Author:
Aruga Seiji,Pajor Ana M.,Nakamura Kiyoshi,Liu Liping,Moe Orson W.,Preisig Patricia A.,Alpern Robert J.
Abstract
Urinary citrate concentration, a major factor in the formation of kidney stones, is primarily determined by its rate of reabsorption in the proximal tubule. Citrate reabsorption is mediated by the Na-dicarboxylate cotransporter-1 (NaDC-1). The opossum kidney (OKP) cell line possesses many characteristics of the renal proximal tubule. The OKP NaDC-1 (oNaDC-1) cDNA was cloned and encodes a 2.4-kb mRNA. When injected into Xenopus oocytes, the cotransporter is expressed and demonstrates Na-coupled citrate transport with a stoichiometry of ≥3 Na:1 citrate, specificity for di- and tricarboxylates, pH-dependent citrate transport, and pH-independent succinate transport, all characteristics of the other NaDC-1 orthologs. Chronic metabolic acidosis increases proximal tubule citrate reabsorption, leading to profound hypocitraturia and an increased risk for stone formation. Under the conditions studied, endogenous OKP NaDC-1 mRNA abundance is not regulated by changes in media pH. In OKP cells transfected with a green fluorescent protein-oNaDC-1 construct, however, media acidification increases Na-dependent citrate uptake, demonstrating posttranscriptional acid regulation of NaDC-1 activity.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
20 articles.
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