Abstract
Regulation of urea transport by vasopressin in inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) cells is thought to be important for the urinary concentrating mechanism. Isolated tubule perfusion studies suggest the existence of a saturable urea carrier. We have measured 14C-urea efflux in IMCD cells which were freshly isolated and grown in primary culture. Cells were isolated from rat papilla by collagenase digestion and hypotonic shock. In suspended cells, 14C-urea efflux (Jurea) from loaded cells was exponential with time constant 59 +/- 3 sec (SEM, n = 6, 23 degrees C). Jurea had an activation energy of 4.1 kcal/mole and was inhibited 42 +/- 7% by 0.25 mM phloretin and 30-40% by the high affinity urea analogues dimethylurea and phenylurea. Jurea was increased 40-60% by addition of vasopressin (10(-8) M) or 8-bromo-cAMP (1 mM); stimulated Jurea was inhibited 55 +/- 8% by the kinase A inhibitor H-8. Phorbol esters and epidermal growth factor did not alter Jurea. IMCD cells grown in primary culture were homogeneous in appearance with greater than fivefold stimulation of cAMP by vasopressin. The exponential time constant for urea efflux was 610 +/- 20 sec (n = 3). Jurea was not altered by vasopressin, cAMP or phloretin. Another function of in vivo IMCD cells, vasopressin-dependent formation of endosomes containing water channels, was absent in the cultured cells. These results demonstrate presence of a urea transporter on suspended IMCD cells which is activated by cAMP and inhibited by phloretin and urea analogues. The urea transporter and its regulation by cAMP, and cAMP-dependent apical membrane endocytosis, are lost after growth in primary culture.
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