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G. Burckhardt, A. Bahn, and N. A. Wolff are at the Zentrum Physiologie und Pathophysiologie, Georg-August-Universität, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
| Abstract |
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-ketoglutarate and is mediated by the organic anion transporter 1. PAH exit into tubule lumen is species specific and may involve ATP-independent and -dependent transporters. | Introduction |
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| The renal PAH transporter is polyspecific |
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-ketoglutarate (see Fig. 2
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Proximal tubule cells take up PAH from the blood in exchange for -ketoglutarate
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-ketoglutarate. The transporter catalyzing PAH/
-ketoglutarate exchange has meanwhile been named OAT1 (3, 11). The
-ketoglutarate is recycled into the cell in symport with three Na+ ions by the Na+-dicarboxylate cotransporter 3 (NaDC3) (8).
-Ketoglutarate may also originate from cell metabolism or be taken up from the lumen by another three Na+-dicarboxylate symporter, NaDC1, which is located in the apical membrane (8). The Na+ ions taken up by NaDC3 or NaDC1 are pumped out of the cell in exchange for K+ ions by the Na+-K+-ATPase. Finally, the K+ ions flow back out through K+ channels, generating the inside negative membrane potential. In summary, the uptake of PAH, or of anionic drugs, into the cell occurs at the expense of ATP.
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-ketoglutarate, a dicarboxylate with five carbons, capable of acting as a catalyst for PAH uptake? Figure 2
-ketoglutarate can couple the operations of OAT1 and NaDC3 efficiently.
PAH/ -ketoglutarate exchange is highly conserved in evolution
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-ketoglutarate exchange was demonstrated in renal basolateral membrane vesicles isolated from rat, rabbit, pig, and bovine kidneys. A dependence of PAH accumulation, or of PAH secretion, on extracellular Na+ and
-ketoglutarate was found in crab urinary bladder as well as in intact tubules of flounder, snake, chicken, rat, and rabbit kidneys, indicating a high degree of evolutionary conservation of this organic anion secretory mechanism throughout the animal kingdom (9). Possibly, this system is part of the body's defense system against potentially toxic environmental or endogenous substances. | Structure of OAT1 |
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-ketoglutarate exchangers from mouse, rat, flounder, and human kidneys have been cloned and characterized (reviewed in Ref. 3). Although originally given different abbreviations (NKT, OAT1, ROAT, ROAT1, PAHT), we shall use OAT1 for these transporters throughout. The deduced primary structure of the OAT1 revealed 546 (mouse), 550 (human, short isoform), 551 (rat), 562 (flounder), or 563 (human, long isoform) amino acids. The occurrence of two isoforms in human kidneys is the result of differential splicing at the junction between exons 9 and 10 (1). The human OAT1, short isoform, shares 87.8, 85.8, and 49.5% of identical amino acids with rat, mouse, and flounder OAT1, respectively. The high degree of similarity between rat, mouse, and human OAT1 strongly suggests that these transporters are orthologs. Whether the flounder OAT1, which is more distantly related to human OAT1, is also an ortholog is not clear.
Secondary structure predictions converge to 12 transmembrane domains (see Fig. 3
) with cytoplasmatically located amino and carboxy terminals. The loop between transmembrane domain (TMD) 1 and TMD 2 contains 35 potential N-glycosylation sites, indicating that this loop is oriented to the cell exterior. Several potential phosphorylation sites for protein kinase C (OAT1 from human, rat, mouse, flounder), protein kinase A (human and flounder OAT1), casein kinase II (human, rat, and flounder OAT1) and tyrosine kinase (human OAT1) are clustered in the loop between TMD 6 and TMD 7 as well as the carboxy terminus (3, 12). Which of these sites is involved in regulation of OAT1 in vivo is not yet known.
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| The expressed OAT1 is polyspecific |
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-ketoglutarate or glutarate, proving that the expressed OATs performed PAH/dicarboxylate exchange.
In experiments on the substrate specificity of expressed OAT1, unlabeled aliphatic dicarboxylates with five or more carbons, NSAIDs, penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics, and loop diuretics inhibited the uptake of labeled PAH (3, 11). Specificity of transport was also directly assessed with various radiolabeled substrates. Besides PAH, the rat OAT1 also transported
-ketoglutarate, cAMP, cGMP, folate, prostaglandin E2, the NSAIDs acetylsalicylate (aspirin) and indomethacin, the ß-lactam antibiotics cephaloridine and penicillin G, and the nephrotoxic agent ochratoxin A. The human OAT1 also showed transport of the antiviral drugs adefovir and cidofovir (5). Importantly, the expression of human OAT1 conferred sensitivity to the cytotoxic effect of these antiviral drugs. Probenecid, the classic inhibitor of the PAH transporter, diminished uptake of antiviral drugs as well as their cytotoxic effect. Since OAT1 handles toxic compounds (antiviral drugs, cephaloridine, ochratoxin A), it is most probably involved in the nephrotoxicity induced by these drugs/toxins.
With respect to radiolabeled urate, transport has been found with rat OAT1 but not with human and flounder OAT1. Unlabeled urate inhibited PAH uptake by rat OAT1 in one study but had no effect on the same transport system in another study (3). Therefore, the physiological role of OAT1 in proximal tubular urate transport is not clear at present.
The OAT1 is involved in the proximal tubular secretion of at least some diuretics (11). Furosemide inhibited PAH uptake by rat and human OAT1, and bumetanide inhibited uptake by human and flounder OAT1. Radiolabeled bumetanide was transported by flounder OAT1 (3). In voltage-clamp studies on oocytes expressing the flounder OAT1, 0.1 mM bumetanide elicited an inward current, which was as large as that induced by 0.1 mM PAH. Presumably, a monovalent bumetanide anion is exchanged for a divalent intracellular
-ketoglutarate anion, generating a net efflux of negative charge, which, by definition, is equivalent to an inward (positive) current. Ethacrynic acid and tienilic acid also induced inward currents, but sulfanilamide, acetazolamide, and furosemide did not, at least not at the applied concentration of 0.1 mM (2). The negative result with furosemide, a loop diuretic secreted in proximal tubules, is puzzling and requires further experimentation.
The collected data indicate that OAT1 interacts with a great variety of chemically unrelated compounds, as has been found earlier for the rat renal basolateral PAH transporter in situ. The apparent affinities of expressed OAT1 on the one side and of the PAH transporter in the intact kidney on the other differ quantitatively (3). However, the apparent affinities for dicarboxylates or NSAIDs follow the same order, suggesting that OAT1 may indeed represent the PAH transporter.
The location of the binding site(s) within the OAT1 molecule is unknown. As a first approximation, one can assume that positively charged amino acids play a role in the organic anion binding. Figure 3
shows the position of three amino acids carrying a positive charge and being conserved throughout all known OAT1 proteins as well as in OAT2 and OAT3 (see below). These amino acids are a histidine in TMD 1, a lysine at the intracellular border of TMD 8, and an arginine in TMD 11. In the polyspecific organic cation transporters OCT13, the histidine and the lysine are replaced by neutral amino acids and the arginine in TMD 11 is replaced by a negatively charged aspartate (3, 6). In vitro mutagenesis studies on the rat OCT1 provided evidence for a role of the negatively charged aspartate in TMD 11 in substrate recognition (4). Experiments are needed to delineate the function of the analogous amino acid residues in OAT1.
| Are there other candidates for PAH uptake across the basolateral membrane? |
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-ketoglutarate, prostaglandin E2, methotrexate, acetylsalicylate, and salicylate. Rat OAT3 and human OAT4 catalyzed uptake of radiolabeled estrone sulfate and ochratoxin A, proving that they translocate diverse organic anions and are polyspecific (11). Preloading of oocytes with glutarate did not accelerate salicylate uptake through rat OAT2, leaving open whether this transporter can operate as an organic anion/dicarboxylate exchanger. Glutarate did not inhibit estrone sulfate transport by human OAT4, indicating that this transporter does not interact with five-carbon dicarboxylates. Both human OAT4 and rat OAT3 were unable to perform anion exchange. Thus it is not clear whether OAT24 perform uphill PAH uptake against an inside negative membrane potential difference. They could, however, facilitate downhill PAH efflux, e.g., across the luminal membrane of proximal tubule cells. Antibody studies are required to clarify the cellular location of OAT24 in the kidney. | PAH transport across the luminal (brush-border) membrane of proximal tubule cells |
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-ketoglutarate exchange, which is shared by all species studied to date, the release of PAH across the luminal brush-border membrane into the proximal tubular lumen exhibited clear species differences (9). In dog and rat renal brush-border membrane vesicles, an anion antiporter exchanged PAH or urate against OH, HCO3, Cl, lactate, acetoacetate, or monovalent succinate. Brush-border membrane vesicles isolated from rat, pig, rabbit, and human kidneys showed voltage-driven PAH transport, whereas in brush-border membrane vesicles from bovine and human kidneys a PAH/
-ketoglutarate exchanger was found. In Fig. 1
Recently, the human type 1 Na+-dependent phosphate transporter (NPT1) was expressed in HEK-293 cells and displayed low affinity uptake of labeled PAH (Km,PAH of 2.7 mM) (13). Benzylpenicillin, indomethacin, salicylate, and probenecid inhibited PAH uptake, suggesting that NPT1 is a polyspecific organic anion transporter of the apical membrane of human proximal tubule cells. However, trans-stimulation of PAH exit by external Cl or by an inside more negative membrane potential was not shown in these studies. Therefore, it is not yet possible to assign NPT1 to the PAH antiporter or uniporter (Fig. 1
) characterized in earlier experiments with brush-border membrane vesicles.
Also shown in Fig. 1
is MRP2 as a PAH transporter of the luminal membrane. MRP2 is located in the apical membrane of renal proximal tubule cells. In membrane vesicles isolated from HEK cells expressing human MRP2, ATP accelerated uptake of radiolabeled PAH (7). Typical substrates of MRP2, leukotriene C4 and cyclosporin A, inhibited ATP-driven PAH uptake dose dependently.
The relative contribution of NPT1 and MRP2 to overall PAH exit across the luminal membrane of mammalian proximal tubule cells is unknown. Moreover, additional PAH transporters may exist that have not yet been identified on a molecular level.
| Conclusions |
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-ketoglutarate-driven and indirectly Na+-dependent uptake of PAH across the basolateral membrane. Efflux of PAH across the luminal membrane may involve NPT1 and MRP2 and possibly other transporters of as yet uncertain molecular nature. With more and more polyspecific OATs and OCTs being cloned and functionally characterized, we can search for common protein structures or amino acid motifs that allow for the handling of such chemically diverse organic ions. Eventually, X-ray structure analysis will be needed to localize the binding sites and to understand how polyspecificity is achieved. Further research should also be directed toward delineation of the molecular basis for transcriptional and posttranslational regulation of OATs because of their impact on the efficiency of the kidneys in excreting endogenous and exogenous anionic compounds.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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