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Urinary Extracellular Vesicles for Renal Tubular Transporters Expression in Patients With Gitelman Syndrome

Authors :
Yi-Chang Lin
Sung-Sen Yang
Yu-Chun Lin
Chih-Chien Sung
Shih-Hua Lin
Yi-Jia Lin
Min-Hsiu Chen
Source :
Frontiers in Medicine, Vol 8 (2021), Frontiers in Medicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2021.

Abstract

Background: The utility of urinary extracellular vesicles (uEVs) to faithfully represent the changes of renal tubular protein expression remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate renal tubular sodium (Na+) or potassium (K+) associated transporters expression from uEVs and kidney tissues in patients with Gitelman syndrome (GS) caused by inactivating mutations in SLC12A3.Methods: uEVs were isolated by ultracentrifugation from 10 genetically-confirmed GS patients. Membrane transporters including Na+-hydrogen exchanger 3 (NHE3), Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2), NaCl cotransporter (NCC), phosphorylated NCC (p-NCC), epithelial Na+ channel β (ENaCβ), pendrin, renal outer medullary K1 channel (ROMK), and large-conductance, voltage-activated and Ca2+-sensitive K+ channel (Maxi-K) were examined by immunoblotting of uEVs and immunofluorescence of biopsied kidney tissues. Healthy and disease (bulimic patients) controls were also enrolled.Results: Characterization of uEVs was confirmed by nanoparticle tracking analysis, transmission electron microscopy, and immunoblotting. Compared with healthy controls, uEVs from GS patients showed NCC and p-NCC abundance were markedly attenuated but NHE3, ENaCβ, and pendrin abundance significantly increased. ROMK and Maxi-K abundance were also significantly accentuated. Immunofluorescence of the representative kidney tissues from GS patients also demonstrated the similar findings to uEVs. uEVs from bulimic patients showed an increased abundance of NCC and p-NCC as well as NHE3, NKCC2, ENaCβ, pendrin, ROMK and Maxi-K, akin to that in immunofluorescence of their kidney tissues.Conclusion: uEVs could be a non-invasive tool to diagnose and evaluate renal tubular transporter adaptation in patients with GS and may be applied to other renal tubular diseases.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f11535cffe339889e573de642ca7aeae
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.679171/full