| Literature DB >> 18446382 |
Michael J Stechman1, Nellie Y Loh, Rajesh V Thakker.
Abstract
Renal stone disease (nephrolithiasis) affects 3-5% of the population and is often associated with hypercalciuria. Hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis is a familial disorder in over 35% of patients and may occur as a monogenic disorder that is more likely to manifest itself in childhood. Studies of these monogenic forms of hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis in humans, e.g. Bartter syndrome, Dent's disease, autosomal dominant hypocalcemic hypercalciuria (ADHH), hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis with hypophosphatemia, and familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria have helped to identify a number of transporters, channels and receptors that are involved in regulating the renal tubular reabsorption of calcium. Thus, Bartter syndrome, an autosomal disease, is caused by mutations of the bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-Cl (NKCC2) co-transporter, the renal outer-medullary potassium (ROMK) channel, the voltage-gated chloride channel, CLC-Kb, the CLC-Kb beta subunit, barttin, or the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR). Dent's disease, an X-linked disorder characterized by low molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria and nephrolithiasis, is due to mutations of the chloride/proton antiporter 5, CLC-5; ADHH is associated with activating mutations of the CaSR, which is a G-protein-coupled receptor; hypophosphatemic hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis associated with rickets is due to mutations in the type 2c sodium-phosphate co-transporter (NPT2c); and familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria is due to mutations of paracellin-1, which is a member of the claudin family of membrane proteins that form the intercellular tight junction barrier in a variety of epithelia. These studies have provided valuable insights into the renal tubular pathways that regulate calcium reabsorption and predispose to hypercalciuria and nephrolithiasis.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18446382 PMCID: PMC2770137 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-008-0807-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Genetic defects associated with some monogenic forms of hypercalciuria
| Diseasea | Mode of inheritanceb | Genec | Human chromosomal location | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Idiopathic hypercalciuria | ||||
| A-d | SAC | 1q23.3-q24 | [ | |
| A-d | VDR | 12q12-q14 | [ | |
| A-d | ? | 9q33.2-q34.2 | [ | |
| ADHH | A-d | CASR | 3q21.1 | [ |
| Hypercalcemia with hypercalciuria | A-d | CASR | 3q21.1 | [ |
| Bartter syndromes | ||||
| Type I | A-r | SLC12A1/NKCC2 | 15q15-q21.1 | [ |
| Type II | A-r | KCNJ1/ROMK | 11q24 | [ |
| Type IIId | A-r | CLCNKB | 1q36 | [ |
| Type IVd | A-r | BSND | 1q31 | [ |
| Type V | A-d | CASR | 3q21.1 | [ |
| Type VIe | X-r | CLCN5 | Xp11.22 | [ |
| Dent’s disease | X-r | CLCN5 | Xp11.22 | [ |
| Lowe’s syndrome | X-r | OCRL1 | Xq25 | [ |
| HHRH | A-r | NPT2c/SLC34A3 | 9q34 | [ |
| Nephrolithiasis, osteoporosis and hypophosphatemia | A-d | NPT2a/SLC34A1 | 5q35 | [ |
| Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis | A-r | PCLN1/CLDN16 | 3q28 | [ |
| Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis with ocular abnormalities | A-r | CLDN19 | 1p34.2 | [ |
| dRTA | A-d | SLC4A1/kAE1 | 17q21.31 | [ |
| dRTA with sensorineural deafness | A-r | ATP6B1/ATP6V1B1 | 2p13 | [ |
| dRTA with preserved hearing | A-r | ATP6N1B/ATP6V0A4 | 7q34 | [ |
aADHH autosomal dominant hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria, HHRH hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria, dRTA distal renal tubular acidosis
bA-d autosomal dominant, A-r autosomal recessive, X-r X-linked recessive
cSAC human soluble adenylyl cyclase; VDR vitamin D receptor; CASR calcium-sensing receptor; SLC12A1 solute carrier family 12, member 1; NKCC2 sodium–potassium–chloride co-transporter 2; KCNJ1 potassium channel, inwardly rectifying, subfamily J, member 1; ROMK renal outer medullary potassium channel; CLCNKB chloride channel Kb; BSND Barttin; CLCN5 chloride channel 5; OCRL1 oculo-cerebro-renal syndrome of Lowe 1; NPT2c/a sodium–phosphate co-transporter type 2c/a; SLC34A1/3 solute carrier family 34, member 1/3; PCLN1 paracellin; CLDN16/19 claudin 16/19; SLC4A1 solute carrier family 4, member 1; kAE1 kidney anion exchanger 1; ATP6B1 ATPase, H+ transporting (vacuolar proton pump), V1 subunit B1; ATP6N1B ATPase, H+ transporting, lysosomal V0 subunit a4
dBartter type III is associated with hypercalciuria but not nephrocalcinosis; Bartter type IV is not associated with persistent hypercalciuria or nephrocalcinosis, but these are included here for completeness
eBartter type VI has been reported in one patient only, who had hypercalciuria
Hereditary diseases associated with hypercalcemia and hypercalciuria (FIHP familial isolated hyperparathyroidism, MEN multiple endocrine neoplasia, HPT-JT hyperparathyroidism–jaw tumor syndrome)
| Disorder | Clinical features | Gene product | Chromosomal location of the gene |
|---|---|---|---|
| FIHP | Familial isolated parathyroid tumors | Menin | 11q13 |
| Parafibromin | 1q31.2 | ||
| CaSR | 3q21.1 | ||
| MEN1 | Parathyroid hyperplasia and/or tumors associated with pituitary and pancreatico-duodenal neuro-endocrine tumors | Menin | 11q13 |
| MEN2a | Parathyroid tumors with medullary thyroid cancer and pheochromocytoma | Ret | 10q11.2 |
| HPT-JT | Parathyroid tumors with ossifying fibromas of the jaw | Parafibromin | 1q31.2 |
Fig. 1Suggested algorithm for the investigation of a child with hypercalciuria and nephrolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis, based initially on measurements of plasma calcium and PTH. For the hypocalcemic patient, hypoparathyroidism in this context, i.e. in association with hypercalciuria, is rare and is included here for completeness. One study of 85 patients with hypoparathyroidism and 15 ADHH patients has shown that prior to their treatment with vitamin D to correct the hypocalcemia, the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio in ADHH patients was generally higher than that found in patients with hypoparathyroidism, although there was an overlap [94]. Following treatment with vitamin D, the urinary calcium/creatinine ratios in ADHH and hypoparathyroid patients were similar [94]. Hence, it may be difficult for patients with hypoparathyroidism to be distinguished from those with ADHH on the sole basis of urinary calcium excretion evaluations [94]