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Acute Intravenous NaCl and Volume Expansion Reduces Sodium-Chloride Cotransporter Abundance and Phosphorylation in Urinary Extracellular Vesicles.

Kidney360. 2022 May 27
Background: Sodium chloride (NaCl) loading and volume expansion suppress the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system to reduce renal tubular reabsorption of NaCl and water, but effects on the sodium-chloride cotransporter (NCC) and relevant renal transmembrane proteins that are responsible for this modulation in humans are less well investigated.

Methods: We used urinary extracellular vesicles (uEVs) as an indirect readout to assess renal transmembrane proteins involved in NaCl and water homeostasis in 44 patients with hypertension who had repeatedly raised aldosterone/renin ratios undergoing infusion of 2 L of 0.9% saline over 4 hours.

Results: When measured by mass spectrometry in 13 patients, significant decreases were observed in NCC (median fold change [FC]=0.70); pendrin (FC=0.84); AQP2 (FC=0.62); and uEV markers, including ALIX (FC=0.65) and TSG101 (FC=0.66). Immunoblotting reproduced the reduction in NCC (FC=0.54), AQP2 (FC=0.42), ALIX (FC=0.52), and TSG101 (FC=0.55) in the remaining 31 patients, and demonstrated a significant decrease in phosphorylated NCC (pNCC; FC=0.49). However, after correction for ALIX, the reductions in NCC (FC=0.90) and pNCC (FC=1.00) were no longer apparent, whereas the significant decrease in AQP2 persisted (FC=0.62).

Conclusion: We conclude that ( 1 ) decreases in NCC and pNCC, induced by acute NaCl loading and volume expansion, may be due to diluted post-test urines; ( 2 ) the lack of change of NCC and pNCC when corrected for ALIX, despite a fall in plasma aldosterone, may be due to the lack of change in plasma K+ ; and ( 3 ) the decrease in AQP2 may be due to a decrease in vasopressin in response to volume expansion.

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