Abstract

The transient receptor potential (TRP) channels TRPM6 and TRPM7 are critically involved in maintaining whole body and cellular Mg2+ homeostasis and ensuring the normal function of organs such as the heart and kidney. However, we do not know how the expression of TRPM6 and TPRM7 in these organs changes throughout fetal development and adult life, and whether this expression can be hormonally regulated. This study determined the ontogeny of TRPM6 and TRPM7 mRNA expression from mid-gestation through to adulthood in the mouse. In a second series of experiments, we examined how maternal administration of the glucocorticoids corticosterone and dexamethasone between embryonic days 12.5–15 affected TRPM6 and TRPM7 channel mRNA expression in the mother and fetus. Whilst renal TRPM7 expression was relatively constant throughout development, renal TRPM6 expression was markedly upregulated after birth. In contrast, cardiac TRPM7 expression was 2–4 fold higher in the fetus than in the adult. Surprisingly, TRPM6 expression was detected in the fetal heart (qPCR and in situ hybridization). Glucocorticoid administration during gestation increased fetal cardiac expression of both channels without affecting renal expression. In contrast, in the dam renal TRPM6 and TRPM7 expression was increased by glucocorticoids with no change in the cardiac channel expression. These data suggest that TRPM6 and TRPM7 channels are important in organogenesis, and that elevated maternal glucocorticoid levels can alter the expression of these channels. This suggests that perturbations in hormonal regulatory systems during pregnancy may adversely impact upon normal fetal development, at least in part by altering expression of TRPM channels.

Highlights

  • Magnesium is an abundant intracellular cation that is crucial for many fundamental processes involved in normal cell function, including protein synthesis, DNA replication and energy metabolism [1]

  • Renal TRPM7 expression was increased (*1.8 fold, P

  • This study is the first to demonstrate that TRPM6 and TRPM7 are differentially expressed in the heart and kidney throughout gestation and into adulthood

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Summary

Introduction

Magnesium is an abundant intracellular cation that is crucial for many fundamental processes involved in normal cell function, including protein synthesis, DNA replication and energy metabolism [1]. Serum magnesium levels are kept tightly controlled, with overall body magnesium homeostasis reflecting the balance between intestinal absorption and renal excretion [2]. Intracellular magnesium concentrations are maintained within a narrow range, until recently the molecular mechanisms regulating magnesium transport at the cellular level were poorly understood. Studies of HSH patients by two independent research groups identified multiple mutations in TRPM6 that caused abnormal renal magnesium handling and hypomagnesemia [3,4,5]. Whilst overall magnesium homeostasis is influenced by intestinal absorption and dynamic exchange with bone, the major site of regulation is the kidney, which controls magnesium excretion to balance intestinal absorption [3]. We can consider TRPM6 to be a regulator of whole body magnesium homeostasis

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