Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (
collecting duct
)
5,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
CAM expression was investigated immunohistochemically in tissue sections and in pure cultures of human proximal and distal tubular cells. In the fetal kidney, N-CAM immunoreactivity was detected in the non-induced and condensing metanephrogenic mesenchyme, and in all stages until the S-shaped bodies. A-CAM (N-cadherin) first appeared in the non-induced mesenchyme and remained present thereafter. Its expression became exclusively associated with the lower limb of the S-shaped bodies and the developing proximal tubule. In contrast,
L-CAM
(E-cadherin;
uvomorulin
) staining was observed in the fetal
collecting duct
, the upper limb of the S-shaped bodies, and the developing distal tubule. This segment-specific expression of A-CAM and
L-CAM
in the early developing nephron was maintained in the adult kidney: A-CAM staining was restricted to adherens junctions in the proximal tubule and thin limb, whereas
L-CAM
was expressed in Bowman's capsule and in all tubular segments except the proximal convoluted and straight tubule. Also after in vitro culture, A-CAM expression was an exclusive property of proximal tubular cells, while
L-CAM
was confined to distal tubular cells. In conclusion, each major subdivision of the fetal and adult nephron displays a characteristic combination of
L-CAM
and A-CAM, suggesting that they may be the basis of segmental differentiation and border formation between adjacent nephron segments.
...
PMID:Stage- and segment-specific expression of cell-adhesion molecules N-CAM, A-CAM, and L-CAM in the kidney. 835 56
To evaluate the effect of cyclosporine A (CyA) at high concentrations (10(-4) and 10(-5) M) and the influence of endothelin-1 (ET-1) at physiological and pharmacological concentrations (10(-14) to 10(-6) M) on epithelial cell function, LLC-PK1 cells were studied as a model of the proximal tubule and MDCK cells as a model of the distal tubule/
collecting duct
. CyA caused time- and concentration-dependent acute toxicity. In LLC-PK1 cells, CyA caused a decrease in transepithelial resistance, indicating a loss of cell contacts, a release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and villin into the supernatant, suggesting destruction of the apical membrane with loss of brush border, and finally release of
uvomorulin
, suggesting a disruption of the cell-cell adhesion, the zonula adherens. DNA synthesis, as evaluated by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, was significantly affected at > or = 10(-5) M CyA. The toxicity of CyA was higher when given from the apical rather than the basolateral compartment. ET-1 alone was without effect, but in combination with CyA, ET-1 significantly enhanced toxicity. The ET-1 effect was partially inhibitable by an ET(B), but not an ET(A), antagonist. Immunofluorescence for alpha-catenin, another protein of the zonula adherens, demonstrated no change in polarity for this protein, and immunoprecipitation of the complex indicated relative stability of the zonula adherens despite loss of cadherin into the supernatant. In MDCK cells the effects were different. CyA was not associated with LDH release, but with an increase in transepithelial resistance, indicating increased paracellular resistance. Morphological alterations were significantly less, but BrdU incorporation was decreased. This pattern of toxicity is compatible with a direct toxic effect of CyA on cells of the proximal tubule, with predominant morphological destruction of the cells, with concomitant proximal tubular dysfunction, and a functional alteration in cells of the distal tubule associated with increased paracellular resistance, which may lead to solute and water loss.
...
PMID:Tubular toxicity of cyclosporine A and the influence of endothelin-1 in renal cell culture models (LLC-PK1 and MDCK). 943 65