4.6 Article

Recovery of renal tubule phosphate reabsorption despite reduced levels of sodium-phosphate transporter

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 151, Issue 6, Pages 797-801

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/eje.0.1510797

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Background: The acute effect of parathyroid hormone (PTH) on phosphate transport has been reported to be mediated by rapid downregulation of sodium-phosphate transporter (NaPi-IIa) protein, but the association was observed with pharmacological doses of PTH. Objective: To explore the effects of physiological doses of PTH on NaPi-IIa protein and its relationship to phosphate transport. Methods: Acute clearance studies were performed in parathyroidectomized rats given a bolus i.v. physiological dose (1 mug) of bovine PTH(1-34) and NaPi-IIa protein concentrations were examined at different time intervals. Results: Fractional excretion of phosphate increased from 0.03+/-0.006 (mean+/-S.E.) to 0.238+/-0.059 (P < 0.01 compared with baseline and compared with controls) at 40 min and returned to control values by 1.20 min. Urinary cAMP concentrations were increased at 20 min only Superficial cortex brush-border membrane (BBM) NaPi-IIa protein was decreased from baseline at both 40 and 120 min (P < 0.01) and did not recover at 240 min (P < 0.01. compared with baseline and compared with controls). Conclusion: These results confirm that PTH, even in physiological dosage. causes a rapid decrease in BBM NaPi-IIa, but subsequent recovery of phosphate reabsorption is poorly correlated with BBM concentrations of NaPi-IIa protein. This suggests that transport mechanisms other than NaPi-IIa are important in renal phosphate reabsorption.

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