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A novel type of urea transporter, UT-C, is highly expressed in proximal tubule of seawater eel kidney
43
Citations
36
References
2004
Year
Rainbow TroutGeneticsMolecular GeneticsCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyRenal FunctionMembrane TransportKidney Tubule RemodelingProteomicsOsmoregulationNovel TypeSodium HomeostasisMorphogenesisMembrane BiologyRenal PathophysiologyGene ExpressionBiologySeawater Eel KidneyEst DatabaseNatural SciencesPhysiologyUrea TransporterMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
A new type of urea transporter was identified by a database search and shown to be highly expressed in the renal proximal tubule cells of teleosts; proximal tubule-type urea transporters have not been describe previously. We first identified urea transporter-like sequences in the fugu genome and in an EST database of rainbow trout. Based on these pieces of sequence information, we obtained a full-length cDNA for the eel ortholog, consisting of 378 amino acid residues, and named it eUT-C. Although its sequence similarity to the known urea transporters is low (approximately 35%), its heterologous expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes indicated that it is a facilitative urea transporter sensitive to phloretin. Its activity is not dependent on Na+. Northern blot analysis showed that expression of eUT-C is highly restricted to the kidney, with weak expression in the stomach. In both tissues, eUT-C mRNA was strongly induced when eels were transferred from freshwater to seawater. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization histochemistry revealed proximal tubule cell localization of eUT-C. Taking into account that 1) urea is mainly secreted from the gill where another type of urea transporter (eUT) has been identified and 2) fish excrete a very small volume of urine in seawater, we propose that eUT-C cloned here is a key component working in combination with the gill transporter to achieve an efficient urea excretory system in fish, namely, eUT-C reabsorbs urea from glomerular filtrate and sends it to the gill, through the circulation, for excretion.
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