AI Article Synopsis

  • Congenital progressive hydronephrosis (cph) is a genetic mutation in mice that causes severe kidney swelling and obstructive kidney disease, linked to a specific area on mouse chromosome 15.
  • Researchers identified a single base pair mutation in the aquaporin-2 (Aqp2) gene that alters a key amino acid, affecting the protein's ability to properly accumulate in kidney cells.
  • This impaired protein function leads to significant urine concentration issues, resulting in symptoms similar to nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, suggesting the hydronephrosis is secondary to excessive urine production instead of developmental defects in kidney function.

Article Abstract

Congenital progressive hydronephrosis (cph) is a spontaneous recessive mutation that causes severe hydronephrosis and obstructive nephropathy in affected mice. The mutation has been mapped to the distal end of mouse chromosome 15, but the mutated gene has not been found. Here, we describe the identification of a single base pair change in aquaporin-2 (Aqp2) in cph mutants through genetic linkage mapping. The C-T change led to the substitution of a Ser (S256) by a Leu in the cytoplasmic tail of the Aqp2 protein, preventing its phosphorylation at S256 and the subsequent accumulation of Aqp2 on the apical membrane of the collecting duct principal cells. The interference with normal trafficking of Aqp2 by this mutation resulted in a severe urine concentration defect. cph homozygotes demonstrated polydipsia and produced a copious amount of hypotonic urine. The urine concentration defect could not be corrected by [deamino-Cys1,D-Arg8]-vasopressin (DDAVP, a vasopressin analog), characteristic of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. The nephrogenic diabetes insipidus symptoms and the absence of developmental defects in the pyeloureteral peristaltic machinery in the mutants before the onset of hydronephrosis suggest that the congenital obstructive nephropathy is most likely a result of the polyuria. This study has revealed the genetic basis for the classical cph mutation and has provided direct genetic evidence that S256 in Aqp2 is indispensable for the apical accumulation, but not the general glycosylation or membrane association, of Aqp2.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1459000PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0602087103DOI Listing

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