Inherited and acquired disorders that enhance the activity of transporters mediating renal tubular Na(+) reabsorption are well established causes of hypertension. It is unclear, however, whether primary activation of an Na(+)-independent chloride transporter in the kidney can also play a pathogenic role in this disease. Here, mice overexpressing the chloride transporter pendrin in intercalated cells of the distal nephron (Tg(B1-hPDS) mice) displayed increased renal absorption of chloride. Compared with normal mice, these transgenic mice exhibited a delayed increase in urinary NaCl and ultimately, developed hypertension when exposed to a high-salt diet. Administering the same sodium intake as NaHCO3 instead of NaCl did not significantly alter BP, indicating that the hypertension in the transgenic mice was chloride-sensitive. Moreover, excessive chloride absorption by pendrin drove parallel absorption of sodium through the epithelial sodium channel ENaC and the sodium-driven chloride/bicarbonate exchanger (Ndcbe), despite an appropriate downregulation of these sodium transporters in response to the expanded vascular volume and hypertension. In summary, chloride transport in the distal nephron can play a primary role in driving NaCl transport in this part of the kidney, and a primary abnormality in renal chloride transport can provoke arterial hypertension. Thus, we conclude that the chloride/bicarbonate exchanger pendrin plays a major role in controlling net NaCl absorption, thereby influencing BP under conditions of high salt intake.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2012080787 | DOI Listing |
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
August 2024
Department of Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, United States.
Front Physiol
February 2024
Department of Biosciences, Biotechnologies and Environment, University of Bari, Bari, Italy.
Efferent sympathetic nerve fibers regulate several renal functions activating norepinephrine receptors on tubular epithelial cells. Of the beta-adrenoceptors (β-ARs), we previously demonstrated the renal expression of β3-AR in the thick ascending limb (TAL), the distal convoluted tubule (DCT), and the collecting duct (CD), where it participates in salt and water reabsorption. Here, for the first time, we reported β3-AR expression in the CD intercalated cells (ICCs), where it regulates acid-base homeostasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPflugers Arch
April 2024
Department of Biomedicine, Physiology, Health, Aarhus University, Høegh-Guldbergsgade 10, Bld. 1115, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark.
Secretin is a key hormone of the intestinal phase of digestion which activates pancreatic, bile duct and Brunner gland HCO secretion. Recently, the secretin receptor (SCTR) was also found in the basolateral membrane of the beta-intercalated cell (B-IC) of the collecting duct. Experimental addition of secretin triggers a pronounced activation of urinary HCO excretion, which is fully dependent on key functional proteins of the B-IC, namely apical pendrin and CFTR and the basolateral SCTR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPflugers Arch
April 2024
Institute of Cellular and Integrative Physiology, Center for Experimental Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Martinistrasse 52, 20246, Hamburg, Germany.
The kidney plays a crucial role in acid-base homeostasis. In the distal nephron, α-intercalated cells contribute to urinary acid (H) secretion and β-intercalated cells accomplish urinary base (HCO) secretion. β-intercalated cells regulate the acid base status through modulation of the apical Cl/HCO exchanger pendrin (SLC26A4) activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPflugers Arch
April 2024
Centre de dépistage et de Médecine de précision des Maladies Rénales, Service de Néphrologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Amiens-Picardie, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, F-80000, Amiens, France.
Pendrin (SLC26A4) is an anion exchanger from the SLC26 transporter family which is mutated in human patients affected by Pendred syndrome, an autosomal recessive disease characterized by sensoneurinal deafness and hypothyroidism. Pendrin is also expressed in the kidney where it mediates the exchange of internal HCO for external Cl at the apical surface of renal type B and non-A non-B-intercalated cells. Studies using pendrin knockout mice have first revealed that pendrin is essential for renal base excretion.
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