Abstract

Background: The culture of human renal tubular cells of well-defined nephron origin is an important basis in the research of various physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms in the kidney. In vitro differentiation of cultured cells is affected by cell isolation and culture conditions. Our study describes in vitro differentiation of cultured human renal proximal and distal (thick ascending limb and early distal) tubular epithelial cells. Methods: Proximal tubular cells (PTC) and early distal tubular cells (DTC) were isolated immunomagnetically and cultured. In vitro differentiation was assessed by Western blot analysis and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction using characteristic markers. Morphologic characterization was shown by fluorescence and scanning electron microscopy. Results: E-cadherin was highly expressed in DTC, whereas expression was low in PTC. In contrast to DTC, in PTC, intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and aquaporin 1 were constitutively expressed at high levels. Both cell types expressed cytokeratin 18 and Na-K-ATPase but not α-smooth muscle actin. Morphological analysis showed that PTC develop long microvilli, whereas DTC formed short microvilli in culture, and both express the tight junction protein zona occludens protein 1. Conclusions: We demonstrate differential expression of E-cadherin, intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and aquaporin 1 in cultured PTC and DTC as described for the renal tubule in vivo. We could show the in vitro differentiation of the cells, and thus, their usefulness as an in vitro model of the human proximal and early distal tubule.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call