Abstract
PTH inhibition of renal sodium-phosphate (Na-Pi) cotransport is associated with the endocytic retrieval of the type II Na-Pi cotransporter, Npt2, from the renal brush border membrane into the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment. The aim of the present study was to determine whether mice homozygous for the disrupted Npt2 gene (Npt2-/-) exhibit decreased renal Pi reabsorption in response to PTH. We demonstrate that PTH has no effect on the serum Pi concentration, fractional excretion of Pi, or Na-dependent Pi transport in renal brush border membrane vesicles in Npt2-/- mice. In contrast, PTH elicits a fall in the serum Pi concentration, an increase in urinary Pi excretion, a decrease in brush border membrane Na-Pi cotransport, and a corresponding reduction in the relative abundance of Npt2 protein in wild-type mice (Npt2+/+). Both Npt2-/- and Npt2+/+ mice exhibit a significant rise in the urinary cAMP/creatinine ratio in response to PTH, indicating that generalized resistance to PTH cannot account for the absence of the PTH response in Npt2-/- mice. In addition, we demonstrate that Pi-depleted normal mice respond to PTH with a decrease in renal brush border membrane Na-Pi cotransport and Npt2 protein, indicating that Pi deficiency per se does not account for PTH resistance in Npt2-/- mice. Taken together, our data provide compelling evidence that Npt2 gene expression is crucial for PTH effects on renal Pi handling.
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