Beyond glycemic control, SGLT2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) have protective effects on cardiorenal function. Renoprotection has been suggested to involve inhibition of NHE3 leading to reduced ATP-dependent tubular workload and mitochondrial oxygen consumption. NHE3 activity is also important for regulation of endosomal pH, but the effects of SGLT2i on endocytosis are unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProximal tubule (PT) cells retrieve albumin and a broad array of other ligands from the glomerular ultrafiltrate. Efficient uptake of albumin requires PT expression of both megalin and cubilin receptors. Although most proteins engage cubilin selectively, megalin is required to maintain robust flux through the apical endocytic pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe kidney proximal tubule (PT) elaborates a uniquely high-capacity apical endocytic pathway to retrieve albumin and other proteins that escape the glomerular filtration barrier. Megalin and cubilin/amnionless (CUBAM) receptors engage Dab2 in these cells to mediate clathrin-dependent uptake of filtered ligands. Knockout of megalin or Dab2 profoundly inhibits apical endocytosis and is believed to atrophy the endocytic pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSignificance Statement: Loss of function of the 2Cl - /H + antiporter ClC-5 in Dent disease causes an unknown impairment in endocytic traffic, leading to tubular proteinuria. The authors integrated data from biochemical and quantitative imaging studies in proximal tubule cells into a mathematical model to determine that loss of ClC-5 impairs endosome acidification and delays early endosome maturation in proximal tubule cells, resulting in reduced megalin recycling, surface expression, and half-life. Studies in a Dent mouse model also revealed subsegment-specific differences in the effects of ClC-5 knockout on proximal tubule subsegments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cells that comprise the proximal tubule (PT) are specialized for high-capacity apical endocytosis necessary to maintain a protein-free urine. Filtered proteins are reclaimed via receptor-mediated endocytosis facilitated by the multiligand receptors megalin and cubilin. Despite the importance of this pathway, we lack a detailed understanding of megalin trafficking kinetics and how they are regulated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe multiligand receptors megalin () and cubilin () and their endocytic adaptor protein Dab2 () play essential roles in maintaining the integrity of the apical endocytic pathway of proximal tubule (PT) cells and have complex and poorly understood roles in the development of chronic kidney disease. Here, we used RNA-sequencing and CRISPR/Cas9 knockout (KO) technology in a well-differentiated cell culture model to identify PT-specific transcriptional changes that are directly consequent to the loss of megalin, cubilin, or Dab2 expression. KO of had the greatest transcriptional effect, and nearly all genes whose expression was affected in KO and KO cells were also changed in KO cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCultured cell models are an essential complement to dissecting kidney proximal tubule (PT) function in health and disease but do not fully recapitulate key features of this nephron segment. We recently determined that culture of opossum kidney (OK) cells under continuous orbital shear stress (OSS) significantly augments their morphological and functional resemblance to PTs . Here we used RNASeq to identify temporal transcriptional changes upon cell culture under static or shear stress conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProximal tubule (PT) cells express a single saturable albumin-binding site whose affinity matches the estimated tubular concentration of albumin; however, albumin uptake capacity is greatly increased under nephrotic conditions. Deciphering the individual contributions of megalin and cubilin to the uptake of normal and nephrotic levels of albumin is impossible in vivo, as knockout of megalin in mice globally disrupts PT endocytic uptake. We quantified concentration-dependent albumin uptake in an optimized opossum kidney cell culture model and fit the kinetic profiles to identify albumin-binding affinities and uptake capacities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Renal Physiol
March 2020
Albuminuria is frequently associated with proximal tubule (PT) cytotoxicity that can feed back to cause glomerular damage and exacerbate kidney disease. PT cells express megalin and cubilin receptors that bind to and internalize albumin over a broad concentration range. How the exposure to high concentrations of albumin leads to PT cytotoxicity remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Lowe syndrome (LS) is an X-linked recessive disorder caused by mutations in , which encodes the enzyme OCRL. Symptoms of LS include proximal tubule (PT) dysfunction typically characterized by low molecular weight proteinuria, renal tubular acidosis (RTA), aminoaciduria, and hypercalciuria. How mutant causes these symptoms isn't clear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKidney disease, including proximal tubule (PT) dysfunction, and vitamin D deficiency are among the most prevalent complications in sickle cell disease (SCD) patients. Although these two comorbidities have never been linked in SCD, the PT is the primary site for activation of vitamin D. Precursor 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] bound to vitamin D-binding protein (DBP) is taken up by PT cells via megalin/cubilin receptors, hydroxylated to the active 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH)D] form, and released into the bloodstream.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKidney proximal tubule (PT) cells have high-metabolic demands to drive the extraordinary ion and solute transport, water reabsorption, and endocytic uptake that occur in this nephron segment. Increases in renal blood flow alter glomerular filtration rate and lead to rapid mechanosensitive adaptations in PT transport, impacting metabolic demand. Although the PT reabsorbs essentially all of the filtered glucose, PT cells rely primarily on oxidative metabolism rather than glycolysis to meet their energy demands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells lining the kidney proximal tubule (PT) respond to acute changes in glomerular filtration rate and the accompanying fluid shear stress (FSS) to regulate reabsorption of ions, glucose, and other filtered molecules and maintain glomerulotubular balance. Recently, we discovered that exposure of PT cells to FSS also stimulates an increase in apical endocytic capacity (Raghavan et al. PNAS, 111:8506-8511, 2014).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells lining the proximal tubule (PT) have unique membrane specializations that are required to maintain the high-capacity ion transport and endocytic functions of this nephron segment. PT cells in vivo acutely regulate ion transport in response to changes in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) to maintain glomerulotubular balance. PT cells in culture up-regulate endocytic capacity in response to acute changes in fluid shear stress (FSS); however, it is not known whether GFR modulates PT endocytosis to enable maximally efficient uptake of filtered proteins in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProximal tubule (PT) dysfunction, including tubular proteinuria, is a significant complication in young sickle cell disease (SCD) that can eventually lead to chronic kidney disease. Hemoglobin (Hb) dimers released from red blood cells upon hemolysis are filtered into the kidney and internalized by megalin/cubilin receptors into PT cells. The PT is especially sensitive to heme toxicity, and tubular dysfunction in SCD is thought to result from prolonged exposure to filtered Hb.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParathyroid hormone (PTH) and FGF23 are the primary hormones regulating acute phosphate homeostasis. Human renal proximal tubule cells (RPTECs) were used to characterize the mechanism and signaling pathways of PTH and FGF23 on phosphate transport and the role of the PDZ protein NHERF1 in mediating PTH and FGF23 effects. RPTECs express the NPT2A phosphate transporter, αKlotho, FGFR1, FGFR3, FGFR4, and the PTH receptor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe kidney has an extraordinary ability to maintain stable fractional solute and fluid reabsorption over a wide range of glomerular filtration rates (GFRs). Internalization of filtered low molecular weight proteins, vitamins, hormones, and other small molecules is mediated by the proximal tubule (PT) multiligand receptors megalin and cubilin. Changes in GFR and the accompanying fluid shear stress (FSS) modulate acute changes in PT ion transport thought to be mediated by microvillar bending.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe proximal tubule (PT) reabsorbs the majority of sodium, bicarbonate, and chloride ions, phosphate, glucose, water, and plasma proteins from the glomerular filtrate. Despite the critical importance of endocytosis for PT cell (PTC) function, the organization of the endocytic pathway in these cells remains poorly understood. We have used immunofluorescence and live-cell imaging to dissect the itinerary of apically internalized fluid and membrane cargo in polarized primary cultures of PTCs isolated from mouse kidney cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe apical transmembrane glycoprotein MUC1 is endocytosed to recycle through the trans-Golgi network (TGN) or Golgi complex to the plasma membrane. We followed the hypothesis that not only the known follow-up sialylation of MUC1 in the TGN is associated with this process, but also a remodeling of O-glycan core structures, which would explain the previously described differential core 2- vs core 1-based O-glycosylation of secreted, single Golgi passage and recycling membrane MUC1 isoforms (Engelmann K, Kinlough CL, Müller S, Razawi H, Baldus SE, Hughey RP, Hanisch F-G. 2005.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sorting signals that direct proteins to the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells are complex and can include posttranslational modifications, such as N- and O-linked glycosylation. Efficient apical sorting of the neurotrophin receptor p75 is dependent on its O-glycosylated membrane proximal stalk, but how this domain mediates targeting is unknown. Protein oligomerization or clustering has been suggested as a common step in the segregation of all apical proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocalized synthesis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P(2)] at clathrin coated pits (CCPs) is crucial for the recruitment of adaptors and other components of the internalization machinery, as well as for regulating actin dynamics during endocytosis. PtdIns(4,5)P(2) is synthesized from phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate by any of three phosphatidylinositol 5-kinase type I (PIP5KI) isoforms (α, β or γ). PIP5KIβ localizes almost exclusively to the apical surface in polarized mouse cortical collecting duct cells, whereas the other isoforms have a less polarized membrane distribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLowe syndrome is an X-linked disorder characterized by cataracts at birth, mental retardation and progressive renal malfunction that results from loss of function of the OCRL1 (oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe) protein. OCRL1 is a lipid phosphatase that converts phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate to phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate. The renal pathogenesis of Lowe syndrome patients has been suggested to result from alterations in membrane trafficking, but this cannot fully explain the disease progression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Renal Physiol
September 2011
Galectins (Gal) are β-galactoside-binding proteins that function in epithelial development and homeostasis. An overlapping role for Gal-3 and Gal-7 in wound repair was reported in stratified epithelia. Although Gal-7 was thought absent in simple epithelia, it was reported in a proteomic analysis of cilia isolated from cultured human airway, and we recently identified Gal-7 transcripts in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells (Poland PA, Rondanino C, Kinlough CL, Heimburg-Molinaro J, Arthur CM, Stowell SR, Smith DF, Hughey RP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Disorazoles are polyene macrodiolides isolated from a myxobacterium fermentation broth. Disorazole C1 was newly synthesized and found to depolymerize microtubules and cause mitotic arrest. Here we examined the cellular responses to disorazole C1 in both non-cancer and cancer cells and compared our results to vinblastine and taxol.
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