Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3883788 Kidney International 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Metabolically generated acid is the major physiological stimulus for increasing proximal tubule citrate reabsorption, which leads to a decrease in citrate excretion. The activity of the Na-citrate cotransporter, NaDC-1, is increased in vivo by acid ingestion and in vitro by an acidic pH medium. In opossum kidney cells the acid stimulatory effect and the ability of endothelin-1 (ET-1) to stimulate NaDC-1 activity are both blocked by the endothelin B (ETB) receptor antagonist, BQ788. Acid feeding had no effect on brush border membrane NaDC-1 activity in mice in which ETB receptor expression was knocked out, whereas a stimulatory effect was found in wild-type mice. Using ETA/ETB chimeric and ETB C-terminal tail truncated constructs, ET-1 stimulation of NaDC-1 required a receptor C-terminal tail from either ETA or ETB. The ET-1 effect was greatest when either the ETB transmembrane domain and C-terminal tail were present or the ETB C-terminal tail was linked to the ETA transmembrane domain. This effect was smaller when the ETB transmembrane domain was linked to the ETA C-terminal tail. Thus, the acid-activated pathway mediating stimulation of NaDC-1 activity requires a functional ETB receptor in vivo and in vitro, as does acid stimulation of NHE3 activity. Since increased NaDC-1 and NHE3 activities constitute part of the proximal tubule adaptation to an acid load, these studies indicate that there are similarities in the signaling pathway mediating these responses.

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