Abstract

The UT-B urea transporter is the major urea transporter in red blood cells and kidney descending vasa recta. Humans and mice that lack UT-B have a mild urine-concentrating defect. Whether deletion of UT-B altered the expression of other transporter proteins involved in urinary concentration was tested. Fluorescence-based real-time reverse transcription-PCR and Northern blot analysis showed upregulation of the UT-A2 urea transporter and the aquaporin 2 (AQP2) and AQP3 water channel transcripts but no change in other urea transporters or AQP. Western blot analysis showed that UT-A2 protein abundance in the outer medulla of UT-B null mice increased to 122 +/- 6% of wild-type control. AQP2 protein abundance increased to 177 +/- 32% and 127 +/- 7% in the outer and inner medulla, respectively, of UT-B null versus wild-type mice. The abundance of UT-A1, AQP1, renal outer medullary potassium channel, and NKCC2/BSC1 proteins were not significantly different between UT-B null and wild-type mice. The increases in AQP2 and AQP3 would reduce water loss and improve concentrating ability. The lack of UT-B does not result in a change in expression of urea transporters involved in urea reabsorption from the inner medullary collecting duct (UT-A1 and UT-A3). However, UT-B null mice have a selective increase in UT-A2 protein abundance. This may be an adaptive response to the loss of UT-B, because UT-B and UT-A2 are involved in different intrarenal urea recycling pathways.

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