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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (
collecting duct
)
5,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vasopressin regulates water and solute transport in the renal
collecting duct
. In addition to short-term regulation of aquaporin-2 trafficking, vasopressin also has long-term effects to regulate the abundances of aquaporins-2 and -3 and beta- and gamma-subunits of the epithelial sodium channel in
collecting duct
principal cells. To investigate further the direct and indirect long-term regulatory actions of vasopressin in the inner medullary
collecting duct
(IMCD), we used a proteomic approach [difference gel electrophoresis (DIGE) coupled with MALDI-TOF identification of differentially expressed protein spots]. DDAVP or vehicle was infused subcutaneously in Brattleboro rats for 3 days, and IMCD cells were purified from the inner medullas for proteomic analysis. Forty-three proteins were found to be regulated in response to vasopressin infusion, including 18 that were increased in abundance, 22 that were decreased, and 3 that were shifted in the gel, presumably because of posttranslational modification. Immunocytochemistry confirmed
collecting duct
expression of several of the proteins that were identified. Immunoblot analysis of nine of the proteins confirmed the changes seen by the DIGE method. Of these nine proteins, six were increased in response to DDAVP infusion: nitric oxide synthase-2 (NOS2),
GRP78
, heat shock protein-70, annexin II, glutaminase, and cathepsin D. The remaining three were decreased in response to DDAVP: aldehyde reductase I, adenylyl cyclase VI, and carbonic anhydrase II. The findings point to a role for vasopressin in the coordinate regulation of several determinants of nitric oxide levels (NOS2, arginase II, NADPH oxidase) and of proteins potentially involved in vasopressin escape (adenylyl cyclase VI and G protein-coupled receptor kinase 4).
...
PMID:Proteomic analysis of long-term vasopressin action in the inner medullary collecting duct of the Brattleboro rat. 1453 64
Activation of V2 receptors (V2R) during antidiuresis increases the permeability of the inner medullary
collecting duct
to urea and water. Extracellular osmolality is elevated as the concentrating capacity of the kidney increases. Osmolality is known to contribute to the regulation of
collecting duct
water (aquaporin-2; AQP2) and urea transporter (UT-A1, UT-A3) regulation. AQP1KO mice are a concentrating mechanism knockout, a defect attributed to the loss of high interstitial osmolality. A V2R-specific agonist, deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP), was infused into wild-type and AQP1KO mice for 7 days. UT-A1 mRNA and protein abundance were significantly increased in the medullas of wild-type and AQP1KO mice following dDAVP infusion. The mRNA and protein abundance of UT-A3, the basolateral urea transporter, was significantly increased by dDAVP in both wild-type and AQP1KO mice. Semiquantitative immunoblots revealed that dDAVP infusion induced a significant increase in the medullary expression of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperone
GRP78
. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that
GRP78
expression colocalized with AQP2 in principal cells of the papillary tip of the renal medulla. Using immunohistochemistry and immunogold electron microscopy, we demonstrate that vasopressin induced a marked apical targeting of
GRP78
in medullary principal cells. Urea-sensitive genes, GADD153 and ATF4 (components of the ER stress pathway), were significantly increased in AQP1KO mice by dDAVP infusion. These findings strongly support an important role of vasopressin in the activation of an ER stress response in renal
collecting duct
cells, in addition to its role in activating an increase in UT-A1 and UT-A3 abundance.
...
PMID:Vasopressin increases expression of UT-A1, UT-A3, and ER chaperone GRP78 in the renal medulla of mice with a urinary concentrating defect. 2066 95