Renal sodium transport in renin-deficient Dahl salt-sensitive rats

Author:

Pavlov Tengis S1,Levchenko Vladislav1,Ilatovskaya Daria V1,Moreno Carol12,Staruschenko Alexander13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, USA

2. Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases, MedImmune, Cambridge, UK

3. Cardiovascular Center, Medical College of Wisconsin, USA

Abstract

Objective: The Dahl salt-sensitive rat is a well-established model of salt-sensitive hypertension. The goal of this study was to assess the expression and activity of renal sodium channels and transporters in the renin-deficient salt-sensitive rat. Methods: Renin knockout (Ren−/−) rats created on the salt-sensitive rat background were used to investigate the role of renin in the regulation of ion transport in salt-sensitive hypertension. Western blotting and patch-clamp analyses were utilized to assess the expression level and activity of Na+ transporters. Results: It has been described previously that Ren−/− rats exhibit severe kidney underdevelopment, polyuria, and lower body weight and blood pressure compared to their wild-type littermates. Here we found that renin deficiency led to decreased expression of sodium-hydrogen antiporter (NHE3), the Na+/H+ exchanger involved in Na+ absorption in the proximal tubules, but did not affect the expression of Na-K-Cl cotransporter (NKCC2), the main transporter in the loop of Henle. In the distal nephron, the expression of sodium chloride cotransporter (NCC) was lower in Ren−/− rats. Single-channel patch clamp analysis detected decreased ENaC activity in Ren−/− rats which was mediated via changes in the channel open probability. Conclusion: These data illustrate that renin deficiency leads to significant dysregulation of ion transporters.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Endocrinology,Internal Medicine

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