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1.
Although the occurrence of organic osmolytes in the inner medulla of the marsupial kidney has been recently reported [Comp. Biochem. Physiol. (2002) 132B 635-644], changes in these substances, in response to water loading in vivo, has not been studied. Adult Trichosurus vulpecula, the Australian brush-tailed possum, were subjected to water deprivation for 48 h. Following anaesthesia and unilateral nephrectomy, the animals were perfused with hypo-osmotic saline (80 mmol l(-1); 1.5 ml min(-1)) for 60 min. This resulted in a rapid increase in urine volume and a corresponding fall in urine osmolality. At the end of the infusion the animals were killed and the second kidney removed. Analysis of the renal tissue revealed that water content of cortical, outer and inner medullary regions of the kidney increased slightly following infusion, while sodium, and chloride contents of all three regions fell. Potassium contents, on the other hand, were barely changed. Of the organic osmolytes determined, very significant decreases in the inner medulla, following infusion, were found for sorbitol (from 397+/-79 to 266+/-49 mmol kg(-1) protein), inositol (247+/-23 to 190+/-25 mmol kg(-1) protein), and betaine (464+/-70 to 356+/-21 mmol kg(-1) protein), while only inositol was significantly decreased in the outer medulla (197+/-22 to 150+/-16 mmol kg(-1) protein). Glycerophosphorylcholine levels were low throughout the kidney and were not significantly affected by the infusion. It was concluded that inositol and sorbitol play a significant role as compatible organic osmolytes in the possum kidney, while betaine functions as the principal counteracting osmolyte. Amino acid levels in the cortex and outer medulla showed no overall change in amount following infusion, although there were highly significant changes in individual amino acids. In the inner medulla there was a highly significant reduction in total amino acids with infusion, largely due to a fall in amounts of taurine (104+/-4 to 75+/-17 mmol kg(-1) protein), and glycine (97+/-15 to 71+/-18 mmol kg(-1) protein). A fall in free amino acid levels in the inner medulla appears to significantly contribute to the process of intracellular osmotic adjustment during an induced diuresis.  相似文献   

2.
Glycerophosphorylcholine (GPC), sorbitol and inositol were quantitated in renal tubule suspensions from inner and outer medulla of untreated Sprague-Dawley rats to study the regulation of organic osmolyte concentrations under different metabolic conditions and varying extracellular osmolalities in vitro. Inner medullary tubules prepared in hypertonic saline (550 mosm/kg) contained osmolyte concentrations comparable to those found in the kidney in vivo. Incubation for up to 8 h at 5 mmol/l glucose increased sorbitol in the inner medullary tubules and medium in an osmolality-dependent fashion, whereas GPC and inositol remained constant. At a given glucose concentration the rate of sorbitol formation decreased linearly with increasing tubular sorbitol concentration, which was regulated by an osmolality-dependent export mechanism. Perturbation of tubular mechanisms by inhibition of glycolysis or oxidative phosphorylation did not change the tubular osmolyte content. In contrast to papilla outer medullary tubules contained only inositol. Lactate added as a metabolic substrate to the outer medullary tubules did not change the cellular inositol levels. In outer medullary tubules osmolality changes (320-710 mosm/kg) had no effect on tubular inositol. Addition of furosemide was without effect, when added in vitro. The results indicate that tubular sorbitol formation is regulated by glucose concentration, the level of tubular sorbitol, and an osmolality-dependent export mechanism. In contrast, cellular inositol and GPC levels seem to be independent of acute changes in tubular metabolism.  相似文献   

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Summary During antidiuresis cells in the renal inner medulla contain large amounts of sorbitol, myo-inositol, glycerophosphorylcholine and betaine to adjust the intracellular osmolality to the extracellular hyperosmolality. Although the accumulation of these four major organic osmolytes in the inner medulla of the dehydrated animal has been a consistent finding, the role of another class of organic osmolytes, amino acids, in osmoregulation in the kidney remains controversial. In the present study, renal responses of four major osmolytes and amino acids to dehydration were investigated using two HPLC systems. Taurine levels were significantly higher in the inner medulla of the dehydrated rats as compared with the control rats, and increased monotonically from the cortex to the inner medulla along the corticopapillary axis in the dehydrated rats. As for four major osmolytes, we confirm previously reported patterns in antidiuresis in greater detail. In conclusion, not only the four major osmolytes but taurine also plays a salient role in the osmoregulation in the kidney.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism that concentrates the urine to an osmolality several times that of systemic plasma results in high concentrations of solutes (particularly NaCl and urea) in extracellular fluid of renal medulla, but not in the labyrinth of the renal cortex. Intracellular and extracellular osmolality must be equal in animals, but the known intracellular levels of Na and K salts and urea in renal medullas are much too low to balance the high extracellular osmolality. The purpose of these studies was to identify the other intracellular osmolytes that must be present. Cortexes and medullas from rabbit and rat kidneys were analyzed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance, mass spectrometry, and chemical assays to determine the identity and amount of organic solutes. Large amounts of glycerophosphorylcholine, betaine, sorbitol, and inositol were found in both species localized almost exclusively to the inner medulla. In rabbits during antidiuresis glycerophosphorylcholine, betaine, and sorbitol were present in the inner medulla, at concentrations of 21.1, 34.8, and 20.8 mumol/g wet weight, respectively, but were not detected in the cortex. Inositol was present in rabbit inner medulla at 10.7 mumol/g wet weight and was also present in the cortex, but at lower concentration. None of the above metabolites was present in measurable amounts in urine or peripheral plasma. The accumulation in the cells of the inner medulla of relatively large amounts of betaine, sorbitol, glycerophosphorylcholine and inositol during antidiuresis suggests that they may play a significant role in the maintenance of intracellular osmotic balance.  相似文献   

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1. The mammalian renal medulla uses sorbitol, myo-inositol, betaine and glycerophosphorylcholine as intracellular osmolytes.2. Sorbitol synthesis was inhibited by feeding male Wistar rats the aldose reductase inhibitor sorbinil at 40 mg/kg/day for 71 d, and renal inner medullas were extracted for analysis.3. Aldose reductase activities and sorbitol contents were greatly reduced in sorbinil-treated animals, while betaine contents increased significantly (with no other osmolytes changing).4. The betaine increase compensated for the sorbitol decrease such that the total organic osmolytes maintained the same ratio to sodium contents as controls.5. These results are identical to the pattern previously reported for sorbinil treatment of rats for 10 d, but not for 21 d.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Urea, sodium, the methylamines glycine betaine and glycerophosphorylcholine (GPC), and the polyols sorbitol and myo-inositol are reported to be the major osmolytes in kidneys of laboratory mammals. These were measured (millimoles per kilogram wet weight) in kidney regions and urines of three species of wild rodents with different dehydration tolerances: the pocket mousePerognathus parvus (xeric), voleMicrotus montanus (mesic), and deer mousePeromyscus m. gambeli (intermediate). In animals kept without water for 4–6 days, sodium, urea, betaine and GPC+choline were found in gradients increasing from cortex to outer to inner medulla in all species, withPerognathus having the highest levels. Sorbitol was high in the inner medulla but low in the cortex and outer medulla; inositol was highest in the outer medulla. Totals of methylamines and methylamines plus polyols in the medulla showed high linear correlations (positive) with urea and with sodium values.Whole medullae were analyzed at several time points inMicrotus andPeromyscus subject to water diuresis followed by antidiuresis. In 102 h diuresis inMicrotus, all osmolytes decreased except inositol; however, only urea, sodium and sorbitol reached new steady states within 24 h. Urea returned to initial values in 18 h antidiuresis, while other osmolytes required up to 90 h. InPeromyscus, all osmolytes except the polyols declined in diuresis (max. 78 h test period). During antidiuresis, urea and GPC+choline rose to initial values in 18 h, with sodium and betaine requiring more time. In plots of both species combined, total methylamines+polyols correlated linearly (positive) with sodium, and GPC+choline with urea.Estimates of tissue concentrations suggest that total methylamines+polyols can account for intracellular osmotic balance in all species in antidiuresis and that sufficient concentrations of methylamines may be present to counteract perturbing effects of urea on proteins.Abbrevations GPC Glycero-3-phosphorylcholine - TCA trichloroacetic acid - M+P methylamines plus polyols  相似文献   

10.
Polyol determination along the rat nephron   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The polyols sorbitol and inositol were determined in single freshly microdissected tubule segments of rat kidney. Twenty different structures were separated from six different kidney zones reaching from cortex to papillary tip. Picomol amounts of sorbitol and inositol were quantitated by use of an enzymatic bioluminescence procedure. Experimental conditions (700 mosmol/kg, 4 degrees C) were chosen to assure constant polyol concentrations over 3 h dissection period. Sorbitol exhibited a concentration gradient in the collecting duct system from the outer/inner medullary border (3.9 +/- 0.5 pmol/mm) to the papillary tip (78.8 +/- 6.9 pmol/mm). In the same region descending and ascending limbs of Henle's loop contained 1.5 +/- 0.5 to 5.3 +/- 1.6 pmol/mm and 2.5 +/- 0.8 to 8.35 +/- 1.5 pmol/mm, respectively. In contrast, all outer medullary and cortical structures had lower sorbitol concentrations. Inositol amounts increased continuously in the collecting duct from cortex (5.3 +/- 0.5 pmol/mm) to inner medulla (30.7 +/- 3.8 pmol/mm). This polyol was also found in thick ascending limb of Henle's loop (6.2 +/- 1.1 pmol/mm in cortex to 11.2 +/- 1.4 pmol/mm in outer medulla) and in proximal tubules (5.6 +/- 1.2 pmol/mm in S1 and 4.5 +/- 1.5 pmol/mm in S3). When related to cellular volume measured by planimetry, intracellular sorbitol concentration was calculated to be 51 mmol/l in papillary collecting duct and inositol 28 mmol/l in outer medullary thick ascending limb cells. These data confirm the role of sorbitol in the renal concentrating process in papilla. Inositol seems to have additional function in thick ascending limb of Henle's loop and the proximal tubule.  相似文献   

11.
Organic osmolytes are used in animal and plant cells to adapt to hyper- and hypoosmolar stress. We used our RBC-membrane model to investigate the effects of the osmolytes betaine, sorbitol and myo-inositol on Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase, Ca(2+)-ATPase and calmodulin-stimulated Ca(2+)-ATPase (CaM). Our results show that betaine inhibited ATPases by more than 61%: Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase (75 +/- 5.9 vs 27 +/- 2.2), Ca(2+)-ATPase (236 +/- 18.9 vs 62 +/- 4.9), and CaM (450 +/- 18 vs 174 +/- 6.9) (microM pi/min/mg protein, control (0 microM betaine) vs 100 micromol/L betaine). Sorbitol (100 micromol/L) inhibited the Ca(2+)-ATPases by 41% (126 +/- 7.6 vs 74 +/- 4.4) and CaM by 42% (253 +/- 17.7 vs 147 +/- 10.3). Inositol (100 micromol/L) inhibited Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase strongest (37 +/- 1.9 vs 20 +/- 1.0; 47% inhibition) while it showed a lesser effect on the Ca(2+)-ATPases (136 +/- 6.8 vs 102 +/- 5.1; 25% inhibition). All osmolytes inhibited RBC membrane ATPases at concentrations above 50 micromol/L, which corresponds to high normal physiologic range for organic osmolytes in serum. Furthermore, the presence of osmolytes (250 micromol/L) decreased hypoosmotic stress induced hemolysis by 42%. Together these data indicate an important regulatory role of organic osmolytes on human RBC membrane ATPases and a protective function of osmolytes in RBCs against hypoosmotic stress.  相似文献   

12.
Renal medullary cells are normally exposed to high extracellular NaCl as part of the urinary concentrating mechanism. They react to this stress by accumulating sorbitol and other organic osmolytes. PAP-HT25, a line of epithelial cells derived from rabbit renal inner medulla, expresses this response. In hypertonic medium, these cells accumulate large amounts of sorbitol. There is a large increase in the amount of aldose reductase, which catalyzes production of sorbitol from glucose. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether the aldose reductase protein increases because of faster synthesis or slower degradation. We measured the rate of synthesis and degradation of aldose reductase protein by pulse-chase with [35S]methionine, followed by immunoprecipitation with specific antiserum and autoradiography. The protein synthesis rate was 6 times greater in cells grown in hypertonic (500 mosmol/kg) medium, than in those grown in normal (300 mosmol/kg) medium. When control cells were switched to hypertonic medium, the synthesis rate increased 15-fold by 24 h, then decreased to 11-fold after 48 h. In contrast, synthesis rate continued to increase past 24 h when accumulation of sorbitol was prevented by inhibiting aldose reductase activity with Tolrestat. Thus, there is a feedback mechanism by which cellular sorbitol accumulation inhibits aldose reductase protein synthesis. Degradation of aldose reductase protein was slow (only about 25% in 3 days) and was not affected by osmolality. Thus, the osmoregulatory increase in aldose reductase protein is due to an increase in its synthesis rate and not to any change in its degradation.  相似文献   

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Cells of the renal medulla adapt osmotically to varying external electrolyte concentrations mainly by changing the intracellular content of small organic osmoeffectors (osmolytes) such as sorbitol, inositol and trimethylamines. This implies that despite extreme variations in extracellular tonicity the intracellular concentrations of monovalent electrolytes are stabilized at levels optimal for enzyme function and cell metabolism. In contrast to inorganic electrolytes these organic osmolytes are metabolically neutral and thus do not affect cell metabolism. In addition, some of these organic osmoeffectors, the trimethylamine compounds, are known to counteract the deleterious effects of high urea concentrations (prevailing in antidiuresis) on structure and function of cell proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The Australian brush-tailed possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, is capable of producing a moderately concentrated urine, at least up to 1300 mOsm l(-1). Kidneys of adult animals fed in captivity on a normal diet with ready access to water were analysed. The inner medullary regions were found to have moderately high concentrations of sodium (outer medulla, 367+/-37; inner medulla 975+/-93 mmol kg(-1) dry wt.), chloride (outer medulla 240+/-21; inner medulla 701+/-23 mmol kg(-1) dry wt.) and urea (outer medulla, 252+/-62; inner medulla, 714+/-69 mmol kg(-1) protein). When the animals were fed on a 'wet diet', amounts of these substances in the outer medulla and cortex were reduced, although with the exception of urea these changes were not significant. There were highly significant changes in amounts of Na(+), Cl(-) and urea in the inner medulla (Na(+), 566+/-7; Cl(-), 422+/-9 mmol kg(-1) dry wt.; urea 393+/-84 mmol kg(-1) protein). Likewise, the inner medulla of animals fed a 'dry diet' with limited access to water showed highly significant increases in the same substances (Na(+), 1213+/-167; Cl(-), 974+/-137 mmol kg(-1) dry wt.; urea, 1672+/-98 mmol kg(-1) protein). Inositol was found in the outer medulla (224+/-90 mmol kg(-1) protein) and inner medulla (282 mmol kg(-1) protein) as was sorbitol (outer medulla, 62+/-20; inner medulla, 274+/-72 mmol kg(-1) protein). Both these polyols were reduced in amount in renal tissue from 'wet diet' animals, and increased in 'dry diet' animals, but the changes were not statistically significant. The methylamines, betaine and glycerophosphorylcholine (GPC), showed a similar pattern, but both were significantly elevated in the inner medulla of 'dry diet' animals (betaine 154+/-57 to 315+/-29 mmol kg(-1) protein; GPC 35+/-7 to 47+/-10 mmol kg(-1) protein). It was concluded that in this marsupial the concentrating mechanism probably functions in a similar way to that in higher mammals, and that the mechanism of osmoprotection of the medulla of the kidney involves the same osmolytes. However, the high ratio of betaine to GPC in the inner medulla resembles the situation in the avian kidney.  相似文献   

16.
Many hypertonic bacteria, plants, marine animals, and the mammalian renal medulla are protected from the deleterious effects of high intracellular concentrations of electrolytes by accumulating high concentrations of the nonperturbing osmolyte betaine. When kidney-derived Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells are cultured in hypertonic medium, they accumulate betaine to 1,000 times its medium concentration. This results from induction by hypertonicity of high rates of betaine transport into cells. We have isolated a cDNA (BGT-1) encoding a renal betaine transporter by screening an MDCK cell cDNA library for expression of a betaine transporter in Xenopus oocytes. The cDNA encodes a single protein of 614 amino acids, with an estimated molecular weight of 69 kDa. The deduced amino acid sequence exhibits highly significant sequence and topographic similarity to brain gamma-amino-n-butyric acid (GABA) and noradrenaline transporters, suggesting that the renal BGT-1 is a member of the brain GABA/noradrenaline transporter gene family. Expression in oocytes indicates that the BGT-1 protein has both betaine and GABA transport activities that are Cl(-)- as well as Na(+)-dependent and functionally similar to betaine and GABA transport in MDCK cells. Northern hybridization indicates that transporter mRNA is localized to the kidney medulla and is induced in MDCK cells by hypertonicity.  相似文献   

17.
Kidney medullary cells in situ, as well as kidney-derived Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells accumulate nonperturbing, small organic solutes (osmolytes), including myo-inositol, when bathed in hypertonic media. Accumulation of osmolytes balances the osmolality of extracellular fluid without raising intracellular salts that would perturb cellular functions. In hypertonic media, increased myo-inositol accumulation is the result of increased activity of a Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter. We have isolated a cDNA encoding a Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter from MDCK cells using expression in Xenopus oocytes. The cDNA sequence predicts a protein of 718 amino acids with a significant amino acid sequence similarity to the Na+/D-glucose cotransporters of absorbing epithelia. Transporter mRNA is present in kidney and brain and is markedly induced in MDCK cells by medium hypertonicity, demonstrating that adaptation to hypertonic stress involves up-regulation of transporter mRNA accumulation.  相似文献   

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We investigated the effect of compatible and non-compatible osmolytes in combination with macromolecular crowding on the kinetics of yeast hexokinase. This was motivated by the fact that almost all studies concerning the osmolyte effects on enzyme activity have been performed in diluted buffer systems, which are far from the physiological conditions within cells, where the cytosol contains several hundred mg protein ml(-1). Four organic (glycerol, betaine, TMAO and urea) and one inorganic (NaCl) osmolyte were tested. It was concluded that the effect of compatible osmolytes (glycerol, betaine and TMAO) on V(max) and K(M) was practically equivalent in pure buffer and in 200-250 mg BSA ml(-1) supporting the view that these small organic osmolytes do minimal perturbance on enzyme function in physiological solutions. The effect of urea on enzyme kinetics was not independent of protein concentration, since the presence of 250 mg BSA ml(-1) partly compensated the perturbing effect of urea. Even though the organic osmolytes glycerol, betaine and TMAO are generally considered compatible with enzyme function, especially glycerol did have a significant effect on hexokinase kinetics, decreasing both k(cat), K(M) and k(cat)/K(M). The osmolytes decreased k(cat)/K(M) in the order: NaCl>Urea>TMAO/glycerol>betaine. For the organic osmolytes this order correlates with the degree of exclusion from protein-water interfaces. Thus, the stronger the exclusion the weaker the perturbing effects on k(cat)/K(M).  相似文献   

20.
Methylamines and polyols are known to behave as organic osmolytes in the adaptation of many cells to hyperosmolar conditions. Using 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to analyze perchloric acid extracts we have examined several tissues in the rat for the presence of these compounds. Methylamines such as glycerophosphorylcholine, choline and betaine were observed in the renal inner medulla, urinary bladder, urine, liver, brain, and plasma. Myoinositol was relatively abundant in the renal inner medulla and brain whereas sorbitol was detected only in the inner medulla. A variety of unidentified compounds was also detected in each tissue. Although these methylamines and polyols are known to respond to osmotic changes in the renal inner medulla, their responses in other tissues remain to be investigated.  相似文献   

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