Abstract

Hyperuricemia is a significant factor in a variety of diseases, including gout and cardiovascular diseases. Although renal excretion largely determines plasma urate concentration, the molecular mechanism of renal urate handling remains elusive. Previously, we identified a major urate reabsorptive transporter, URAT1 (SLC22A12), on the apical side of the renal proximal tubular cells. However, it is not known how urate taken up by URAT1 exits from the tubular cell to the systemic circulation. Here, we report that a sugar transport facilitator family member protein GLUT9 (SLC2A9) functions as an efflux transporter of urate from the tubular cell. GLUT9-expressed Xenopus oocytes mediated saturable urate transport (K(m): 365+/-42 microm). The transport was Na(+)-independent and enhanced at high concentrations of extracellular potassium favoring negative to positive potential direction. Substrate specificity and pyrazinoate sensitivity of GLUT9 was distinct from those of URAT1. The in vivo role of GLUT9 is supported by the fact that a renal hypouricemia patient without any mutations in SLC22A12 was found to have a missense mutation in SLC2A9, which reduced urate transport activity in vitro. Based on these data, we propose a novel model of transcellular urate transport in the kidney; urate [corrected] is taken up via apically located URAT1 and exits the cell via basolaterally located GLUT9, which we suggest be renamed URATv1 (voltage-driven urate transporter 1).

Highlights

  • Hyperuricemia is a significant factor in a variety of diseases, including gout and cardiovascular diseases

  • We report that a sugar transport facilitator family member protein GLUT9 (SLC2A9) functions as an efflux transporter of urate from the tubular cell

  • A sugar transport facilitator family protein GLUT9 was found to act as a voltage-driven urate transporter

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Summary

ACCELERATED PUBLICATION

Plasma Urate Level Is Directly Regulated by a Voltage-driven Urate Efflux Transporter URATv1 (SLC2A9) in Humans*□S. Despite several potential candidate proteins for urate transport such as UAT (uric acid transporter), OAT1 (organic anionic transporter 1), OAT3, OAT4, OATv1/NPT1 (sodium phosphate transporter 1), MRP4 (multidrug resistance-associated protein), and OAT10 [6,7,8,9,10], URAT1 is the sole transporter whose physiological role in renal urate reabsorption is established, based on the fact that lossof-function mutations in URAT1 cause renal hypouricemia [5] It is not known how urate taken up via URAT1 exits from the tubular cell [11]. We report a previously unknown urate transporter on the basolateral side of the renal proximal tubule, which is likely to act in tandem with URAT1 for urate reabsorption in its physiological role in vivo in humans

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Idiopathic renal hypouricemia
DISCUSSION
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS
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