Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (hyperoxaluria)
912 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Oxalate urolithiasis (nephrolithiasis) is the most frequent type of kidney stone disease. Epidemiological research has shown that urolithiasis is approximately twice as common in men as in women, but the underlying mechanism of this sex-related prevalence is unclear. Oxalate in the organism partially originate from food (exogenous oxalate) and largely as a metabolic end-product from numerous precursors generated mainly in the liver (endogenous oxalate). Oxalate concentrations in plasma and urine can be modified by various foodstuffs, which can interact in positively or negatively by affecting oxalate absorption, excretion, and/or its metabolic pathways. Oxalate is mostly removed from blood by kidneys and partially via bile and intestinal excretion. In the kidneys, after reaching certain conditions, such as high tubular concentration and damaged integrity of the tubule epithelium, oxalate can precipitate and initiate the formation of stones. Recent studies have indicated the importance of the SoLute Carrier 26 (SLC26) family of membrane transporters for handling oxalate. Two members of this family [Sulfate Anion Transporter 1 (SAT-1; SLC26A1) and Chloride/Formate EXchanger (CFEX; SLC26A6)] may contribute to oxalate transport in the intestine, liver, and kidneys. Malfunction or absence of SAT-1 or CFEX has been associated with hyperoxaluria and urolithiasis. However, numerous questions regarding their roles in oxalate transport in the respective organs and male-prevalent urolithiasis, as well as the role of sex hormones in the expression of these transporters at the level of mRNA and protein, still remain to be answered.
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PMID:Oxalate: from the environment to kidney stones. 2438 68

The anion exchanger SAT-1 [sulfate anion transporter 1 (Slc26a1)] is considered an important regulator of oxalate and sulfate homeostasis, but the mechanistic basis of these critical roles remain undetermined. Previously, characterization of the SAT-1-knockout (KO) mouse suggested that the loss of SAT-1-mediated oxalate secretion by the intestine was responsible for the hyperoxaluria, hyperoxalemia, and calcium oxalate urolithiasis reportedly displayed by this model. To test this hypothesis, we compared the transepithelial fluxes of 14C-oxalate, 35 SO42- , and 36Cl- across isolated, short-circuited segments of the distal ileum, cecum, and distal colon from wild-type (WT) and SAT-1-KO mice. The absence of SAT-1 did not impact the transport of these anions by any part of the intestine examined. Additionally, SAT-1-KO mice were neither hyperoxaluric nor hyperoxalemic. Instead, 24-h urinary oxalate excretion was almost 50% lower than in WT mice. With no contribution from the intestine, we suggest that this may reflect the loss of SAT-1-mediated oxalate efflux from the liver. SAT-1-KO mice were, however, profoundly hyposulfatemic, even though there were no changes to intestinal sulfate handling, and the renal clearances of sulfate and creatinine indicated diminished rates of sulfate reabsorption by the proximal tubule. Aside from this distinct sulfate phenotype, we were unable to reproduce the hyperoxaluria, hyperoxalemia, and urolithiasis of the original SAT-1-KO model. In conclusion, oxalate and sulfate transport by the intestine were not dependent on SAT-1, and we found no evidence supporting the long-standing hypothesis that intestinal SAT-1 contributes to oxalate and sulfate homeostasis. NEW & NOTEWORTHY SAT-1 is a membrane-bound transport protein expressed in the intestine, liver, and kidney, where it is widely considered essential for the excretion of oxalate, a potentially toxic waste metabolite. Previously, calcium oxalate kidney stone formation by the SAT-1-knockout mouse generated the hypothesis that SAT-1 has a major role in oxalate excretion via the intestine. We definitively tested this proposal and found no evidence for SAT-1 as an intestinal anion transporter contributing to oxalate homeostasis.
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PMID:Absence of the sulfate transporter SAT-1 has no impact on oxalate handling by mouse intestine and does not cause hyperoxaluria or hyperoxalemia. 3038 13

Chloride/formate exchanger (CFEX; SLC26A6) mediates oxalate transport in various mammalian organs. Studies in Cfex knockout mice indicated its possible role in development of male-dominant hyperoxaluria and oxalate urolithiasis. Rats provide an important model for studying this pathophysiological condition, but data on Cfex (rCfex) localisation and regulation in their organs are limited. Here we applied the RT-PCR and immunochemical methods to investigate rCfex mRNA and protein expression and regulation by sex hormones in the pancreas, small intestine, liver, and kidneys from intact prepubertal and adult as well as gonadectomised adult rats treated with sex hormones. rCfex cDNA-transfected HEK293 cells were used to confirm the specificity of the commercial anti-CFEX antibody. Various biochemical parameters were measured in 24-h urine collected in metabolic cages. rCfex mRNA and related protein expression varied in all tested organs. Sex-independent expression of the rCfex protein was detected in pancreatic intercalated ducts (apical domain), small intestinal enterocytes (brush-border membrane; duodenum > jejunum > ileum), and hepatocytes (canalicular membrane). In kidneys, the rCfex protein was immunolocalised to the proximal tubule brush-border with segment-specific pattern (S1=S2<S3), and both rCfex mRNA and protein expression exhibited male-dominant sex differences driven by stimulatory effects of androgens after puberty. However, urinary oxalate excretion was unrelated to renal rCfex protein expression. While the effect of male-dominant expression of rCfex in renal proximal tubules on urine oxalate excretion remains unknown, its expression in the hepatocyte canalicular membrane may be a pathway of oxalate elimination via bile.
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PMID:Sex-independent expression of chloride/formate exchanger Cfex (Slc26a6) in rat pancreas, small intestine, and liver, and male-dominant expression in kidneys. 3086 78