Prostasin is a serine peptidase hypothesized to regulate epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) activity in animals or on in vitro cultured cells. We investigated whether urinary prostasin may be a candidate marker of ENaC activation in humans. We studied 10 healthy volunteers and 8 hypertensive patients with raised aldosterone-to-renin ratio before and after spironolactone or saline/Florinef suppression test, respectively. Four healthy subjects were also studied before and after saline. Urinary prostasin was evaluated by SDS-PAGE, 2D maps, and Western blotting. Every sample of normotensive individuals was compared with the corresponding sample of urine collected after spironolactone or saline; every sample of hypertensive patients was compared with the corresponding sample of urine collected after saline or Florinef. Prostasin was detectable in all subjects regardless of gender, dietary sodium intake, and spironolactone treatment. Spironolactone (100 mg) increased urinary Na+/K+ ratio and decreased urinary prostasin in normotensives in whom the renin/aldosterone axis was activated by a low Na+ intake, but it was ineffective in individuals with high Na+ intake. Saline infusion also reduced prostasin in normotensive subjects. In contrast, prostasin paradoxically increased in urine of patients affected by primary aldosteronism after volume expansion. By 2D immunoblotting, several protein isoforms were observed, some of them being overexpressed after inhibition tests in patients with primary aldosteronism. In addition to a "basal" aliquot of prostasin, constitutively released in human urine regardless of sodium balance and aldosterone activation, there exists a second "aldosterone-responsive" aliquot modulated by Na+ intake and potentially suitable as candidate marker of ENaC activation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.HYP.0000184108.12155.6b | DOI Listing |
Front Pediatr
February 2024
Department of Integrative and Cellular Physiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, United States.
Introduction: This study was designed to measure the concentration and activity of urinary proteases that activate renal epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) mediated Na transport in infants with congenital heart disease, a potential mechanism for fluid retention.
Methods: Urine samples from infants undergoing cardiac surgery were collected at three time points: T1) pre-operatively, T2) 6-8 h after surgery, and T3) 24 h after diuretics. Urine was collected from five heathy infant controls.
Cells
September 2023
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.
The serine proteases CAP1/Prss8 and CAP3/St14 are identified as ENaC channel-activating proteases in vitro, highly suggesting that they are required for proteolytic activation of ENaC in vivo. The present study tested whether CAP3/St14 is relevant for renal proteolytic ENaC activation and affects ENaC-mediated Na absorption following Na deprivation conditions. CAP3/St14 knockout mice exhibit a significant decrease in CAP1/Prss8 protein expression with altered ENaC subunit and decreased pNCC protein abundances but overall maintain sodium balance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharmacol Sci
December 2022
Department of Nephrology, Kumamoto University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kumamoto, Japan; Comprehensive Clinical Education, Training and Development Center, Kumamoto University Hospital, Kumamoto, Japan.
Serine proteases (SPs) play physiological roles in the kidney. We previously reported that a synthetic SP inhibitor, camostat mesilate (CM), suppressed sodium reabsorption in the renal tubule and showed natriuretic effects in aldosterone-infused rats. Here, we aimed to explore novel physiological roles of SPs in the renal tubule and understand the mechanism of actions of SP inhibitors, by administering CM to healthy rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTher Adv Med Oncol
October 2022
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, 723 West Michigan Street, SL220, Indianapolis IN 46202, USA.
Background: A wide range of disorders can be detected in the urine. Tumor-modifying proteins in the urine may serve as a diagnostic tool for cancer patients and the alterations in their profiles may indicate efficacies of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and surgery.
Methods: We focused on urinary proteomes of patients with prostate cancer and identified tumor-modifying proteins in the samples before and after prostatectomy.
Int J Mol Sci
June 2022
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.
The serine protease prostasin (CAP1/Prss8, channel-activating protease-1) is a confirmed in vitro and in vivo activator of the epithelial sodium channel ENaC. To test whether proteolytic activity or CAP1/Prss8 abundance itself are required for ENaC activation in the kidney, we studied animals either hetero- or homozygous mutant at serine 238 (S238A; and ), and renal tubule-specific CAP1/Prss8 knockout (Prss8) mice. When exposed to varying Na-containing diets, no changes in Na and K handling and only minor changes in the expression of Na and K transporting protein were found in both models.
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