Publication | Open Access
Reduced renal medullary water channel expression in puromycin aminonucleoside--induced nephrotic syndrome.
109
Citations
30
References
1997
Year
Renal PathologyRenal InflammationCellular PhysiologyPuromycin AminonucleosideGlomerulonephritisRenal FunctionElectron MicroscopyAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseRenal PharmacologyOsmoregulationConcentrating DefectOsmotic StressSodium HomeostasisNephrotic SyndromeMembrane BiologyRenal PathophysiologyPharmacologyUrologyPhysiologyInduced Nephrotic SyndromeMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
The aquaporins are molecular water channels that mediate transcellular water transport across water-permeable epithelia. To investigate the cause of the concentrating defect in the nephrotic syndrome, immunoblotting using membrane fractions from inner medulla was utilized to assess the level of expression of four aquaporin water channels in vehicle-treated versus puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN)-treated rats. Scanning electron microscopy demonstrating loss of glomerular foot processes and measurements of urinary protein excretion confirmed the efficacy of the PAN treatment. In rats receiving PAN, there was an increase in plasma vasopressin, without a change in plasma sodium concentration. Inner medullary tissue hypertonicity was sustained in PAN-treated rats while the urinary osmolality was low, pointing to defective osmotic equilibration across the collecting ducts in PAN-nephrosis. Among collecting duct aquaporins, there was an 87% decrease in aquaporin-2 expression and a 70% decrease in aquaporin-3 expression in the inner medulla, whereas aquaporin-4 expression was unaltered. Transmission electron microscopy of the inner medullary collecting ducts of PAN-treated rats showed normal-appearing cells. Thus, PAN-nephrosis is associated with an extensive downregulation of collecting duct water channel expression despite increased circulating vasopressin, providing an explanation for the concentrating defect associated with the nephrotic syndrome.
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