Adenine acts in the kidney as a signaling factor and causes salt- and water-losing nephropathy: early mechanism of adenine-induced renal injury

Author:

Dos Santos Ingrid F.1,Sheriff Sulaiman2,Amlal Sihame1,Ahmed Rafeeq P. H.3,Thakar Charuhas V.1,Amlal Hassane1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology and Kidney C.A.R.E, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio

2. Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio

3. Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio

Abstract

Chronic adenine feeding is extensively used to develop animal models of chronic renal failure with metabolic features resembling those observed in humans. However, the mechanism by which adenine induces renal failure is poorly understood. In this study, we examined the early effects of adenine on water metabolism and salt balance in rats placed in metabolic cages and fed control or adenine-containing diets for 7 days. Molecular and functional studies demonstrated that adenine-fed rats exhibited a significant reduction in food intake, polyuria, polydipsia, decreased urine osmolality, and increased salt wasting. These effects are independent of changes in food intake and result from a coordinated downregulation of water channel aquaporin-2 (AQP2) and salt transporter (Na+-K+-Cl cotransporter 2; NKCC2) in the collecting duct and medullary thick ascending limb, respectively. As a result, adenine-fed rats exhibited massive volume depletion, as indicated by a significant body weight loss, increased blood urea nitrogen, and increased hematocrit and hemoglobin levels, all of which were significantly corrected with NaCl replacement. Adenine-induced urinary concentrating defect was not corrected by exogenous arginine vasopressin (AVP), and it correlated with reduced cAMP production in vivo and in vitro. In conclusion, adenine acts on renal tubules as a signaling molecule and causes nephrogenic diabetes insipidus with salt wasting, at least, by directly interfering with AVP V2 receptor signaling with subsequent downregulation of NKCC2 and AQP2 in the kidney. The combination of renal fluid loss and decreased food intake with subsequent massive volume depletion likely plays an important role in the development of early prerenal failure that progresses to chronic kidney disease in long-term adenine feeding.

Funder

CnpQ Scholarship, Brazil

NIH

Dialysis Clinic, INC.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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