Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (collecting duct)
5,183 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study was designed to establish the relationship between urinary pCO2 and systemic blood pCO2 during acute hypercapnia and to investigate the significance of this relationship to collecting duct hydrogen ion (H+) secretion when the urine is acid and when it is highly alkaline. In rats excreting a highly alkaline urine, an acute increase in blood pCO2 (from 42 +/- 0.8 to 87 +/- 0.8 mmHg) resulted in a significant fall in urine minus blood (U-B) pCO2 (from 31 +/- 2.0 to 16 +/- 4.2 mmHg, P less than 0.005), a finding which could be interpreted to indicate inhibition of collecting duct H+ secretion by hypercapnia. The urinary pCO2 of rats with hypercapnia, unlike that of normocapnic controls, was significantly lower than that of blood when the urine was acid (58 +/- 6.3 and 86 +/- 1.7 mmHg, P less than 0.001) and when it was alkalinized in the face of accelerated carbonic acid dehydration by infusion of carbonic anhydrase (78 +/- 2.7 and 87 +/- 1.8 mmHg, P less than 0.02). The finding of a urinary pCO2 lower than systemic blood pCO2 during hypercapnia suggested that the urine pCO2 prevailing before bicarbonate loading should be known and the blood pCO2 kept constant to evaluate collecting duct H+ secretion using the urinary pCO2 technique. In experiments performed under these conditions, sodium bicarbonate infusion resulted in an increment in urinary pCO2 (i.e., a delta pCO2) which was comparable in hypercapnic and normocapnic rats (40 +/- 7.2 and 42 +/- 4.6 mmHg, respectively) that were alkalemic (blood pH 7.53 +/- 0.02 and 7.69 +/- 0.01, respectively). The U-B pCO2, however, was again lower in hypercapnic than in normocapnic rats (15 +/- 4.0 and 39 +/- 2.5 mmHg, respectively, P less than 0.001). In hypercapnic rats in which blood pH during bicarbonate infusion was not allowed to become alkalemic (7.38 +/- 0.01), the delta pCO2 was higher than that of normocapnic rats which were alkalemic (70 +/- 5.6 and 42 +/- 4.6 mmHg, respectively, P less than 0.005) while the U-B pCO2 was about the same (39 +/- 3.7 and 39 +/- 2.5 mmHg). We further examined urine pCO2 generation by measuring the difference between the urine pCO2 of a highly alkaline urine not containing carbonic anhydrase and that of an equally alkaline urine containing this enzyme. Carbonic anhydrase infusion to hypercapnic rats that were not alkalemic resulted in a fall in urine pCO(2) (from 122+/-5.7 to 77+/-2.2 mmHg) which was greater (P <0.02) than that seen in alkalemic normocapnic controls (from 73+/- 1.9 to 43+/-1.3 mmHg) with a comparable urine bicarbonate concentration and urine nonbicarbonate buffer capacity. CO(2) generation, therefore, from collecting dust H(+) secretion and titration of bicarbonate, was higher in hypercapnic rats that in normocapnic controls. We conclude that in rats with actue hypercapnia, the U-B p(CO(2)) achieved during bicarbonate loading greatly underestimates collecting duct H(+) secretion because it is artificially influenced by systemic blood pCO(2). the deltapCO(2) is a better qualitative index of collecting duct H+ secretion that the U-B pCO(2), because it is not artificially influenced by systemic blood pCO(2) and it takes into account the urine PCO(2) prevailing before bicarbonate loading.
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PMID:Relationship of urinary and blood carbon dioxide tension during hypercapnia in the rat. Its significance in the evaluation of collecting duct hydrogen ion secretion. 298 5

The present study was carried out to test directly whether isolated perfused rabbit cortical collecting ducts (CCDs) spontaneously generate a luminal disequilibrium pH. We determined disequilibrium pH as the difference between 1) the actual luminal pH measured by perfusing the lumen with a membrane-impermeant pH-sensitive dye [1,4-dihydroxyphthalonitrile (1,4-DHPN)] and 2) equilibrium pH calculated from the measured total CO2 concentration in fluid collected at the end of the tubule. When the peritubular bath and perfusate had the same composition, a statistically significant acidic disequilibrium pH was found (mean -0.14 units). To determine whether the disequilibrium pH is due to an absolute lack of luminal carbonic anhydrase, we measured the effective rate constant for carbonic acid dehydration in the lumen (k-1). To do this, a lumen-to-bath NH3 concentration gradient was imposed, and the luminal pH was measured along the tubule with 1,4-DHPN. NH3 absorption caused a luminal disequilibrium pH (due to dissociation of NH+4 to NH3 and H+), whose profile along the lumen is dependent on k-1 and NH3 permeability (PNH3). PNH3 and k-1 were estimated from the luminal pH profiles using a mathematical model of proton and buffer transport. The measured k-1 (37 s-1) is within the reported range of values for uncatalyzed H2CO3 dehydration. Calculations demonstrate that the measured PNH3 (2 X 10(-3) cm/s) is high enough and the measured k-1 is low enough to explain ammonia secretion rates seen in previous studies. We conclude that proton secretion in the CCD generates an acidic luminal disequilibrium pH, associated with an absolute lack of luminal carbonic anhydrase, which enhances the net rate of NH3 secretion.
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PMID:Disequilibrium pH and ammonia transport in isolated perfused cortical collecting ducts. 312 87

During a bicarbonate diuresis, final urine Pco2 considerably exceeds systemic Pco2, an effect thought to reflect the postpapillary delayed dehydration of carbonic acid. To test this explanation, Pco2 tensions along the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) of bicarbonate-loaded rats were measured directly using Pco2 microelectrodes. With systemic Pco2 held at 40 mm Hg, IMCD Pco2 exceeded systemic Pco2 in every measurement by an average of 20 to 30 mm Hg. A significant increment in Pco2 was seen between 50% IMCD length and the papilla tip. During the infusion of carbonic anhydrase, IMCD Pco2 was reduced but not to systemic levels. Finding elevated Pco2 along the terminal IMCD deemphasizes the importance of postpapillary delayed dehydration and suggests the possibility that bicarbonaturia is associated with papillary accumulation of carbon dioxide.
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PMID:Elevated urinary PCO2 in the rat: an intrarenal event. 629 Jul 41

Membrane-bound luminal carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV, by catalyzing the dehydration of carbonic acid into CO2 plus water, facilitates H+ secretion in the renal outer medullary collecting duct from the inner stripe (OMCDi). To examine the role of CA IV on H+ secretion, we measured net HCO3- transport in perfused OMCDi segments and examined the effect on transport of two extracellular CA inhibitors, benzolamide and F-3500, aminobenzolamide coupled to a nontoxic polymer, polyoxyethylene bis(acetic acid) [synthesized and kindly provided by C. Conroy and T. Maren (C. W. Conroy, G. C. Wynns, and T. H. Maren. Bioorg, Chem, 24: 262-272, 1996)]. These agents would inhibit only the luminal CA enzyme. Dose titration curves for net HCO3- flux were performed for each drug. Basal HCO3- absorptive flux was 12 pmol.min-1.mm-1 in control segments and significantly increased to 16 pmol.min-1.mm-1 in segments from 3-day acid-treated animals. The concentrations of benzolamide and F-3500 that inhibited HCO3- absorption by 50% were approximately 0.1 and approximately 5 microM, similar to the Ki for CA IV inhibition by these agents (0.2 and 4.0 microM, respectively; T. Maren, C. W. Conroy, G. C. Wynns, and D. R. Godman. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 280: 98-105, 1997). Adding exogenous CA to the inhibitor in the perfusate nearly restored basal HCO3- transport, suggesting that cytosolic CA II was not inhibited by these impermeant inhibitors. In OMCDi segments from acidotic rabbits, the concentrations of benzolamide and F-3500 that inhibited HCO3- absorption by 50% were 50 and 500 microM, respectively, > 100 times the Ki for CA IV inhibition and for inhibition of HCO3- transport in control tubules. Thus, in the OMCDi, doses of extracellular CA inhibitors that inhibited approximately 50% of CA IV activity also comparably inhibited HCO3- transport, indicating that H+ secretion depends in part on the availability of luminal CA IV activity. Acidosis substantially decreased the sensitivity of HCO3- transport to CA inhibition.
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PMID:HCO3- absorption in rabbit outer medullary collecting duct: role of luminal carbonic anhydrase. 945 33

Carbonic anhydrase (CA) facilitates renal bicarbonate reabsorption and acid excretion. Cytosolic CA II catalyzes the buffering of intracellular hydroxyl ions by CO2, whereas membrane-bound CA IV catalyzes the dehydration of carbonic acid generated from the secretion of protons. Although CA II and IV are expressed in rabbit kidney, it is not entirely clear which segments express which isoforms. It was the purpose of this study to characterize the expression of CA II and CA IV mRNAs by specific segments of the nephron using semiquantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and to determine the effect of chronic metabolic acidosis on CA expression by those segments. Individual nephron segments (usually 1-2 mm) were isolated by microdissection and subjected to RT-PCR. Amplification was performed simultaneously for CA IV, CA II, and malate dehydrogenase (MDH), a housekeeping gene. The intensities of the PCR products were quantitated by densitometry. CA IV mRNA was expressed by S1 and S2 proximal tubules and by outer medullary collecting duct from inner stripe (OMCDi) and outer stripe and initial inner medullary collecting duct (IMCDi). CA II mRNA was expressed by S1, S2, and S3 proximal tubules, thin descending limb, connecting segment (CNT), and all collecting duct segments. Acid loading induced CA IV mRNA expression in S1 and S2 proximal tubules and in OMCDi and IMCDi. CA II mRNA was induced by acidosis in all three proximal segments and nearly all distal segments beginning with CNT. No upregulation of MDH mRNA expression occurred. These adaptive increases in CA II and IV mRNAs are potentially important in the kidney's adaptation to chronic metabolic acidosis.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase II and IV mRNA in rabbit nephron segments: stimulation during metabolic acidosis. 948 20

Carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV activity facilitates renal acidification by catalyzing the dehydration of luminal carbonic acid. CA IV has been localized to the proximal tubules and medullary collecting ducts. Maturation of CA IV expression has been considered to be important in the development of renal acid excretion. The purpose of the present study was to determine the maturational expression of CA IV in rabbit kidney. A guinea pig polyclonal antibody to purified rabbit lung microsomal membrane CA IV was generated. Immunoblotting of membrane proteins after peptide-N-glycosidase F treatment revealed two N-glycosylation sites and reduction in size from approximately 52 to 35 kDa; there appeared to be heavier glycosylation in the medulla. In membrane and total proteins from the kidney cortex, CA IV was 15-30% of the adult level during the first 2 wk of life but increased to mature levels by 5 wk of age. The maturational pattern in the cortex was confirmed by measuring SDS-resistant CA hydratase activity. In the medulla, both membrane and total proteins were generally less than one-fourth of the adult level of CA IV during the first 2 wk of life before reaching mature levels by 5 wk of age. Immunohistochemistry showed staining in proximal tubules (apical > basolateral), with maximal label in the S2 segment. CA IV also appeared on the apical membranes of a minority cell type of the cortical collecting duct, presumably the alpha-intercalated cell. Several labeled cells also appeared to be the process of being extruded from medullary collecting ducts of 1- to 2-wk rabbits. The antibody did not reliably detect medullary CA IV expression in sections from mature rabbits. These studies indicate that there is a substantial postnatal increase in expression of CA IV in the maturing kidney in both the cortex and medulla. The disappearance of intercalated cells in the maturing rabbit medullary collecting duct may be part of a normal renal developmental program as previously reported [J. Kim, J.-H. Cha, C. C. Tisher, and K. M. Madsen. Am. J. Physiol. 270 (Renal Fluid Electrolyte Physiol. 39): F575-F592, 1996]. It is likely that the maturation of CA IV expression contributes to the increase in renal acidification observed early in postnatal life.
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PMID:Postnatal development of carbonic anhydrase IV expression in rabbit kidney. 1019 9

Carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV is a membrane-bound enzyme that catalyzes the dehydration of carbonic acid to CO(2) and water. Using peptides from each end of the deduced rabbit CA IV amino acid sequence, we generated a goat anti-rabbit CA IV antibody, which was used for immunoblotting and immunohistochemical analysis. CA IV was expressed in a variety of organs including spleen, heart, lung, skeletal muscle, colon, and kidney. Rabbit kidney CA IV had two N-glycosylation sites and was sialated, the apparent molecular mass increasing by at least 11 to approximately 45 kDa in the cortex. Medullary CA IV was much more heavily glycosylated than CA IV from cortex or any other organ, such modifications increasing the molecular mass by at least 20 kDa. CA IV was expressed on the apical and basolateral membranes of proximal tubules with expression levels on the order of S2 > S1 > S3 = 0. Because CA IV is believed to be anchored to the apical membrane by glycosylphosphatidylinositol, the presence of basolateral CA IV suggests an alternative mechanism. CA IV was localized on the apical membranes of outer medullary collecting duct cells of the inner stripe and inner medullary collecting duct cells, as well as on alpha-intercalated cells. However, CA IV was not expressed by beta-intercalated cells, glomeruli, distal tubule, or Henle's loop cells. Thus CA IV was expressed by H(+)-secreting cells of the rabbit kidney, suggesting an important role for CA IV in urinary acidification.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase IV is expressed in H(+)-secreting cells of rabbit kidney. 1083 77