4.5 Article

Tolvaptan inhibits ERK-dependent cell proliferation, Cl- secretion, and in vitro cyst growth of human ADPKD cells stimulated by vasopressin

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-RENAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 301, Issue 5, Pages F1005-F1013

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00243.2011

Keywords

V2 receptor; cyclic AMP; polycystic kidney disease; MAP kinase

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [R01DK081579, P50DK057301]
  2. Otsuka Pharmaceutical

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Reif GA, Yamaguchi T, Nivens E, Fujiki H, Pinto CS, Wallace DP. Tolvaptan inhibits ERK-dependent cell proliferation, Cl- secretion, and in vitro cyst growth of human ADPKD cells stimulated by vasopressin. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 301: F1005-F1013, 2011. First published August 3, 2011; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00243.2011.-In autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), arginine vasopressin (AVP) accelerates cyst growth by stimulating cAMP-dependent ERK activity and epithelial cell proliferation and by promoting Cl--dependent fluid secretion. Tolvaptan, a V2 receptor antagonist, inhibits the renal effects of AVP and slows cyst growth in PKD animals. Here, we determined the effect of graded concentrations of tolvaptan on intracellular cAMP, ERK activity, cell proliferation, and transcellular Cl- secretion using human ADPKD cyst epithelial cells. Incubation of ADPKD cells with 10(-9) M AVP increased intracellular cAMP and stimulated ERK and cell proliferation. Tolvaptan caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of AVP-induced cAMP production with an apparent IC50 of similar to 10(-10) M. Correspondingly, tolvaptan inhibited AVP-induced ERK signaling and cell proliferation. Basolateral application of AVP to ADPKD cell monolayers grown on permeable supports caused a sustained increase in short-circuit current that was completely blocked by the Cl- channel blocker CFTRinh-172, consistent with AVP-induced transepithelial Cl- secretion. Tolvaptan inhibited AVP-induced Cl- secretion and decreased in vitro cyst growth of ADPKD cells cultured within a three-dimensional collagen matrix. These data demonstrate that relatively low concentrations of tolvaptan inhibit AVP-stimulated cell proliferation and Cl- dependent fluid secretion by human ADPKD cystic cells.

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