Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
1999 Oct;3(5):513-519.
Changes in phosphate transporter activity evaluated by phosphonoformic acid binding in cadmium-exposed renal brush-border membranes
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Physiology, Kosin Medical College, 34 Amnam-dong, Suh-ku, Pusan, 602-030 South Korea.
Abstract
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Direct exposure of renal tubular brush-border membranes (BBM) to free
cadmium (Cd) causes a reduction in phosphate (Pi) transport capacity.
Biochemical mechanism of this reduction was investigated in the present
study. Renal proximal tubular brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV)
were isolated from rabbit kidney outer cortex by Mg precipitation
method. Vesicles were exposed to 50~200 muM CdCl2 for 30 min, then
the phosphate transporter activity was determined. The range of Cd
concentration employed in this study was comparable to that of the
unbound Cd documented in renal cortical tissues of Cd-exposed animals
at the time of onset of renal dysfunction. The rate of sodium-dependent
phosphate transport (Na+-Pi cotransport) by BBMV was determined by
32P-labeled inorganic phosphate uptake, and the number of Na+/-Pi
cotransporters in the BBM was assessed by Pi-protectable 14C-labeled
phosphonoformic acid ((14C)PFA) binding. The exposure of BBMV to Cd
decreased the Na+-Pi cotransport activity in proportion to the Cd
concentration in the preincubation medium, but it showed no apparent
effect on the Pi-protectable PFA binding. These results indicate that
an interaction of renal BBM with free Cd induces a reduction in Na+-Pi
cotransport activity without altering the carrier density in the
membrane. This, in turn, suggest that the suppression of phosphate
transport capacity (Vmax) observed in Cd-treated renal BBM is due to a
reduction in Na+-Pi translocation by existing carriers, possibly by
Cd-induced fall in membrane fluidity.