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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (
collecting duct
)
5,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aldosterone is involved in salt and water homeostasis. The main effect is thought to involve genomic mechanisms. However, the existence of plasma membrane steroid receptors has been postulated. We used whole cell patch clamp to test the hypothesis that epithelial sodium channels (
ENaC
) expressed by renal
collecting duct
principal cells can be regulated nongenomically by aldosterone. In freshly isolated principal cells from rabbit, aldosterone (100 nM) rapidly (<2 min) increased
ENaC
sodium current specifically. The aldosterone-activated current was completely inhibited by amiloride. Aldosterone also activated
ENaC
in cells treated with the mineralocorticoid receptor blocker spiranolactone. Nongenomic activation was inhibited by inclusion of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine in the pipette solution, which inhibits methylation reactions. Also, the nongenomic activation required 2 mM ATP supplementation in the pipette solution. Aldosterone did not activate any
ENaC
current in whole cell clamped rat
collecting duct
principal cells. These functional studies are consistent with aldosterone membrane binding studies, suggesting the presence of a plasma membrane steroid receptor that affects cellular processes by mechanisms unrelated to altered gene expression.
...
PMID:Nongenomic regulation of ENaC by aldosterone. 1154 44
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.
...
PMID:Regulation of the abundance of renal sodium transporters and channels by vasopressin. 1157 75
Aldosterone controls extracellular volume and blood pressure by regulating Na+ reabsorption, in particular by epithelia of the distal nephron. A main regulatory site of this transcellular transport is the epithelial sodium channel (
ENaC
) that mediates luminal Na+ influx. The Na,K-ATPase (Na+ pump) that coordinately extrudes Na+ across the basolateral membrane is known to be regulated by short term aldosterone as well. We now show that in the cortical
collecting duct
(
CCD
) from adrenalectomized rats, the increase in Na,K-ATPase activity (approximately 3-fold in 3 h), induced by a single aldosterone injection, can be fully accounted by the increase in Na,K-ATPase cell surface expression (+ 497 +/- 35%). The short term aldosterone action was further investigated in cultured mouse
collecting duct
principal cells mpkCCD(cl4). Within 2 h, maximal Na,K-ATPase function assessed by Na+ pump current (I(p)) measurements and Na,K-ATPase cell surface expression were increased by 20-50%. Aldosterone did not modify the Na+ dependence of the Na+ pumps and induced transcription- and translation-dependent actions on pump surface expression and current independently of
ENaC
-mediated Na+ influx. In summary, short term aldosterone directly increases the cell surface expression of pre-existing Na+ pumps in kidney
CCD
target cells. Thus, aldosterone controls Na+ reabsorption in the short term not only by regulating the apical cell surface expression of
ENaC
(Loffing, J., Zecevic, M., Feraille, E., Kaissling, B., Asher, C., Rossier, B. C., Firestone, G. L., Pearce, D., and Verrey, F. (2001) Am. J. Physiol. 280, F675-F682) but also by coordinately acting on the basolateral cell surface expression of the Na,K-ATPase.
...
PMID:Short term effect of aldosterone on Na,K-ATPase cell surface expression in kidney collecting duct cells. 1159 18
The organization of Na(+) and Ca(2+) transport pathways along the mouse distal nephron is incompletely known. We revealed by immunohistochemistry a set of Ca(2+) and Na(+) transport proteins along the mouse distal convolution. The thiazide-sensitive Na(+)-Cl(-) cotransporter (NCC) characterized the distal convoluted tubule (DCT). The amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na(+) channel (
ENaC
) colocalized with NCC in late DCT (DCT2) and extended to the downstream connecting tubule (CNT) and
collecting duct
(CD). In early DCT (DCT1), the basolateral Ca(2+)-extruding proteins [Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX), plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PCMA)] and the cytoplasmic Ca(2+)-binding protein calbindin D(28K) (CB) were found at very low levels, whereas the cytoplasmic Ca(2+)/Mg(2+)-binding protein parvalbumin was highly abundant. NCX, PMCA, and CB prevailed in DCT2 and CNT, where we located the apical epithelial Ca(2+) channel (ECaC1). Its subcellular localization changed from apical in DCT2 to exclusively cytoplasmic at the end of CNT. NCX and PMCA decreased in parallel with the fading of ECaC1 in the apical membrane. All three of them were undetectable in CD. These findings disclose DCT2 and CNT as major sites for transcellular Ca(2+) transport in the mouse distal nephron. Cellular colocalization of Ca(2+) and Na(+) transport pathways suggests their mutual interactions in transport regulation.
...
PMID:Distribution of transcellular calcium and sodium transport pathways along mouse distal nephron. 1170 51
Vasopressin is known to acutely stimulate sodium transport in the renal
collecting duct
. We investigated the long-term regulation by vasopressin of the epithelial sodium channel (
ENaC
) in the rat kidney. Five-day infusion of dDAVP (a V(2) receptor agonist) to Brattleboro rats lacking vasopressin induced a marked increase in beta- and gamma-subunit
ENaC
mRNA levels in the renal cortex (beta, 85%; gamma, 100%), with no change in alpha-
ENaC
mRNA. Expression of beta- and gamma-
ENaC
mRNAs was also enhanced in lung (beta, 49%; gamma, 33%) but not in distal colon (an organ devoid of V(2) receptors). Similar results were obtained in Sprague Dawley rats after either partial water restriction or dDAVP infusion for 5 days. Transepithelial voltage and transepithelial sodium and water net fluxes were measured in isolated perfused cortical collecting ducts of Brattleboro rats. Acute addition of 2x10(-10) mol/L dDAVP to the bath increased sodium and water fluxes in the same proportion, and to a far greater extent in dDAVP-infused than in control Brattleboro rats (change in Na(+) net flux, 337+/-30 versus 49+/-11 pmol. min(-1). mm(-1), respectively; P<0.001). These effects were abolished by amiloride. Extrarenal water losses, partly originating from the lung, were reduced by high plasma vasopressin level. This study shows that vasopressin increases sodium transport in the renal
collecting duct
and probably in the lung, through a differential transcriptional regulation of
ENaC
subunits. This effect is followed by isoosmotic water reabsorption and likely contributes to the process of water conservation. It could lead to less efficient sodium excretion, however, and thus participate in some forms of salt-sensitive hypertension.
...
PMID:Chronic exposure to vasopressin upregulates ENaC and sodium transport in the rat renal collecting duct and lung. 1171 12
Prostasin is a serine protease present in mammalian urine that increases the activity of the epithelial sodium channel (
ENaC
) when the two are coexpressed in Xenopus oocytes. To determine if aldosterone, one of the principal regulators of urinary Na reabsorption by the distal nephron, affects prostasin expression, we examined prostasin mRNA and protein in a cultured mouse cortical
collecting duct
cell line (M-1), whole rats, and patients with primary aldosteronism. Aldosterone treatment of M-1 cells substantially increased prostasin expression and stimulated (22)Na uptake. Urinary excretion of prostasin in rats that were infused with aldosterone likewise increased by approximately 4-fold when compared with the vehicle-infused rats. Finally, urinary excretion of prostasin in patients with primary aldosteronism was substantially increased when compared with normal patients. Adrenalectomy reduced urinary prostasin excretion to control levels, whereas urinary prostasin levels were not altered in patients undergoing surgery for other reasons. In patients with primary aldosteronism, reduction in the urinary excretion of prostasin correlated with the increase in the urinary Na/K ratio. These findings, together with our previous report that prostasin activates the amiloride-sensitive Na currents through
ENaC
, demonstrate that prostasin regulates Na balance in vivo by virtue of its heightened expression in the presence of aldosterone.
...
PMID:Regulation of prostasin by aldosterone in the kidney. 1182
Angiotensin II (AngII) helps to regulate overall renal tubular reabsorption of salt and water, yet its effects in the distal nephron have not been well studied. The purpose of these studies was to determine whether AngII stimulates luminal Na(+) transport in the cortical
collecting duct
(
CCD
). Intracellular Na(+) concentration ([Na(+)](i)), as a reflection of Na(+) transport across the apical membrane, was measured with fluorescence microscopy using sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate (SBFI) in isolated, perfused
CCD
segments dissected from rabbit kidneys. Control [Na(+)](i), during perfusion with 25 mM NaCl and a Na(+)-free solution in the bath containing the Na(+)-ionophore monensin (10 microM, to eliminate basolateral membrane Na(+) transport) averaged 19.3 +/- 5.2 mM (n = 16). Increasing luminal [NaCl] to 150 mM elevated [Na(+)](i) by 9.87 +/- 1.5 mM (n = 7; P < 0.05). AngII (10(-9) M) added to the lumen significantly elevated baseline [Na(+)](i) by 6.3 +/- 1.0 mM and increased the magnitude (Delta = 25.2 +/- 3.7 mM) and initial rate ( approximately 5 fold) of change in [Na(+)](i) to increased luminal [NaCl]. AngII when added to the bath had similar stimulatory effects; however, AngII was much more effective from the lumen. Thus, AngII significantly increased the apical entry of Na(+) in the
CCD
. To determine if this apical entry step occurred via the epithelial Na(+) channel (
ENaC
), studies were performed using the specific
ENaC
blocker, benzamil hydrochloride (10(-6) M). When added to the perfusate, benzamil almost completely inhibited the elevations in [Na(+)](i) to increased luminal [NaCl] in both the presence and absence of AngII. These results suggest that AngII directly stimulates Na(+) channel activity in the
CCD
. AT(1) receptor blockade with candesartan or losartan (10(-6) M) prevented the stimulatory effects of AngII. Regulation of
ENaC
activity by AngII may play an important role in distal Na(+) reabsorption in health and disease.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II directly stimulates ENaC activity in the cortical collecting duct via AT(1) receptors. 1196 Sep 99
The
collecting duct
regulates Na(+) transport by adjusting the abundance/activity of epithelial Na(+) channels (
ENaC
). In this study we have investigated the synthesis, degradation, endocytosis, and activity of
ENaC
and the effects of aldosterone on these processes using endogenous channels expressed in the A6 cell line. Biochemical studies were performed with a newly raised set of specific antibodies against each of the three subunits of the amphibian
ENaC
. Our results indicate simultaneous transcription and translation of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits and enhancement of both processes by aldosterone: two- and fourfold increase, respectively. The biosynthesis of new channels can be followed by acquisition of endoglycosidase H-resistant oligosacharides in alpha and beta subunits and, in the case of alpha, by the appearance of a form resistant to reducing agents. The half-life of the total pool of subunits (t(1/2) 40-70 min) is longer than the fraction of channels in the apical membrane (t(1/2) 12-17 min). Aldosterone induces a fourfold increase in the abundance of the three subunits in the apical membrane without significant changes in the open probability, kinetics of single channels, or in the rate of degradation of
ENaC
subunits. Accordingly, the aldosterone response could be accounted by an increase in the abundance of apical channels due, at least in part, to de novo synthesis of subunits.
...
PMID:Effects of aldosterone on biosynthesis, traffic, and functional expression of epithelial sodium channels in A6 cells. 1208 76
The epithelial sodium channel (
ENaC
) and the secretory potassium channel (Kir1.1/ROMK) are expressed in the apical membrane of renal
collecting duct
principal cells where they provide the rate-limiting steps for Na(+) absorption and K(+) secretion. The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is thought to regulate the function of both
ENaC
and Kir1.1. We hypothesized that CFTR may provide a regulatory link between
ENaC
and Kir1.1. In Xenopus laevis oocytes co-expressing both
ENaC
and CFTR, the CFTR currents were 3-fold larger than those in oocytes expressing CFTR alone due to an increased expression of CFTR in the plasma membrane.
ENaC
was also able to increase Kir1.1 currents through an increase in surface expression, but only in the presence of CFTR. In the absence of CFTR, co-expression of
ENaC
was without effect on Kir1.1.
ENaC
-mediated CFTR-dependent up-regulation of Kir1.1 was reduced with a Liddle's syndrome mutant of
ENaC
. Furthermore,
ENaC
co-expressed with CFTR was without effect on the closely related K(+) channel, Kir4.1. We conclude that
ENaC
up-regulates Kir1.1 in a CFTR-dependent manner. CFTR may therefore provide the mechanistic link that mediates the coordinated up-regulation of Kir1.1 during the stimulation of
ENaC
by hormones such as aldosterone or antidiuretic hormone.
...
PMID:Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator-dependent up-regulation of Kir1.1 (ROMK) renal K+ channels by the epithelial sodium channel. 1199 90
The amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (
ENaC
) plays a critical role in fluid and electrolyte homeostasis and consists of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits. The carboxyl terminus of each
ENaC
subunit contains a PPXY motif that is believed to be important for interaction with the WW domains of the ubiquitin-protein ligases, Nedd4 and Nedd4-2. Disruption of this interaction, as in Liddle's syndrome where mutations delete or alter the PPXY motif of either the beta or gamma subunits, has been shown to result in increased
ENaC
activity and arterial hypertension. Here we present evidence that N4WBP5A, a novel Nedd4/Nedd4-2-binding protein, is a potential regulator of
ENaC
. In Xenopus laevis oocytes N4WBP5A increases surface expression of
ENaC
by reducing the rate of
ENaC
retrieval. We further demonstrate that N4WBP5A prevents sodium feedback inhibition of
ENaC
possibly by interfering with the xNedd4-2-mediated regulation of
ENaC
. As N4WBP5A binds Nedd4/Nedd4-2 via PPXY motif/WW domain interactions and appears to be associated with specific intracellular vesicles, we propose that N4WBP5A functions by regulating Nedd4/Nedd4-2 availability and trafficking. Because N4WBP5A is highly expressed in native renal
collecting duct
and other tissues that express
ENaC
, it is a likely candidate to modulate
ENaC
function in vivo.
...
PMID:Regulation of the epithelial sodium channel by N4WBP5A, a novel Nedd4/Nedd4-2-interacting protein. 1205 Jan 53
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