Thiazide-Sensitive NCC (Sodium-Chloride Cotransporter) in Human Metabolic Syndrome

Author:

Preston Richard A.123ORCID,Afshartous David1,Caizapanta Evelyn V.1,Materson Barry J.1,Rodco Rolando1,Alonso Eileen1,Alonso Alberto B.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Clinical Pharmacology Research Unit, Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, FL (R.A.P., D.A., E.V.C., B.J.M., R.R., E.A., A.B.A.)

2. University of Miami Clinical and Translational Science Institutes, FL (R.A.P.)

3. Peggy and Harold Katz Family Drug Discovery Center, Miami, FL (R.A.P.).

Abstract

The thiazide-sensitive sodium-chloride cotransporter (NCC;SLC12A3) is central to sodium and blood pressure regulation. Metabolic syndrome induces NCC upregulation generating sodium-sensitive hypertension in experimental animal models. We tested the role of NCC in sodium sensitivity in hypertensive humans with metabolic syndrome. Conversely, oral potassium induces NCC downregulation producing potassium-induced natriuresis. We determined the time course and magnitude of potassium-induced natriuresis compared with the natriuresis following hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) as a reference standard. We studied 19 obese hypertensive humans with metabolic syndrome during 13-day inpatient confinement. We determined sodium sensitivity by change in 24-hour mean systolic pressure by automated monitor from days 5 (low sodium) to 10 (high sodium). We determined NCC activity by standard 50 mg HCTZ sensitivity test (day 11). We determined potassium-induced natriuresis following 35 mmol KCl (day 13). We determined (1) whether NCC activity was greater in sodium-sensitive versus sodium-resistant participants and correlated with sodium sensitivity and (2) time course and magnitude of potassium-induced natriuresis following 35 mmol KCl directly compared with 50 mg HCTZ. NCC activity was not greater in sodium-sensitive versus sodium-resistant humans and did not correlate with sodium sensitivity. Thirty-five-millimoles KCl produced a rapid natriuresis approximately half that of 50 mg HCTZ with a greater kaliuresis. Our investigation tested a key hypothesis regarding NCC activity in human hypertension and characterized potassium-induced natriuresis following 35 mmol KCl compared with 50 mg HCTZ. In obese hypertensive adults with metabolic syndrome ingesting a high-sodium diet, 35 mmol KCl had a net natriuretic effect approximately half that of 50 mg HCTZ.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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