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Journal of neurotrauma · May 2022
ANP and ENaC contribute to spinal cord injury-induced polyuria in mice.
- Xue-Song Sun, Xiao-Long Wang, Ming Bai, Chang Song, Douglas C Eaton, Qiang Yue, Karmarcha K Martin, Hui Cai, Sandra Garraway, Li-Hua Wang, and He-Ping Ma.
- Department of Neurology, the Second Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin, People's Republic of China.
- J. Neurotrauma. 2022 May 1; 39 (9-10): 724734724-734.
AbstractPolyuria is found in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). However, the underlying cellular and molecular mechanism is unknown. Here, we show that mice had elevated urine for 7 days after T10 contusion. Using multi-photon confocal microscopy, we performed intra-vital imaging experiments to evaluate water reabsorption in kidney tubules by examining fluorescent intensity in the lumen of the distal tubule from live mice. The data show that SCI significantly reduced the concentrating function of kidney tubules. The reduced water reabsorption appears to be mediated by atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) because SCI increased the expression levels of both ANP and natriuretic peptide receptor A (NPR-A) in the kidney cortex. Our patch-clamp single-channel recordings from split-open distal tubules show that SCI decreased the activity of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). Western blot combined with confocal microscopy data show that the levels of 70 kD γ-ENaC, which is an active isoform because of proteolytic cleavage, were significantly reduced in distal tubule principal cells. An NPR-A inhibitor (A71915) given intravenously eliminated the effects of SCI on ENaC and polyuria. These data together with previous studies suggest that SCI causes polyuria, probably by reducing ENaC activity through elevating ANP and NPR-A. Further investigation of the signal transduction pathways may provide useful information for discovering an efficient drug to treat SCI-induced polyuria.
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