Literature DB >> 8608414

Inhibitors of renal epithelial phosphate transport in tumor-induced osteomalacia and uremia.

R Kumar1, J D Haugen, E D Wieben, J M Londowski, Q Cai.   

Abstract

Tumors such as sclerosing hemangiomas are sometimes associated with hypophosphatemia and osteomalacia, both of which disappear on removal of the tumor. We identified a heat labile, 8,000-25,000 dalton, inhibitor of renal epithelial phosphate transport in supernatants of cultured sclerosing hemangioma cells obtained from a patient with oncogenic osteomalacia and hypophosphatemia. The inhibitor does not alter glucose or alanine transport in renal epithelial cells, and has a mechanism of cellular action distinct from that of parathyroid hormone (PTH) in that it inhibits phosphate transport in renal epithelia without increasing concentrations of cyclic 3',5' adenosine monophosphate (cAMP); it's activity is not blocked by a PTH receptor antagonist. Sclerosing hemangioma cells also produce a material that cross-reacts with antisera directed against PTH and tumor tissue sections immunostain with PTH antibodies. We have characterized a cDNA that encodes the PTH immunoreactive material. In its longest open reading frame the cDNA encodes a protein of 381 amino acids that does not resemble PTH in its primary structure. Opossum kidney cells transfected with the cDNA do not produce a product that inhibits phosphate transport. Dialysates from patients with end-stage renal disease also contain a substance(s) that inhibits phosphate and glucose transport in opossum kidney cells. The inhibitor(s) of phosphate uptake in dialysates is a heat labile, approximately 30,000 dalton substance that inhibits phosphate transport by a cAMP-independent mechanism. Determination of the structures and physiology of these phosphate transport inhibitors is likely to yield insights into the control of phosphate homeostasis.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8608414

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Assoc Am Physicians        ISSN: 1081-650X


  5 in total

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Authors:  Theresa J Berndt; Bernhard Bielesz; Theodore A Craig; Peter J Tebben; Desa Bacic; Carsten A Wagner; Stephen O'Brien; Susan Schiavi; Jurg Biber; Heini Murer; Rajiv Kumar
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3.  Escaping the cut by restriction enzymes through single-strand self-annealing of host-edited 12-bp and longer synthetic palindromes.

Authors:  Fernando Castro-Chavez
Journal:  DNA Cell Biol       Date:  2011-09-06       Impact factor: 3.311

Review 4.  McCune Albright syndrome and hypophosphatemic rickets.

Authors:  S Dutta; A Bagga
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  1999 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.967

Review 5.  Phosphaturic mesenchymal tumors: what an endocrinologist should know.

Authors:  J M Boland; P J Tebben; A L Folpe
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 4.256

  5 in total

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