Dyslipidemia, with changes in plasma membrane (PM) composition, is associated with hypertension, while rising PM cholesterol induces Na+ channel activity. We hypothesize that ablation of renal tubular ABCA1, a cholesterol efflux protein, leads to cholesterol- and Na+-dependent changes in blood pressure (BP). Transgenic mice (TgPAX8rtTA;tetO-Cre/+) expressing a doxycycline (dox)-inducible CRE recombinase were bred with mice expressing floxed ABCA1 to generate renal tubules deficient in ABCA1 (ABCA1FF). Tail-cuff systolic BP (SBP) was measured in mice on specific diets. Immunoblotting was performed on whole and PM protein lysates of kidney from mice completing experimental diets. Cortical PM of ABCA1FF showed reduced ABCA1 (60 ± 28%; n = 10, P < 0.05) compared with wild-type littermates (WT; n = 9). Tail-cuff SBP of ABCA1FF (n = 11) was not only greater post dox, but also during cholesterol or high Na+ feeding (P < 0.05) compared with WT mice (n = 15). A Na+-deficient diet abolished the difference, while 6 wk of cholesterol diet raised SBP in ABCA1FF compared with mice before cholesterol feeding (P < 0.05). No difference in α-ENaC protein abundance was noted in kidney lysate; however, γ-ENaC increased in ABCA1FF mice versus WT mice. In kidney membranes, NKCC2 abundance was greater in ABCA1FF versus WT mice. Cortical lysates of ABCA1FF mouse kidneys expressed less renin and angiotensin I receptor than WT mouse kidneys. Furosemide injection induced a greater diuretic effect in ABCA1FF (n = 7; 45.2 ± 8.7 µL/g body wt) versus WT (n = 7; 33.1 ± 6.9 µL/g body wt; P < 0.05) but amiloride did not. Tubular ABCA1 deficiency induces cholesterol-dependent rise in SBP and modest Na+ sensitivity of SBP, which we speculate is partly related to Na+ transporters and channels.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Cholesterol has been linked to greater Na+ channel activity in kidney cells, which may predispose to systemic hypertension. We showed that when ABCA1, a protein that removes cholesterol from tissues, is ablated from mouse kidneys, systemic blood pressure is greater than normal mice. Dietary cholesterol further increases blood pressure in transgenic mice, whereas low dietary salt intake reduced blood pressure to that of normal mice. Thus, we speculate that diseases and pharmaceuticals that reduce renal ABCA1 expression, like diabetes and calcineurin inhibitors, respectively, contribute to the prominence of hypertension in their clinical presentation.
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