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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (
collecting duct
)
5,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The inwardly rectifying, ATP-sensitive K+ channel (
ROMK
) was localized by in situ hybridization in the rat kidney. Tissue in situ hybridization revealed that transcripts encoding the
ROMK
channel were expressed predominantly in cortical and outer medullary nephron segments. The localization of
ROMK
mRNA to specific nephron segments was assessed by hybridization of isolated nephron segments with an
ROMK
-specific probe (single segment in situ hybridization).
ROMK
mRNA was present in cortical and medullary thick ascending limb, distal tubule, and cortical and outer medullary collecting ducts, but not in proximal tubule. A weak hybridization was observed with inner medullary collecting ducts. To confirm these results, serial cryosections were alternatively stained by hybridization histochemistry for
ROMK
mRNA or by immunocytochemistry using antibodies specific for S1, S2, or S3 proximal tubular segments. Tubular cells that displayed immunoreactivity with the proximal tubular segment-specific antibodies showed little, if any,
ROMK
message. In addition, using an in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry double-labeling technique,
ROMK
transcripts and vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein were shown to colocalize to the distal tubule (distal convoluted tubule and connecting tubule). The overall nephron localization of
ROMK
mRNA shown in these studies is consistent with the possibility that this novel channel may represent the low-conductance ATP-sensitive K+ channel that has been identified in apical membranes of thick limb and
collecting duct
segments and is believed to participate in K+ secretion.
...
PMID:ROMK inwardly rectifying ATP-sensitive K+ channel. I. Expression in rat distal nephron segments. 761 53
Arachidonic acid (AA) has been shown to inhibit the activity of the low-conductance ATP-sensitive K+ channel in the apical membrane of the cortical
collecting duct
[W. Wang, A. Cassola, and G. Giebisch. Am. J. Physiol. 262 (Renal Fluid Electrolyte Physiol. 31): F554-F559, 1992].
ROMK1
, a K+ channel derived from the rat renal outer medulla, shares many biophysical properties of the native low-conductance K+ channel, which is localized to the apical membranes of the cortical
collecting duct
and thick ascending limb. This study was designed to determine whether the
ROMK
channel maintains the property of AA sensitivity of the native low-conductance K+ channel. Experiments were conducted in Xenopus oocytes injected with cRNA encoding the
ROMK1
channel by use of patch-clamp techniques. We have confirmed previous reports that the cloned
ROMK1
has similar channel kinetics, high open probability, and inward slope conductance as the native low-conductance K+ channel, respectively. Addition of 5 microM AA to an inside-out patch resulted in reversible inhibition of channel activity at a concentration similar to the inhibitor constant for AA on the native K+ channel. The effect of AA on channel activity was preserved in the presence of 10 microM indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, 4 microM cinnamyl-3,4-dihydroxycyanocinnamate, a lipoxygenase inhibitor, and 4 microM 17-octadecynoic acid, an inhibitor of cytochrome P-450 monooxygenases, thus indicating that the effect of AA was not mediated by metabolites of AA. The effect did not appear to be the result of changes in membrane fluidity, since 5 microM eicosatetraynoic acid, an AA analogue that is a potent modulator of membrane fluidity, had no effect. Furthermore, the addition of AA to the outside of the patch also had no effect on channel activity. These results indicate that, like the native low-conductance channel, AA is able to directly inhibit
ROMK1
channel activity.
...
PMID:Arachidonic acid inhibits activity of cloned renal K+ channel, ROMK1. 885 20
Potassium (K+) homeostasis is controlled by the secretion of K+ ions across the apical membrane of renal
collecting duct
cells through a low-conductance inwardly rectifying K+ channel. The sensitivity of this channel to intracellular pH is particularly high and assumed to play a key role in K+ homeostasis. Recently, the apical K+ channel has been cloned (
ROMK1
,2,3 = Kir1.1a, Kir1.1b and Kir1.1c) and the pH dependence of
ROMK1
was shown to resemble closely that of the native apical K+ channel. It is reported here that the steep pH dependence of
ROMK
channels is determined by a single amino acid residue located in the N-terminus close to the first hydrophobic segment M1. Changing lysine (K) at position 80 to methionine (M) removed the sensitivity of
ROMK1
channels to intracellular pH. In pH-insensitive IRK1 channels, the reverse mutation (M84K) introduced dependence on intracellular pH similar to that of
ROMK1
wild-type. A detailed mutation analysis suggests that a shift in the apparent pKalpha of K80 underlies the pH regulation of
ROMK1
channels in the physiological pH range.
...
PMID:Identification of a titratable lysine residue that determines sensitivity of kidney potassium channels (ROMK) to intracellular pH. 886 38
The renal ATP-sensitive low-conductance K+ channel (KATP) plays an important role in K+ recycling in the thick ascending limb and in K+ secretion in the
collecting duct
. The low-conductance KATP is stimulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A and inhibited by protein kinase C, arachidonic acid, acidic pH and sulfonylurea agents. We reviewed the progress concerning the properties of the recently cloned inward-rectifying K+ channel (
ROMK
or KirI) and compared their regulatory mechanisms with the native low-conductance KATP. The results are important to gain insight into molecular mechanisms by which
ROMK
channels are regulated.
...
PMID:Structure and function of the low conductance KATP channel, ROMK. 926 88
In this little essay I describe recent advances in understanding the problem of salt sensitivity and salt resistance involved in the control of blood volume and blood pressure. Genetic evidence links the recently characterized epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) and the potassium channel (
ROMK
-1) to monogenic diseases in humans, characterized by a renal salt-losing syndrome. A loss of function mutations in
ROMK
-1 gene causes in some pedigrees the syndrome of Bartter, characterized by metabolic alkalosis and a severe salt-losing syndrome. A loss of function mutations in ENaC genes causes pseudohypoaldosteronism-type 1, characterized by hypovolaemia, hyperkaliaemia, metabolic acidosis and hypotension. ENaC and
ROMK
-1 are expressed in the apical membrane of principal cells of the cortical
collecting duct
and their role in Na/K balance is briefly reviewed.
...
PMID:Lose salt and gain a friend! A tribute to Gerhard Giebisch. 926 95
The ATP-sensitive, inwardly rectifying K+ channel,
ROMK
, has been suggested to be the low-conductance ATP-sensitive K+ channel identified in apical membranes of mammalian renal thick ascending limb (TAL) and cortical
collecting duct
(
CCD
). Mutations in the human
ROMK
gene (KIR 1.2) have been identified in kindreds with neonatal Bartter's syndrome. In the present study, we generated polyclonal antibodies raised against both a COOH-terminal (amino acids 252-391)
ROMK
-maltose binding protein (MBP) fusion protein and an NH2-terminal (amino acids 34-49)
ROMK
peptide. Affinity-purified anti-
ROMK
COOH-terminal antibody detected the 45-kDa
ROMK
protein in kidney tissues and HEK-293 cells transfected with
ROMK1
cDNA. The antibody also recognized 85- to 90-kDa proteins in kidney tissue; these higher molecular weight proteins were abolished by immunoabsorption with
ROMK
-MBP fusion protein and were also detected on Western blots using anti-
ROMK
NH2-terminal antibody. Immunofluoresence studies using anti-
ROMK
COOH-terminal antibody showed intense apical staining along the loop of Henle and distal nephron; staining with preimmune and immunoabsorbed serum was negative. When colocalized with distal nephron markers [the thiazide-sensitive cotransporter (rTSC1), the bumetanide-sensitive cotransporter (rBSC1), the vacuolar type H(+)-ATPase, and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS I)], the
ROMK
protein was found primarily at the apical border of cells in the TAL, macula densa, distal convoluted tubule, and connecting tubule. Within the
CCD
, the
ROMK
protein was expressed in principal cells and was absent from intercalated cells. The tubule localization and polarity of
ROMK
staining are consistent with the distribution of
ROMK
mRNA and provide more support for
ROMK
being the low-conductance K+ secretory channel in the rat distal nephron.
...
PMID:Localization of the ROMK protein on apical membranes of rat kidney nephron segments. 937 37
We have previously demonstrated that the
ROMK
channel maintains the property of arachidonic acid (AA) sensitivity observed originally in the native ATP-sensitive K+ channel of the rat cortical
collecting duct
(16). We used the patch-clamp technique to extend these studies to other NH2-terminal splice variants of the
ROMK
channel family, ROMK2 and ROMK3, expressed in Xenopus oocytes to determine the mechanism by which AA inhibits channel activity. Although the conductance, channel open probability, and open/closed times of the three homologs were determined to be similar, addition of 5-10 microM AA caused only a moderate inhibition of ROMK2 (15 +/- 8%) and ROMK3 (13 +/- 9%) activity, indicating that differences in the NH2 termini of
ROMK
channels strongly influence the AA action. We consequently examined the effect of AA on a
ROMK1
variant, R1ND37, in which the NH2 terminal amino acids 2-37 were deleted, and on a mutant
ROMK1
, R1S4A, in which the serine-4 residue was mutated to alanine. Like ROMK2 and ROMK3, AA had a diminished effect on these variants. Addition of 1 nM exogenous protein kinase C (PKC) inhibited
ROMK1
but not the mutant, R1S4A. However, the effect of AA is not a result of stimulation of a membrane bound PKC, since PKC inhibitors, calphostin C and chelerythrine, failed to abolish the AA-induced inhibition. In contrast, application of 5 microM staurosporine, a nonspecific protein kinase inhibitor at high concentration, abolished the effect of AA. We conclude that phosphorylation of serine-4 residue in the NH2 terminus plays a key role in determination of AA effect on
ROMK
channels.
...
PMID:Role of the NH2 terminus of the cloned renal K+ channel, ROMK1, in arachidonic acid-mediated inhibition. 945 37
Serum potassium is normally maintained within a narrow range through an exquisite balance between cellular K+ efflux and influx, and between the intake and output of potassium from the body. Ultimately such balances are determined by cell membrane molecules which effect K+ transfer from one milieu to another. Over the last decade, electrophysiological and molecular techniques of study, briefly reviewed in this article, have helped to define the biochemical and functional characteristics of many of the molecules responsible for potassium homeostasis. When combined with molecular genetics, the same technology allows for the ultimate definition of hereditary or familial disease states characterized by hypokalemia. Familial hypokalemic periodic paralysis is associated with mutations of the dihydropyridine receptor gene encoding the L-type Ca+2 channel, but how such mutations result in episodic hypokalemia and paralysis remains a mystery. Mutations in several genes involved in renal ion transport also result in hypokalemia. Among them, Liddle's syndrome, or pseudohyperaldosteronism, has been linked to increased surface expression of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) responsible for Na+ transport in the cortical
collecting duct
. On the other hand, Bartter's syndrome, characterized by defective salt reabsorption by the ascending limb of Henle's loop, is associated with mutations in either the NKCC2 gene encoding the loop's 1Na+-1K+-2Cl- cotransporter, or in the
ROMK
gene, which allows K+ recycling in the loop to occur from cell to lumen, making Na+ reabsorption via the cotransporter possible. In Gitelman's syndrome, which clinically appears as a milder form of Bartter's, the abnormal gene encodes the thiazide sensitive Na+-Cl- cotransporter operating in the distal convoluted tubule.
...
PMID:Hypokalemia and the pathology of ion transport molecules. 945 87
Several K+ conductances have been identified in the kidney, with specific properties and localization in distinct cell types and membrane domains. On the other hand, several K+ channels have been characterized at the molecular level. By immunolocalization, we show that a new inward rectifying K+ channel, TWIK-1, is specifically expressed in distinct tubular segments and cell types of the rat kidney. In the proximal tubule, TWIK-1 prevails in the initial portions (convoluted part), where it is restricted to the apical (brush-border) membrane. In the
collecting duct
, immunofluorescence was intracellular or confined to the apical membrane and restricted to intercalated cells, i.e., in cells lacking aquaporin-2, as shown by double immunofluorescence. TWIK was also expressed in medullary and cortical parts of the thick limb of the loop of Henle, identified with an anti-Tamm-Horsfall protein antibody (double immunofluorescence). The intensity of TWIK-1 immunolabeling was unchanged in rats fed a low-Na+ or a low-K+ diet. Because TWIK-1 shares common properties with the low-conductance apical K+ channel of the
collecting duct
, we propose that it could play a role in K+ secretion, complementary to
ROMK
, another recently characterized K+ channel located in principal cells of the cortical
collecting duct
and in the loop of Henle.
...
PMID:Expression of TWIK-1, a novel weakly inward rectifying potassium channel in rat kidney. 984 22
ROMK
is a gene encoding inwardly rectifying adenosine triphosphate regulated K+ channels. Alternative splicing of
ROMK
exons yields several different transcripts,
ROMK
1-3, that are differentially expressed along the nephron. Cloned
ROMK
channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes exhibit properties similar to those of the native low-conductance K+ secretory channels in cortical
collecting duct
and medullary thick ascending limb, as manifested by use of the patch-clamp technique. These similarities between the cloned and native channels suggest that
ROMK
represents the low-conductance secretory K+ channels in the kidney. We studied the role of dietary K+ and aldosterone in the regulation of
ROMK
mRNA expression in the rat kidney. K+ deficiency downregulated
ROMK
mRNA in cortex and medulla. Adrenalectomy markedly downregulated cortical
ROMK
, while it increased it in the medulla. In adrenalectomized rats K+ deficiency decreased
ROMK
mRNA in cortex and medulla similarly to intact rats. Na-K-ATPase subunits alpha1 and beta1 were regulated in parallel to the regulation of
ROMK
. In the medulla
ROMK
mRNA correlated highly with serum K+ and with the alpha1 and beta1 subunits of Na-K-ATPase. These results show that cortical
ROMK
expression is regulated by aldosterone and K+, while the medullary
ROMK
mRNA is regulated by serum K+, irrespective of aldosterone.
...
PMID:Regulation of the ROMK potassium channel in the kidney. 1035 59
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