4.5 Article

Camostat mesilate inhibits prostasin activity and reduces blood pressure and renal injury in salt-sensitive hypertension

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages 181-189

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0b013e328317a762

Keywords

epithelial sodium channel; prostasin; renal injury; salt-sensitive hypertension; serine protease inhibitor

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in Japan [19590956, 19590958, 18790570, 18790569, 18390252]
  2. Salt Science Research Foundation [0728]
  3. Mitsubishi Pharma Research Foundation
  4. Suzuken Memorial Foundation

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Prostasin, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored serine protease, regulates epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) activity. Sodium reabsorption through ENaC in distal nephron segments is a rate-limiting step in transepithelial sodium transport. Recently, proteolytic cleavage of ENaC subunits by prostasin has been shown to activate ENaC. Therefore, we hypothesized that serine protease inhibitors could inhibit ENaC activity in the kidney, leading to a decrease in blood pressure. We investigated the effects of camostat mesilate, a synthetic serine protease inhibitor, and FOY-251, an active metabolite of camostat mesilate, on sodium transport in the mouse cortical collecting duct cell line (M-1 cells) and on blood pressure in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. Treatment with camostat mesilate or FOY-251 decreased equivalent current (I-eq) in M-1 cells in a dose-dependent manner and inhibited the protease activity of prostasin in vitro. Silencing of the prostasin gene also reduced equivalent current in M-1 cells. The expression level of prostasin protein was not changed by application of camostat mesilate or FOY-251 to M-1 cells. Oral administration of camostat mesilate to Dahl salt-sensitive rats fed a high-salt diet resulted in a significant decrease in blood pressure with elevation of the urinary Na/K ratio, decrease in serum creatinine, reduction in urinary protein excretion, and improvement of renal injury markers such as collagen 1, collagen 3, transforming growth factor-beta 1, and nephrin. These findings suggest that camostat mesilate can decrease ENaC activity in M-1 cells probably through the inhibition of prostasin activity, and that camostat mesilate can have beneficial effects on both hypertension and kidney injury in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. Camostat mesilate might represent a new class of antihypertensive drugs with renoprotective effects in patients with salt-sensitive hypertension. J Hypertens 27:181-189 (C) 2009 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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