AI Article Synopsis

  • Arginine and its metabolites, crucial for kidney function, may influence the early kidney changes seen in diabetes, but their transport regulation in diabetic kidneys hasn't been explored.
  • Researchers examined how arginine was taken up in kidney cells from both diabetic and control rats, alongside other experimental groups to understand these changes.
  • Findings revealed that diabetic rats had significantly higher arginine transport due to increased expression of the CAT-1 transporter, suggesting this mechanism contributes to kidney hyperfiltration in diabetes, potentially influenced by nitric oxide production.

Article Abstract

Background: It is suggested that either arginine or its metabolites, nitric oxide and polyamines play a role in the renal hemodynamic alterations observed in the early stages of diabetes. Yet, the regulation of arginine transport in diabetic kidneys has never been studied.

Methods: Arginine uptake was determined in glomeruli harvested from control rats; diabetic rats (2 weeks following an intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin, 60 mg/kg body weight); rats, 4 days following left nephrectomy (a nondiabetic model of hyperfiltration); diabetes + lysine (0.5% in the drinking water to attenuate arginine uptake); and control + lysine.

Results: Glomerular arginine transport was significantly increased in diabetic rats, but remained unchanged following uninephrectomy. Lysine abolished the increase in arginine uptake in diabetic rats but had no effect in controls. The increase in creatinine clearance observed in diabetes was completely abolished by lysine. Using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), Northern blotting, and immunohistochemistry, we found a significant increase in glomerular cationic amino acid transporter-1 (CAT-1) expression in diabetic animals, which was unaffected by lysine. When human endothelial cells were incubated with arginine end products no effect on arginine transport was observed. However, only in the presence of 0.5 mM/L sodium nitroprusside (SNP) an augmented steady-state CAT-1 mRNA was demonstrated by RT-PCR.

Conclusion: In a rat model of early diabetes, glomerular arginine uptake is elevated through modulation of CAT-1 expression, thus, contributing to the pathogenesis of hyperfiltration. Increased nitric oxide formation may play a role in this process.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1755.2004.00508.xDOI Listing

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