ID | 118944 |
Title Alternative | Alternative intestinal phosphate transporter in CKD
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Author |
Ichida, Yasuhiro
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Ohtomo, Shuichi
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Yamamoto, Tessai
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Murao, Naoaki
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Tsuboi, Yoshinori
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Kawabe, Yoshiki
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Segawa, Hiroko
Tokushima University
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Horiba, Naoshi
Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Miyamoto, Ken-ichi
Tokushima University
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Floege, Jürgen
RWTH Aachen University
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Keywords | chronic kidney disease
intestine
NaPi-IIb
phosphate PiT
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Background: Phosphate is absorbed in the small intestine via passive flow and active transport.NaPi-IIb, a type II sodium-dependent phosphate transporter, is considered to mediate active phosphate transport in rodents. To study the regulation of intestinal phosphate transport in chronic kidney disease (CKD), we analyzed the expression levels of NaPi-IIb, pituitary-specific transcription factor 1 (PiT-1) and PiT-2 and the kinetics of intestinal phosphate transport using two CKD models.
Methods: CKD was induced in rats via adenine orThy1 anti-body injection. Phosphate uptake by intestinal brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) and the messenger RNA (mRNA) expression of NaPi-IIb, PiT-1 and PiT-2 were analyzed. The protein expression level of NaPi-IIb was measured by mass spectrometry (e.g. liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry). Results: In normal rats, phosphate uptake into BBMV consisted of a single saturable component and its Michaelis constant (Km) was comparable to that of NaPi-IIb. The maximum velocity (Vmax) correlated with mRNA and protein levels of NaPi-IIb. In the CKD models, intestinal phosphate uptake consisted of two saturable components. The Vmax of the higher-affinity transport, which is thought to be responsible for NaPi-IIb, significantly decreased and the decrease correlated with reduced NaPi-IIb expression. The Km of the lower-affinity transport was comparable to that of PiT-1 and -2. PiT-1 mRNA expression was much higher than that of PiT-2, suggesting that PiT-1 was mostly responsible for phosphate transport. Conclusions: This study suggests that the contribution of NaPi-IIb to intestinal phosphate absorption dramatically decreases in rats with CKD and that a low-affinity alternative to NaPi-IIb, in particular PiT-1, is upregulated in a compensatory manner in CKD. |
Journal Title |
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
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ISSN | 09310509
14602385
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NCID | AA1073277X
AA12096159
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Publisher | Oxford University Press
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Volume | 36
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Issue | 1
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Start Page | 68
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End Page | 75
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Published Date | 2020-09-03
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Rights | This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
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language |
eng
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Publisher
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departments |
Medical Sciences
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