Evidence for NHE3-mediated Na transport in sheep and bovine forestomach. Rabbani, I; Siegling-Vlitakis, C; Noci, B; Martens, H American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
301
R313-9
2011
Show Abstract
Na absorption across the cornified, multilayered, and squamous rumen epithelium is mediated by electrogenic amiloride-insensitive transport and by electroneutral Na transport. High concentrations of amiloride (greater than 100 μM) inhibit Na transport, indicating Na(+)/H(+) exchange (NHE) activity. The underlying NHE isoform for transepithelial Na absorption was characterized by mucosal application of the specific inhibitor HOE642 for NHE1 and S3226 for NHE3 in Ussing chamber studies with isolated epithelia from bovine and sheep forestomach. S3226 (1 μM; NHE3 inhibitor) abolished electroneutral Na transport under control conditions and also the short-chain fatty acid-induced increase of Na transport via NHE. However, HOE642 (30 μM; NHE1 inhibitor) did not change Na transport rates. NHE3 was immunohistochemically localized in membranes of the upper layers toward the lumen. Expression of NHE1 and NHE3 has been previously demonstrated by RT-PCR, and earlier experiments with isolated rumen epithelial cells have shown the activity of both NHE1 and NHE3. Obviously, both isoforms are involved in the regulation of intracellular pH, pH(i). However, transepithelial Na transport is only mediated by apical uptake via NHE3 in connection with extrusion of Na by the basolaterally located Na-K-ATPase. The missing involvement of NHE1 in transepithelial Na transport suggests that the proposed "job sharing" in epithelia between these two isoforms probably also applies to forestomach epithelia: NHE3 for transepithelial transport and NHE1 for, among others, pH(i) and volume regulation. | | 21613579
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Angiotensin II-mediated biphasic regulation of proximal tubular Na+/H+ exchanger 3 is impaired during oxidative stress. Banday, AA; Lokhandwala, MF American journal of physiology. Renal physiology
301
F364-70
2011
Show Abstract
Angiotensin (ANG) II via AT1 receptors (AT1Rs) maintains sodium homeostasis by regulating renal sodium transporters including Na(+)/H(+) exchanger 3 (NHE3) in a biphasic manner. Low-ANG II concentration stimulates whereas high concentrations inhibit NHE3 activity. Oxidative stress has been shown to upregulate AT1R function that could modulate the ANG II-mediated NHE3 regulation. This study was designed to identify the signaling pathways responsible for ANG II-mediated biphasic regulation of proximal tubular NHE3 and the effect of oxidative stress on this phenomenon. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were chronically treated with a pro-oxidant L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) with and without an antioxidant tempol in tap water for 3 wk. BSO-treated rats exhibited oxidative stress and high blood pressure. At low concentration (1 pM) ANG II increased NHE3 activity in proximal tubules from all animals. However, in BSO-treated rats, the stimulation was more robust and was normalized by tempol treatment. ANG II (1 pM)-mediated NHE3 activation was abolished by AT1R blocker, intracellular Ca(2+) chelator, and inhibitors of phospholipase C (PLC) and Ca(2+)-dependent calmodulin (CaM) but it was insensitive to Giα and protein kinase C inhibitors or AT2R antagonist. A high concentration of ANG II (1 μM) inhibited NHE3 activity in control and tempol-treated rats. However, in BSO-treated rats, ANG II (1 μM) continued to induce NHE3 stimulation. Tempol restored the inhibitory effect of ANG II (1 μM) in BSO-treated rats. The inhibitory effect of ANG II (1 μM) involved AT1R-dependent, cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) activation and was independent of AT2 receptor and nitric oxide signaling. We conclude that ANG II stimulates NHE3 via AT1R-PLC-CaM pathway and inhibits NHE3 by AT1R-PKG activation. Oxidative stress impaired ANG II-mediated NHE3 biphasic response in that stimulation was observed at both high- and low-ANG II concentration. | Western Blotting | 21593187
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Loss of SED1/MFG-E8 results in altered luminal physiology in the epididymis. Raymond, AS; Elder, B; Ensslin, M; Shur, BD Molecular reproduction and development
77
550-63
2010
Show Abstract
SED1/MFG-E8, herein referred to as SED1, is a bimotif adhesive protein with ascribed functions in a range of cell-cell interactions, including sperm-egg binding. In the male reproductive tract, SED1 is secreted by the initial segment of the epididymis, where it coats sperm and subsequently facilitates binding to the egg zona pellucida. We have recently reported that SED1-null epididymides show an unexpected incidence of spermatic granulomas, reflecting breakdown of the epithelium and a consequent autoimmune response against sperm antigens. However, spermatic granulomas are most often manifest in the distal segments of the epididymis, whereas the bulk of SED1 is expressed in the proximal epididymis. In some models, the presence of granulomas in the distal epididymis is associated with an underlying defect in the maintenance of luminal fluid homeostasis. Herein, we report that SED1-null epididymal fluid is both hypo-osmotic and alkaline, relative to wildtype epididymal fluid. Furthermore, the SED1-null epididymal epithelium exhibits various hallmarks of disrupted fluid reabsorption and pH regulation, including altered morphology of clear cells, increased intracellular vesicles, and apical distribution of VATPase. Results indicate that the SED1-null epididymal pathologies are not the secondary consequences of defective testes or efferent ducts or of improper epididymal differentiation, unlike that seen in other epididymal models. The expression and distribution of various ion exchangers, channels, and enzymes that mediate fluid transport and pH regulation are examined in wildtype and SED1-null epididymides, and models to account for how SED1 functions in luminal fluid dynamics are discussed. | Immunohistochemistry | 20422713
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Estrogen actions in the male reproductive system involve estrogen response element-independent pathways. Weiss, J; Bernhardt, ML; Laronda, MM; Hurley, LA; Glidewell-Kenney, C; Pillai, S; Tong, M; Korach, KS; Jameson, JL Endocrinology
149
6198-206
2008
Show Abstract
The estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) acts through multiple pathways, including estrogen response element (ERE)-dependent (classical) and ERE-independent (nonclassical) mechanisms. We previously created a mouse model harboring a two-amino-acid mutation of the DNA-binding domain (E207A, G208A) that precludes direct binding of ERalpha to an ERE. After crossing heterozygous mutant mice with an ERalpha knockout (ERKO) line, it was possible to assess the degree of physiological rescue by the isolated ERalpha nonclassical allele (-/AA; AA) when compared with ERKO mice (-/-) and to wild type (+/+; WT). In male ERKO mice up to 8 months of age, testosterone levels were high, although LH levels were similar to WT. Testosterone was normal in the AA mice, indicating that the AA allele rescues the enhanced testosterone biosynthesis in ERKO mice. Male ERKO mice exhibited distention of the seminiferous tubules as early as 2-3 months of age as a consequence of decreased water resorption in the efferent ducts. By 3-4 months of age, ERKO mice had impaired spermatogenesis in approximately 40% of their tubules, and sperm counts and motility declined in association with the histological changes. In the AA mice, histological defects were greatly reduced or absent, and sperm counts and motility were rescued. Levels of aquaporins 1 and 9, which contribute to water uptake in the efferent ducts, were reduced in ERKO mice and partially or fully rescued in AA mice, whereas another water transporter, sodium-hydrogen exchanger-3, was decreased in both ERKO and AA mice. We conclude that non-ERE-dependent estrogen pathways are sufficient to rescue the defective spermatogenesis observed in ERKO mice and play a prominent role in ERalpha action in the testis, including pathways that regulate water resorption and androgen biosynthesis. | | 18719025
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Phenol injury-induced hypertension stimulates proximal tubule Na+/H+ exchanger activity. Leong, PK; Yang, LE; Landon, CS; McDonough, AA; Yip, KP American journal of physiology. Renal physiology
290
F1543-50
2006
Show Abstract
Injection of 50 microl 10% phenol into rat renal cortex activates renal sympathetic nerve activity which provokes acute hypertension that persists for weeks. We have previously shown with membrane fractionation that phenol injury caused a redistribution of the main proximal tubule (PT) apical transporter NHE3 (Na+/H+ exchanger isoform 3) to low density membranes enriched in apical microvilli. The aim of this study was to determine whether phenol injury increases PT apical Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) activity. NHE activity was measured in vivo as the initial rate of change in intracellular pH (dpH(i)/dt) during luminal Na+ removal in PT preloaded with the pH-sensitive fluorescence dye BCECF. Injection of 50 microl 10% phenol increased blood pressure from 113 +/- 5.2 to 130 +/- 4.6 mmHg without changing glomerular filtration rate or urine output. NHE activity increased 2.6-fold by 70 min after phenol injury. The increase of NHE activity was accompanied with an increase of tubular reabsorption. Total NHE activity/NHE3 protein in cortical brush-border membrane (BBM) vesicles, measured by acridine orange quench and immunoblot, respectively, was unchanged by phenol injury. In conclusion, acute phenol injury provokes coincident increases in PT apical NHE activity, redistribution of NHE3 into low density apical membranes, and hypertension. The increase in NHE activity may contribute to the lack of pressure-diuresis and the maintenance of chronic hypertension in this model. | | 16390865
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Differential traffic of proximal tubule Na+ transporters during hypertension or PTH: NHE3 to base of microvilli vs. NaPi2 to endosomes. Yang, LE; Maunsbach, AB; Leong, PK; McDonough, AA American journal of physiology. Renal physiology
287
F896-906
2004
Show Abstract
We previously reported that Na(+)/H(+) exchanger type 3 (NHE3) and NaPi2 are acutely retracted from the proximal tubule (PT) microvilli (MV) during acute hypertension [high blood pressure (BP)] or parathyroid hormone (PTH) treatment. By subcellular membrane fractionation, NHE3 and NaPi2 show indistinguishable redistribution patterns out of light-density into heavy-density membranes in response to either treatment consistent with a retraction from the apical MV to the intermicrovillar cleft region. This study aimed to examine the redistribution of PT NHE3 vs. NaPi2 by confocal and electron microscopy during high BP and during PTH treatment to determine whether their respective destinations overlap or are distinct. High-BP protocol: systolic BP was increased 50-60 mmHg by increasing peripheral resistance for 20 min; PTH protocol: rats were infused with 6.6 microg/kg iv of PTH followed by 0.1 microg.kg(-1).min(-1) infusion for 1 h. For light microscopy, rats were infused with 25 mg of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) 10 min before kidney fixation. Kidney slices were dual labeled with either NHE3 or NaPi2 and either clathrin-coated vesicle adaptor protein AP2 or endosome marker HRP. The results demonstrate retraction of NHE3 from the MV to the base of MV during either high-BP or PTH treatment: NHE3 staining did not retract below the AP2-stained domain or to HRP-labeled endosomes in either model. In comparison, NaPi2 was retracted from MV to below the AP2-stained region in both models, a little colocalizing with HRP staining. At the electron microscopic level with immunogold labeling, during high BP NHE3 was concentrated in a distinct domain in the base of the MV while NaPi2 moved to endosomes. The results demonstrate that there are divergent routes of retraction of PT NHE3 and NaPi2 from the MV during acute hypertension or PTH treatment: NHE3 is not internalized but remains at the base of the MV while NaPi2 is internalized. | | 15265767
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Estrogen action and male fertility:Roles of the sodium/hydrogen exchanger -3 and fluid reabsorption in reproductive tract function Zhou Q., et.al. PNAS, 98(24):14132-14137 (2001)
2001
| | 11698654
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NHE1, NHE2, and NHE3 contribute to regulation of intracellular pH in murine duodenal epithelial cells. J Praetorius, D Andreasen, B L Jensen, M A Ainsworth, U G Friis, T Johansen American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology
278
G197-206
2000
Show Abstract
Na(+)/H(+)-exchangers (NHE) mediate acid extrusion from duodenal epithelial cells, but the isoforms involved have not previously been determined. Thus we investigated 1) the contribution of Na(+)-dependent processes to acid extrusion, 2) sensitivity to Na(+)/H(+) exchange inhibitors, and 3) molecular expression of NHE isoforms. By fluorescence spectroscopy the recovery of intracellular pH (pH(i)) was measured on suspensions of isolated acidified murine duodenal epithelial cells loaded with 2', 7'-bis(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein. Expression of NHE isoforms was studied by RT-PCR and Western blot analysis. Reduction of extracellular Na(+) concentration ([Na(+)](o)) during pH(i) recovery decreased H(+) efflux to minimally 12.5% of control with a relatively high apparent Michaelis constant for extracellular Na(+). The Na(+)/H(+) exchange inhibitors ethylisopropylamiloride and amiloride inhibited H(+) efflux maximally by 57 and 80%, respectively. NHE1, NHE2, and NHE3 were expressed at the mRNA level (RT-PCR) as well as at the protein level (Western blot analysis). On the basis of the effects of low [Na(+)](o) and inhibitors we propose that acid extrusion in duodenal epithelial cells involves Na(+)/H(+) exchange by isoforms NHE1, NHE2, and NHE3. | | 10666043
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Mammalian Na+/H+ exchanger gene family: structure and function studies. Yun, C H, et al. Am. J. Physiol., 269: G1-11 (1995)
1995
| | 7631785
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Molecular cloning of putative members of the Na/H exchanger gene family. cDNA cloning, deduced amino acid sequence, and mRNA tissue expression of the rat Na/H exchanger NHE-1 and two structurally related proteins. Orlowski, J, et al. J. Biol. Chem., 267: 9331-9 (1992)
1992
| | 1577762
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