Metabolic Responses of Normal Rat Kidneys to a High Salt Intake

Author:

Shimada Satoshi1ORCID,Hoffmann Brian R2ORCID,Yang Chun1ORCID,Kurth Theresa1,Greene Andrew S2ORCID,Liang Mingyu1ORCID,Dash Ranjan K13ORCID,Cowley Allen W1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee, WI 53226 , USA

2. Mass Spectrometry and Protein Chemistry, Protein Sciences, The Jackson Laboratory , Bar Harbor, ME 04609 , USA

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Medical College of Wisconsin and Marquette University , Milwaukee, WI 53226 , USA

Abstract

Abstract In this study, novel methods were developed, which allowed continuous (24/7) measurement of arterial blood pressure and renal blood flow in freely moving rats and the intermittent collection of arterial and renal venous blood to estimate kidney metabolic fluxes of O2 and metabolites. Specifically, the study determined the effects of a high salt (HS; 4.0% NaCl) diet upon whole kidney O2 consumption and arterial and renal venous plasma metabolomic profiles of normal Sprague–Dawley rats. A separate group of rats was studied to determine changes in the cortex and outer medulla tissue metabolomic and mRNAseq profiles before and following the switch from a 0.4% to 4.0% NaCl diet. In addition, targeted mRNA expression analysis of cortical segments was performed. Significant changes in the metabolomic and transcriptomic profiles occurred with feeding of the HS diet. A progressive increase of kidney O2 consumption was found despite a reduction in expression of most of the mRNA encoding enzymes of TCA cycle. A novel finding was the increased expression of glycolysis-related genes in Cx and isolated proximal tubular segments in response to an HS diet, consistent with increased release of pyruvate and lactate from the kidney to the renal venous blood. Data suggests that aerobic glycolysis (eg, Warburg effect) may contribute to energy production under these circumstances. The study provides evidence that kidney metabolism responds to an HS diet enabling enhanced energy production while protecting from oxidative stress and injury. Metabolomic and transcriptomic analysis of kidneys of Sprague-Dawley rats fed a high salt diet.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Cell Biology,Molecular Medicine,Physiology

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