observed in antisense CLC-5 treated cells. Exposure of the cell surface to calcium oxalate crystals results in crystal agglomeration in a minority of sense CLC-5 transfectants (45%) and all antisense CLC-5 transfectants. We conclude that expression of CLC-5 in mIMCD-3 cells allows acidification of endosomes and endocytosis, and that disruption of CLC-5 expression causes abnormal crystal agglomeration.
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PMID:Disordered calcium crystal handling in antisense CLC-5-treated collecting duct cells. 1250 84

Mutations in the gene CLCN5 encoding the vesicular chloride channel ClC-5 lead to Dent's disease, an X-linked renal disorder. Dent's disease is characterised by proteinuria, hyperphosphaturia and hypercalciuria, which eventually lead to kidney stones and nephrocalcinosis. As it was unclear how mutations in a chloride channel might cause these symptoms, we and others have generated genetic mouse models to elucidate the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. We review results obtained from these three mouse models and present new data on endosomal acidification and vitamin D metabolism in ClC-5 knock-out (KO) mice. ClC-5 is expressed in apical endosomes of proximal tubular cells where it co-localizes with endocytosed proteins and the proton ATPase. ClC-5 may provide an electric shunt for the efficient operation of the electrogenic H(+)-ATPase. We confirmed this hypothesis by showing that endosomes from CLCN5 KO mice are acidified at a significantly lower rate than wild-type endosomes. This probably results in the drastic impairment of endocytosis observed in ClC-5 KO mice. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is filtered into the lumen of the nephron, where it is endocytosed and degraded by proximal tubular cells. The defective endocytosis in ClC-5 KO mice entails an increased luminal concentration of PTH, subsequent stimulation of apical PTH receptors which causes an increased endocytosis of the phosphate transporter NaPi and phosphaturia. We now show that it also results in up-regulation of proximal tubular alpha-hydroxylase that generates the active form of vitamin D from its precursor. We discuss how the primary defect in endocytosis leads via secondary changes in calciotropic hormones to the tertiary symptoms hyperphosphaturia, hypercalciuria and kidney stones.
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PMID:The ClC-5 chloride channel knock-out mouse - an animal model for Dent's disease. 1254 89

CLC-5 is a member of the CLC family of voltage-gated chloride channels. Mutations disrupting CLC-5 lead to Dent's disease, an X-linked renal tubular disorder, characterised by low molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal stones. Sequence analysis of CLC-5 reveals a 746 amino acid protein with an intracellular amino-terminus, transmembrane spanning domains, and two CBS domains within its intracellular carboxy-terminus. CBS domains have been implicated in intracellular targetting and trafficking as well as protein-protein interactions. We investigate subcellular localisation of three naturally occurring CLC-5 mutants which all lead to a truncated protein, disrupting the second CBS domain. These mutants are unable to traffic normally to acidic endosomes but are retained in perinuclear compartments, colocalising with the Golgi complex. This is the first identification of the cellular pathogenesis of CBS domain mutations of CLC-5.
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PMID:A role for CBS domain 2 in trafficking of chloride channel CLC-5. 1452 53

Dent's disease is an X-linked renal tubular disorder characterized by low-molecular-weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and eventual renal failure. Various types of mutations in the renal chloride channel gene, CLCN5, have been identified in patients with this disease. We studied a Spanish patient with Dent's disease and found, by polymerase chain reaction amplification of the CLCN5 exons, an abnormally large exon 11. Sequencing analysis revealed that this was attributable to the insertion in codon 650 of an Alu element of the "young" Ya5 subfamily. The Alu element was inserted with the same orientation as the CLCN5 gene and arose de novo on the maternal chromosome. Polymorphism analysis indicated that the insertion occurred in the germline of the maternal grandfather. The presence of a long poly(A) tract and evidence for a 16-bp target-site duplication implied that the Alu element was integrated by retrotransposition. This mutation predicts a truncated ClC-5 protein that lacks part of the carboxy-terminus and is likely to result in loss of function of the chloride channel. Insertions of Alu sequences, which are rarely found in coding regions, have occasionally been reported to cause other genetic diseases. However, this is the first report of a retrotransposon insertion in the CLCN5 gene associated with Dent's disease.
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PMID:De novo insertion of an Alu sequence in the coding region of the CLCN5 gene results in Dent's disease. 1456 59

Dent's disease, a X-linked hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis, is caused by mutations of the CLCN5 gene. The disease is characterised by low molecular weight proteinuria with variable presence of hypercalciuria, hyperphosphaturia, nephrocalcinosis, and kidney stones. CLCN5 encodes a chloride channel belonging to the voltage-gated chloride channel family, which is predominantly expressed in the endosomes of proximal tubular cells. By shunting the current of electrogenic H+-ATPase, ClC-5 is crucial for efficient acidification of renal endosomes. As shown in knock-out mouse models, the ClC-5 loss of function causes severe impairment of receptor-mediated endocytosis, as well as the endocytotic retrieval of plasma membrane proteins including megalin. In a minority of patients with classical Dent's disease, the analysis of CLCN5 coding sequences failed to identify causative mutations. It is conceivable that mutations in the 5' upstream regulatory regions could impair the correct processing and translation of CLCN5. The complexity of its promoter region seems to support this hypothesis. Molecular diagnosis of Dent's disease is now available; since the risk of developing renal insufficiency in adult life is elevated for this type of nephrolithiasis, the correct diagnosis could potentially modify the natural history of the disease by preventing the evolution towards uraemia.
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PMID:[Dent's disease: hereditary nephrolithiasis related to defective tubular endocytosis processes]. 1473 9

McCune-Albright syndrome (MAS) is sometimes complicated by hypophosphatemia and abnormally low levels of 1,25(OH)(2)D in the presence of hypophosphatemia. Recently, fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF-23) was reported as a phosphaturic and a causal factor of abnormal vitamin D metabolism. This abnormal phosphate and vitamin D metabolism is well known to be found in oncogenic and X-linked hypophosphatemia. We furthermore reported increased circulating plasma FGF-23 levels in patients with oncogenic and X-linked hypophosphatemia. To determine whether FGF-23 may be involved in the pathogenesis of MAS, we measured plasma FGF-23 levels in six MAS patients. As a control for hypophosphatemia, we also investigated the plasma FGF-23 levels in two patients with hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria (HHRH). We also investigated the correlation of plasma FGF-23 levels with serum phosphate and 1,25(OH)(2)D levels after short-term pamidronate therapy in three MAS patients. Plasma FGF-23 levels were significantly increased in patients with MAS compared to normal controls, whereas they were not increased in HHRH patients. Serum phosphate levels of the MAS patients were significantly lower than those observed in normal controls. Plasma FGF-23 levels showed significant negative correlation with serum phosphate concentrations. In three MAS patients, pamidronate therapy decreased plasma FGF-23 levels, which showed significant negative correlation with serum 1,25(OH)(2)D concentrations. These data suggested that FGF-23 is a possible causal factor for hypophosphatemia and abnormal vitamin D metabolism in MAS.
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PMID:The role of fibroblast growth factor 23 for hypophosphatemia and abnormal regulation of vitamin D metabolism in patients with McCune-Albright syndrome. 1583 26

Vitamin D-resistant rickets is a group of rare disease characterized by lack of reaction to vitamin D administered in doses sufficient to manage patients with rickets caused by vitamin D deficiency. These disorders result from disturbed metabolism and activity of vitamin D and/or disturbed phosphate metabolism. The most common vitamin D-resistant form of rickets is X-linked hypophosphatemic vitamin D-resistant rickets. Other forms are as the following: oncogenic hypophosphatemic osteomalacia, autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets, hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria and pseudo-vitamin D deficient rickets type I and II.
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PMID:[Vitamin D-resistant rickets]. 1586 46

ClC-5 is a member of the ClC family of voltage-gated chloride channels. Loss-of-function mutations of its corresponding gene (CLCN5) cause Dent's disease, an X-linked kidney disorder, characterized by low-molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis/nephrolithiasis, and progressive renal failure. Here, we examined the effect of different mutations on function and cellular trafficking of the recombinant protein. Mutant CLCN5 cDNAs were generated by site directed mutagenesis for two premature stop codon variants (R347X and M517IfsX528), and several missense mutations (C221R, L324R, G462 V, and R516 W). We also tested L521R (instead of L521RfsX526 observed) and mutants G506E and R648X (previously reported by others). After heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes, ClC-5 channel activity and surface expression were determined by two-electrode voltage-clamp analysis and ClC-5 surface ELISA, respectively. Except for the R516 W and R648X variants, none of the mutated proteins induced functional chloride currents or reached the plasma membrane. This is readily understandable for the truncation mutations. Yet, the tested missense mutations are distributed over different transmembrane regions, implying that correct channel structure and orientation in the membrane is not only a prerequisite for proper ClC-5 function but also for Golgi exit. Interestingly, the R648X mutant although functionally compromised, displayed a significant increase in surface expression. This finding might be explained by the deletion of a ClC-5 carboxy-terminal PY-like internalization signal, which in turn impairs channel removal from the membrane. Our observations further imply that recruitment of ClC-5 to alternative routes (plasma membrane or early endosomes) in the trans-Golgi network is mediated via different signal sequences.
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PMID:Functional evaluation of Dent's disease-causing mutations: implications for ClC-5 channel trafficking and internalization. 1589 57


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