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Resistance to hypertension mediated by intercalated cells of the collecting duct
Johannes Stegbauer, Daian Chen, Marcela Herrera, Matthew A. Sparks, Ting Yang, Eva Königshausen, Susan B. Gurley, Thomas M. Coffman
Johannes Stegbauer, Daian Chen, Marcela Herrera, Matthew A. Sparks, Ting Yang, Eva Königshausen, Susan B. Gurley, Thomas M. Coffman
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Research Article Nephrology

Resistance to hypertension mediated by intercalated cells of the collecting duct

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Abstract

The renal collecting duct (CD), as the terminal segment of the nephron, is responsible for the final adjustments to the amount of sodium excreted in urine. While angiotensin II modulates reabsorptive functions of the CD, the contribution of these actions to physiological homeostasis is not clear. To examine this question, we generated mice with cell-specific deletion of AT1A receptors from the CD. Elimination of AT1A receptors from both principal and intercalated cells (CDKO mice) had no effect on blood pressures at baseline or during successive feeding of low- or high-salt diets. In contrast, the severity of hypertension caused by chronic infusion of angiotensin II was paradoxically exaggerated in CDKO mice compared with controls. In wild-type mice, angiotensin II induced robust expression of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in renal medulla, primarily localized to intercalated cells. Upregulation of COX-2 was diminished in CDKO mice, resulting in reduced generation of vasodilator prostanoids. This impaired expression of COX-2 has physiological consequences, since administration of a specific COX-2 inhibitor to CDKO and control mice during angiotensin II infusion equalized their blood pressures. Stimulation of COX-2 was also triggered by exposure of isolated preparations of medullary CDs to angiotensin II. Deletion of AT1A receptors from principal cells alone did not affect angiotensin II–dependent COX2 stimulation, implicating intercalated cells as the main source of COX2 in this setting. These findings suggest a novel paracrine role for the intercalated cell to attenuate the severity of hypertension. Strategies for preserving or augmenting this pathway may have value for improving the management of hypertension.

Authors

Johannes Stegbauer, Daian Chen, Marcela Herrera, Matthew A. Sparks, Ting Yang, Eva Königshausen, Susan B. Gurley, Thomas M. Coffman

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Figure 1

Hoxb7-Cre expression in principal and intercalated collecting duct cells.

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Hoxb7-Cre expression in principal and intercalated collecting duct cell...
Representative kidney cross-sections ofHoxb7-Cre+ mT/mGmice. (A and B) Green fluorescence indicates the presence of Hoxb7-Cre expression, whereas red fluorescence indicates the absence of Hoxb7-Cre expression (original magnification, [A] ×4 and [B] ×40). (C) Double immunofluorescence with either GFP and AQP2 or GFP and V-ATPase confirms that Hoxb7-Cre is expressed in principal and intercalated cells of the collecting duct in the kidney (original magnification, ×20). (D) AT1A receptor mRNA expression is significantly reduced in isolated collecting ducts of CDKO compared with control mice (**P < 0.01 vs. control; n = 6–8). Unpaired Student’s t test was used. (E) Baseline blood pressures did not differ between CDKO and control mice (n = 10). Blood pressures significantly decrease and increases to a similar extend on low-salt and high-salt diets in CDKO and control mice (*P < 0.05; **P < 0.01 vs. baseline; n = 10). ANOVA followed by Bonferroni’s multiple comparisons post-hoc test was used to compare the differences between the groups.

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