Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
2000 Feb;4(1):63-72.
Cadmium inhibition of renal endosomal acidification
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Physiology, Kosin Medical College, 34 Amnam-dong,
Suh-ku, Pusan, South Korea.
Abstract
- Chronic exposure to cadmium (Cd) results in an inhibition of protein
endocytosis in the renal proximal tubule, leading to proteinuria. In
order to gain insight into the mechanism by which Cd impairs the
protein endocytosis, we investigated the effect of Cd on the
acidification of renal cortical endocytotic vesicles (endosomes). The
endosomal acidification was assessed by measuring the pH
gradient-dependent fluorescence change, using acridine orange or
FITC-dextran as a probe. In renal endosomes isolated from
Cd-intoxicated rats, the Vmax of ATP-driven fluorescence quenching
(H -ATPase dependent intravesicular acidification) was significantly
attenuated with no substantial changes in the apparent Km, indicating
that the capacity of acidification was reduced. When endosomes from
normal animals were directly exposed to free Cd in vitro, the Vmax was
slightly reduced, whereas the Km was markedly increased, implying that
the biochemical property of the H -ATPase was altered by Cd. In
endosomes exposed to free Cd in vitro, the rate of dissipation of the
transmembrane pH gradient after H -ATPase inhibition appeared to be
significantly faster compared to that in normal endosomes, indicating
that the H -conductance of the membrane was increased by Cd. These
results
suggest that in long-term Cd-exposed animals, free Cd ions
liberated in the proximal tubular cytoplasm by lysosomal degradation of
cadmium-metallothionein complex (CdMT) may impair endosomal
acidification 1) by reducing the H -ATPase density in the endosomal
membrane, 2) by suppressing the intrinsic H -ATPase activity, and 3)
possibly by increasing the membrane conductance to H+ ion. Such effects
of Cd could be responsible for the alterations of proximal tubular
endocytotic activities, protein reabsorption and various transporter
distributions observed in Cd-exposed cells and animals.