| Literature DB >> 34751394 |
Anastasia V Sudarikova1, Valeriia Y Vasileva1, Regina F Sultanova2, Daria V Ilatovskaya3.
Abstract
This review focuses on the most recent advances in the understanding of the electrolyte transport-related mechanisms important for the development of severe inherited renal disorders, autosomal dominant (AD) and recessive (AR) forms of polycystic kidney disease (PKD). We provide here a basic overview of the origins and clinical aspects of ARPKD and ADPKD and discuss the implications of electrolyte transport in cystogenesis. Special attention is devoted to intracellular calcium handling by the cystic cells, with a focus on polycystins and fibrocystin, as well as other calcium level regulators, such as transient receptor potential vanilloid type 4 (TRPV4) channels, ciliary machinery, and purinergic receptor remodeling. Sodium transport is reviewed with a focus on the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), and the role of chloride-dependent fluid secretion in cystic fluid accumulation is discussed. In addition, we highlight the emerging promising concepts in the field, such as potassium transport, and suggest some new avenues for research related to electrolyte handling.Entities:
Keywords: Electrolyte transport; Ion channels; Kidney; Polycystic Kidney Disease; Renal Physiology; purinergic signaling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34751394 PMCID: PMC8589009 DOI: 10.1042/CS20210370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sci (Lond) ISSN: 0143-5221 Impact factor: 6.124
Figure 1Schematic representation of renal cysts morphology in ADPKD and ARPKD
A healthy nephron with major segments is shown . In ADPKD (), cysts can form in any nephron segments (including glomeruli); however, they are primarily located in distal regions and the CD. The cysts grow and eventually detach from the rest of the tubule but continue to accumulate fluid. In ARPKD (), cysts are formed in the distal nephron, mainly the CDs, and are presented by dilated tubules, which remain connected with the rest of the nephron. Abbreviation: G, glomerulus; CD, collecting duct.
The expression and function of ion channels in various ARPKD and ADPKD models vs healthy renal epithelia
| ADPKD or ARPKD | Model/species | Effector/force | Action/effect | Changes in expression level of mRNA/protein for the channel/transporter of interest | Reference |
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| ADPKD | VX-809, a corrector of CFTR | VX-809 ↓cyst growth | ↓ αENaC protein reduced in | [ | |
| M1 renal monolayers/mouse | P2X7 (αβmeATP) | P2X7 stimulation ↓ ENaC activity | N/A | [ | |
| ARPKD | Immortalized cells of ARPKD renal cysts/human | ↑ amiloride-sensitive Na+ absorption compared with control cells | ↑ αENaC both mRNA and protein vs control cells | [ | |
| PCK rat kidney; primary cultured PCK CD cells/rat | Mislocalization of E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase Nedd 4-2 | ↑ Amiloride-sensitive Na+ reabsorption vs control rats | ↑ α, β, γ ENaC protein vs control rats | [ | |
| Cilium-deficient | Tg737orpk mutation | ↑ Amiloride and benzamil-sensitive ENaC-mediated Na+ absorption vs control mouse | N/A | [ | |
| CD principal cells from | N/A | ↓ Amiloride-sensitive ENaC-mediated Na+ absorption vs normal mice | αENaC mRNA detected, changes vs normal mice not tested | [ | |
| Primary monolayer cultures of cystic CD principal cells/mouse | Mislocalization of apical EGF receptors; EGF | ↓ Na+ transport | ↓ αENaC mRNA vs non-cystic cells | [ | |
| PCK rats/rat | Salt-deficient diet (SD) | ↑ cyst growth, ↑ miR-9a-5p in SD diet-fed group vs normal and high salt-fed groups | ↑ α, β, γ ENaC mRNA, ↓ αENaC protein in SD diet fed group vs normal and high salt-fed groups | [ | |
| ARPKD cysts from PCK rats/rat | Benzamil | ↓ ENaC activity; ↑ cyst growth in 4- or 12-week benzamil-treated PCK rats | ↓ β-ENaC protein | [ | |
| PCK rats/rat | ↓ ENaC activity; | N/A | [ | ||
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| ADPKD | Fluid shear stress (FSS) | ↑FSS-sensitive ATP release | ↑mRNA expression | [ | |
| FSS; Pannexin-1 inhibition by BB-FCF or knockout | ↑FSS-sensitive ATP release; Pannexin-1 inhibition (by BB-FCF) or knockout ↓FSS sensitive ATP release | ↑mRNA expression | [ | ||
| zebrafish pkd2 morphants (pkd2-MO) | BB-FCF (Pannexin-1 inhibitor) | Pannexin-1 inhibition attenuated cyst growth | N/A | [ | |
| Pkd1RC/RC mouse kidneys/mouse; M1 renal monolayers/mouse | 50 μM probenecid (PANX1 blocker) | ↑ cyst growth; probenecid treatment of M-1 cells ↓shear-stress-stimulated ATP release | ↑protein | [ | |
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| ADPKD | ADPKD kidneys and primary cultured ADPKD cells/human | N/A | N/A | mRNA; protein, apical localization detected in cystic cells | [ |
| CD-derived mCCD-N21 cells/mouse | Forskolin, CPT-cAMP, a membrane-permeable cAMP analog (cAMP-elevating agents); NPPB, 50–100 μM or CFTRinh172, 10–20 μM (CFTR Inhibitors) | ↑tubule enlargement and cyst formation; NPPB ↓ tubule enlargement and cyst formation, in part inhibited aldosterone- and/or vasopressin-induced Isc | mRNA detected | [ | |
| Primary cultures of ADPKD cells/human | Forskolin; CPT-cAMP, a membrane-permeable cAMP analog; glibenclamide, 200 μM; DPC, 500 μM (CFTR channel inhibitors) | ↑ activity of CFTR channel; glibenclamide, DPC inhibit Cl− currents | protein, apical membrane localization detected | [ | |
| MDCK cell model/dog embryonic kidney cyst model ( | Thiazolidinone tetrazolo-CFTRinh172, glycine hydrazide Ph-GlyH-101 (CFTR inhibitors), IC50 > 3 μM | ↓ 8-Br-cAMP-induced cyst number and growth | N/A | [ | |
| Embryonic kidney organ culture model of PKD/mouse | Pyrimido-pyrrolo-quinoxalinedione PPQ-102, IC50 ∼ 90 nM | ↓ 8-Br-cAMP-induced cyst number and growth | N/A | [ | |
| Thiazolidinone CFTRinh172, 100 μM | ↓ cyst formation, | N/A | [ | ||
| VX-809, a corrector of CFTR | VX-809 increases CFTR at the apical membrane, but most strongly at the basolateral membrane | Protein, apical membrane localization detected | [ | ||
| Principal-like (pl)MDCK cyst model/canine | ↑Cl− secretion, cyst size; ↓ cyst growth in the presence of forskolin by inhibition of CFTR | ↑Protein | [ | ||
| MDCK cyst model/canine | Knockdown of CFTR, CFTRinh172, 10 μM | ↓ cyst growth | N/A | [ | |
| ARPKD | CFTR knockout | The loss of CFTR does not alter the course of ARPKD cystic disease | N/A | [ | |
| VX-809 (CFTR corrector), heat shock proteins: ↑ HSP27 or ↓HSP70 or HSP90 | ↑ forskolin-induced cyst growth, altered colocalization of CFTR with both apical and basolateral membranes; VX-809 and HSPs ↓cyst growth and restored CFTR localization toward normal values | ↓ protein | [ | ||
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| ADPKD | Principal-like MDCK cyst model/dog; ADPKD tissue/human; Metanephric kidney cyst model/mouse | Forskolin (adenylyl cyclase agonist), UTP, ATP; tannic acid AO1 (selective inhibitor of anoctamin 1) Knockdown of anoctamin 1 | UTP ↑ Cl− secretion; AO1 or knockdown of anoctamin 1 ↓ Ca2+-dependent Cl− secretion; in metanephric kidney: knockdown and inhibitors ↓ forkolin-induced cyst growth | Forskolin ↑protein in the apical membrane, mRNA detected | [ |
| Renal CD principle cells from dog (MDCK)/canine and M1/mouse | Knockdown of | ↑ intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) signals, purinergic Ca2+ release from ER, Cl− secretion and cyst cell proliferation | ↑mRNA, ↑protein | [ | |
| Principal-like MDCK cyst model/dog | ↑Cl− secretion, [Ca2+]i and cyst cell proliferation; ↓ cyst growth in the presence of niclosamide | ↑protein | [ | ||
| Niclosamide benzbromarone Ani9 (TMEM16A specific inhibitor) | ↓ cyst growth and cyst cell proliferation | ↑protein | [ | ||
| ↓ cyst growth and cyst cell proliferation | ↓protein | [ | |||
| Tissue samples from patients with ADPKD/human, embryonic PKD1−/− kidney cultures/mouse, MDCK cyst model/dog | ROS, peroxidation of plasma membrane phospholipids (e.g. tert-butyl hydroperoxide (tBHP)), ATP, UTP; scavengers of ROS glutathione, coenzyme Q10; ferrostatin-1; idebenone, AO1; knockdown of T16A | ↑activity of TMEM16A, cyst growth, Ca2+ signaling, Ca2+-sensitive adenylate cyclase ADCY1; scavengers of ROS delay cyst enlargement, ↓activation of TMEM16A | ↑protein | [ | |
| Primary renal epithelial cells isolated from | Gender | Basal [Ca2+]i higher in males compared with females, ↑basal and ATP-stimulated Cl− currents, ↑ cell proliferation and cyst development in male kidneys | Protein level not different between male and female | [ | |
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| ADPKD | ADPKD kidneys and primary cultured ADPKD cells/human | N/A | N/A | mRNA detected; protein-basolateral localization (in same cells where CFTR is also expressed) | [ |
| CD-derived mCCD-N21 cells/mouse | Bumetanide or ethacrynic acid (NKCC1 inhibitors) | ↓ AVP- and aldosterone-stimulated short-circuit current, tubular enlargement and cyst formation | Aldosterone ↑ mRNA expression, forskolin didn't change mRNA level | [ | |
| Bumetanide | ↓ Cyst formation | Protein detected | [ | ||
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| ADPKD | Cells derived from the cysts of patients with ADPKD/human | Glibenclamide, 25–100 μM (inhibitor of ATP-sensitive K+ channels and CFTR) | Glibenclamide modestly decreased forskolin-stimulated current at the apical membrane. Its basolateral application ↓Isc to a greater extent. ↓ cyst growth and proliferation | mRNA detected | [ |
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| ADPKD | MDCK/dog; kidney cells derived from patients with ADPKD/human | Forskolin, DCEBIO (KCa3.1 activator); TRAM-34, overexpression of myotubularin-related protein-6 (specific KCa3.1 blockers) | ↑anion secretion, KCa3.1 channel activity, in vitro cyst growth; ↓anion secretion, in vitro cyst formation and enlargement | mRNA detected | [ |
| Principal-like MDCK cyst model/canine | Clotrimazole (SK4 inhibitor) | ↓ ATP, UTP-induced Cl− secretion | N/A | [ | |
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| ADPKD | Primary ADPKD cells/human | Flow | ↓TRPV4 activity, basal [Ca2+]i, loss of flow-induced [Ca2+]i signaling compared with normal kidney (NK) cells | Protein expression did not change vs NK cells; TRPV4 glycosylation was reduced in ADPKD cells | [ |
| ARPKD | CD cysts derived from PCK rats/rat | Flow; GSK1016790A (selective TRPV4 activator) | ↓TRPV4 activity, basal [Ca2+]i, loss of flow-induced [Ca2+]i signaling compared with normal kidney cells; GSK1016790A restored mechanosensitive Ca2+ signaling and TRPV4 function | ↓Protein, TRPV4 glycosylation, subcellular TRPV4 localization is shifted toward the apical membrane; GSK1016790A restored subcellular TRPV4 distribution | [ |
Abbreviations: ENaC, epithelial Na+ channel; FSS, fluid shear stress; HSP, heat shock protein; KCNJ11, ATP-sensitive K+ channel, Kir 6.2; NKCC1, Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporter; PANX1, Pannexin-1; TMEM16A, transmembrane member 16A; TRPV4, transient receptor potential vanilloid type 4.
Figure 2Major determinants of epithelial transport involved in the development of PKDs
(A) Loss of PC1 and/or PC2 function as well as abnormal activities of other Ca2+-permeable ion channels (e.g. PC1/PC2, TRPC1/PC2, TRPV4/PC2, IP3/PC2, RyR/PC2 complexes in the primary cilium or the ER) alter intracellular Ca2+ influx, which in turn can increase intracellular cAMP level. cAMP production can also be stimulated by binding of AVP (vasopressin) to its V2R receptors. Increased cytosolic concentration of cAMP activates apical CFTR (via PKA) and subsequently drives transepithelial fluid secretion, which is supported by the basolateral cotransporter NKCC1. The recycling of K+ for Na+-K+-ATPase and NKCC1 activity is provided by basolateral K+ channels (Kir6.2, KCa3.1). Remodeling of purinergic signaling (a shift from P2Y to P2X) may be another pathological mechanism driving cystogenesis and fluid accumulation. There is an abnormally high ATP level in the cyst; source is still debated, for instance, PANX1 may form a high conductance ATP-releasing channel with P2X7. High ATP level can inhibit ENaC-dependent reabsorption, and can also cause further imbalance in Ca2+ signaling by affecting metabotropic P2Y or ionotropic P2X receptors. Increased activity of the Ca2+-sensitive TMEM16A Cl− channel can be induced by high ATP level. Tolvaptan, the first drug which was shown to slow ADPKD progression (FDA-approved in 2018), is a selective antagonist of vasopressin receptor 2. (B) abnormally high level of ATP may inhibit ENaC-dependent reabsorption (ENaC activity is still being debated in ARPKD models), and can also cause further Ca2+ signaling imbalance by affecting metabotropic P2Y or ionotropic P2X receptors. FPC and PC2 may form a complex in the plasma membrane and/or primary cilium and regulate Ca2+ response; dysfunction of FPC can lead to altered CFTR activity. TRPV4 activity was shown to be reduced in ARPKD animal model. The transcellular water transport in cystic epithelium can be mediated by water channels, aquaporins. Abbreviations: AC6, adenylyl cyclase 6; AQP, aquaporin; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; ENaC, epithelial Na+ channel; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; IP3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor; NKA, Na+/K+ ATPase; NKCC1, Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporter; PANX1, Pannexin-1; PC1, polycystin 1; PC2, polycystin 2; PKA, protein kinase A; RyR, ryanodine receptor; TJ, tight junction; TRPC1, transient receptor potential canonical 1; TRPV4, transient receptor potential vanilloid type 4 channel; V2R, vasopressin receptor 2.
Effects of P2 receptor antagonism/agonism on ARPKD and ADPKD development
| Target | ADPKD or ARPKD | Species/model | Antagonist | Agonist | Action (effect) | Reference |
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| P2Xs | ADPKD | Human ADPKD epithelial primary cultures/in vitro | ATP | Increased cytoplasmic [Ca2+]i, stimulated secretory Cl− transport | [ | |
| MDCK-derived cysts (ADPKD)/ | PPADS; | bzATP | Reduced cyst growth and slowed disease progression | [ | ||
| MDCK-derived cysts (ADPKD)/ | Suramin | Reduced ATP-mediated fluid secretion and cyst development | [ | |||
| P2X4 | ARPKD | PCK rat (ARPKD model)/ | isoPPADS (non-selective P2X antagonist); | αβmeATP | Regulated [Ca2+]i | [ |
| cpk/cpk ARPKD mice/ | oxidized ATP (oxATP) | bzATP (P2X7); | bzATP reduced cyst development; oxATP abrogated this effect ATP, UTP had lesser effects than bzATP | [ | ||
| PCK rat (ARPKD model) | isoPPADS; | αβmeATP | Regulated [Ca2+]i | [ | ||
| PCK rat (ARPKD model)/ | [ | |||||
| P2X7 | ADPKD | A-438079; oxATP | Reduced cyst formation via ERK-dependent pathways | [ | ||
| Cultured human epithelial cells from ADPKD cysts/ | oxATP | UTP; | Loss of flow-induced [Ca2+]i, reduced flow-sensitive ATP release; delayed and attenuated [Ca2+]i recovery was sensitive to oxATP | [ | ||
| αβmeATP | Pannexin-1 and P2X7 contributed to ATP release and decreased ENaC activity, promote cyst development | [ | ||||
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| P2Ys | ADPKD | Human ADPKD epithelial primary cultures/ | UTP | Increased cytoplasmic [Ca2+]i, stimulated secretory Cl− transport | [ | |
| MDCK-derived cysts (ADPKD)/ | PPADS | Reduced cyst growth and slowed disease progression | [ | |||
| P2Y1 | ADPKD | MDCK-derived cysts (ADPKD)/ | PPADS | Reduced cyst growth and slowed disease progression | [ | |
Abbreviation: ENaC, epithelial Na+ channel.