Abstract

The development of urolithiasis is a multifaceted process, starting with urine supersaturation and ending with the formation of mature renal calculi. The retention of microcrystals by kidney tubule epithelium cell membranes has been proposed as a critical event in the process. To date, attachment of kidney stone constituent crystals to urothelial cells has been demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo yet the mechanism of crystal attachment remains unknown. We hypothesize that for effective stone crystal attachment to the epithelium there must be cell membrane rearrangement that would allow for long-range bonding between the stone crystal and the cell membrane. This rearrangement may be influenced by the physical state of the membrane. The current study examines calcium oxalate monohydrate (COM) crystal attachment to inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) cells following changes in cell membrane fluidity. Radioactively labeled COM crystals were used to quantitate crystal attachment. Membrane fluidity was altered by changing temperature, cell membrane cholesterol content, or extended length of cell culture. Crystal attachment to IMCD cells was directly correlated to changes in membrane fluidity. This finding was consistently observed regardless of the method used to alter membrane fluidity. The results are consistent with the theory that the ability to form a crystal attachment region on the cell surface may be related to the ease of rearrangement of membrane components at the cell surface. Variations in the urothelial cell environment during certain pathological conditions in the kidney could induce these physical perturbations and prime kidney epithelial cells at or near the papillary tip to bind COM crystals.

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