The thiazide-sensitive Na–Cl cotransporter is an aldosterone-induced protein

Gheun‐Ho Kim(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Shyama Masilamani(University of Maryland, Baltimore), R. James Turner(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Carter A. Mitchell(University of Maryland, Baltimore), James B. Wade(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Mark A. Knepper(University of Maryland, Baltimore)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 24, 1998
Cited by 407Open Access

Abstract

Although the collecting duct is regarded as the primary site at which mineralocorticoids regulate renal sodium transport in the kidney, recent evidence points to the distal convoluted tubule as a possible site of mineralocorticoid action. To investigate whether mineralocorticoids regulate the expression of the thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter (TSC), the chief apical sodium entry pathway of distal convoluted tubule cells, we prepared an affinity-purified, peptide-directed antibody to TSC. On immunoblots, the antibody recognized a prominent 165-kDa band in membrane fractions from the renal cortex but not from the renal medulla. Immunofluorescence immunocytochemistry showed TSC labeling only in distal convoluted tubule cells. Semiquantitative immunoblotting studies demonstrated a large increase in TSC expression in the renal cortex of rats on a low-NaCl diet (207 +/- 21% of control diet). Immunofluorescence localization in tissue sections confirmed the strong increase in TSC expression. Treatment of rats for 10 days with a continuous subcutaneous infusion of aldosterone also increased TSC expression (380 +/- 58% of controls). Furthermore, 7-day treatment of rats with an orally administered mineralocorticoid, fludrocortisone, increased TSC expression (656 +/- 114% of controls). We conclude that the distal convoluted tubule is an important site of action of the mineralocorticoid aldosterone, which strongly up-regulates the expression of TSC.


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