Function and structure of H-K-ATPase in the kidney
C. S. Wingo and A. J. Smolka The present review summarizes recent functional and structural evidence indicating that the kidney possesses at least one and probably more than one isoform of a proton- and potassium-activated adenosinetriphosphatase (H-K-ATPase). Functional studies have examined in det...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Renal physiology 1995-07, Vol.269 (1), p.1-F16 |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | C. S. Wingo and A. J. Smolka
The present review summarizes recent functional and structural evidence
indicating that the kidney possesses at least one and probably more than
one isoform of a proton- and potassium-activated adenosinetriphosphatase
(H-K-ATPase). Functional studies have examined in detail the mechanism of
luminal acidification and K/Rb absorption by the outer medullary collecting
duct (OMCD) from the inner stripe, a high-capacity distal site of urinary
acidification. These studies indicate that the mechanism of proton
secretion in this segment is similar to a model proposed for gastric acid
secretion. Specifically, the profound effect of H-K-ATPase inhibitors or
luminal K removal on net bicarbonate (HCO3) absorption indicates a major
role for an H-K pump in luminal acidification by the OMCD. The importance
of an H-K-ATPase is further supported by the finding that nanomolar
concentrations of bafilomycin A1, which specifically inhibit vacuolar-type
H-ATPase, have significantly smaller effects on net HCO3 absorption than do
H-K-ATPase inhibitors. Studies on the perfused inner medullary collecting
duct (IMCD) and cultured IMCD cells also suggest a significant role for
H-K-ATPase in luminal acidification by the IMCD. Evidence has accrued from
studies in the cortical CD and OMCD that the mechanism of
H-K-ATPase-mediated luminal proton secretion differs under K-replete and
K-restricted conditions. In K repletion, luminal K ions transported by the
pump recycle back into the lumen by a Ba-sensitive mechanism. However, in K
restriction, the mechanism of the H-K-ATPase involves luminal proton
secretion and K absorption that is insensitive to luminal Ba and, by
inference, apical K recycling. Moreover, in K restriction, K/Rb absorption
is inhibited by basolateral Ba, indicating that the pump operates to
reabsorb K/Rb across the epithelium. The structural evidence reviewed here
indicates the presence of mRNA within the mammalian kidney that is either
identical or highly homologous to mRNAs for gastric and putative colonic
H-K-ATPase alpha-subunits and gastric H-K-ATPase beta-subunit. Localization
of these transcripts by in situ hybridization demonstrates gastric alpha-
and beta-subunit mRNAs in intercalated cells of both the cortical and
medullary CD, principal cells of the CD, and IMCD cells. Additional studies
in transgenic mice indicate that regulatory sequences upstream to the
H-K-ATPase beta-subunit gene direct transcription in both gastric parietal
c |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0363-6127 0002-9513 1931-857X 2161-1157 1522-1466 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajprenal.1995.269.1.F1 |