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1.
Toxicol Lett ; 238(3): 45-52, 2015 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26235813

ABSTRACT

Using isolated mouse renal proximal tubules incubated with lactate as substrate, we have found that the addition of 1-50 µM cadmium chloride (CdCl2) caused a concentration-dependent decrease in lactate utilization, in glucose production and in the cellular level of ATP, coenzyme A, acetyl-coenzyme A and glutathione (reduced and oxidized forms). Combining enzymatic and (13)C NMR measurements in a cellular metabolomic approach, we have shown that, in the presence of 10 µM CdCl2, fluxes through the key-enzymes of gluconeogenesis, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and glucose-6-phosphatase were greatly depressed by cadmium. This was accompanied by a reduction in fluxes through the enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Comparing the mouse and human renal metabolic responses to cadmium, it is interesting to observe that the mouse renal proximal tubule was much more sensitive than the human renal proximal tubule to the adverse effects of CdCl2. As far as renal gluconeogenesis is concerned, the mouse seems to be an appropriate and convenient animal model to study the mechanism of cadmium nephrotoxicity. However, the data obtained in the mouse should be extrapolated to humans with caution because the inhibition of fluxes through the enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mouse tubules were not observed in human tubules.


Subject(s)
Cadmium Chloride/pharmacology , Gluconeogenesis/drug effects , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/drug effects , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Metabolomics/methods , Animals , Cadmium Chloride/administration & dosage , Carbon Isotopes , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Gluconeogenesis/physiology , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/physiology , Mice
2.
Arch Toxicol ; 85(9): 1067-77, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21153630

ABSTRACT

As part of a study on cadmium nephrotoxicity, we studied the effect of cadmium chloride (CdCl2) in isolated human renal proximal tubules metabolizing the physiological substrate lactate. Dose-effect experiments showed that 10-500 µM CdCl2 reduced lactate removal, glucose production and the cellular levels of ATP, coenzyme A, acetyl-coenzyme A and of reduced glutathione in a dose-dependent manner. After incubation with 5 mM L: -[1-(13)C]-, or L: -[2-(13)C]-, or L: -[3-(13)C] lactate or 5 mM L: -lactate plus 25 mM NaH(13)CO3 as substrates, substrate utilization and product formation were measured by both enzymatic and carbon 13 NMR methods. Combination of enzymatic and NMR measurements with a mathematical model of lactate metabolism previously validated showed that 100 µM CdCl2 caused an inhibition of flux through lactate dehydrogenase and alanine aminotransferase and through the entire gluconeogenic pathway; fluxes were diminished by 19% (lactate dehydrogenase), 28% (alanine aminotransferase), 28% (pyruvate carboxylase), 42% (phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase), and 52% (glucose-6-phosphatase). Such effects occurred without altering the oxidation of the lactate carbons or fluxes through enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle despite a large fall of the cellular ATP level, a marker of the energy status and of the viability of the renal cells. These results that were observed at clinically relevant tissue concentrations of cadmium provide a biochemical basis for a better understanding of the cellular mechanism of cadmium-induced renal proximal tubulopathy in humans chronically exposed to cadmium.


Subject(s)
Cadmium Chloride/toxicity , Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Gluconeogenesis/drug effects , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/drug effects , Lactates/metabolism , Metabolomics/methods , Cadmium Chloride/pharmacokinetics , Carbon Isotopes , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Environmental Pollutants/pharmacokinetics , Humans , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/cytology , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/enzymology , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Tissue Culture Techniques
3.
Biochem J ; 401(2): 465-73, 2007 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17002601

ABSTRACT

Recent reports have indicated that 48-72 h of fasting, Type 1 diabetes and high-protein feeding induce gluconeogenesis in the small intestine of adult rats in vivo. Since this would (i) represent a dramatic revision of the prevailing view that only the liver and the kidneys are gluconeogenic and (ii) have major consequences in the metabolism, nutrition and diabetes fields, we have thoroughly re-examined this question in the situation reported to induce the highest rate of gluconeogenesis. For this, metabolically viable small intestinal segments from 72 h-fasted adult rats were incubated with [3-13C]glutamine as substrate. After incubation, substrate utilization and product accumulation were measured by enzymatic and NMR spectroscopic methods. Although the segments utilized [13C]glutamine at high rates and accumulated 13C-labelled products linearly for 30 min in vitro, no substantial glucose synthesis could be detected. This was not due to the re-utilization of [13C]glucose initially synthesized from [13C]glutamine. Arteriovenous metabolite concentration difference measurements across the portal vein-drained viscera of 72 h-fasted Wistar and Sprague-Dawley rats clearly indicated that glutamine, the main if not the only gluconeogenic precursor taken up, could not give rise to detectable glucose production in vivo. Therefore we challenge the view that the small intestine of the adult rat is a gluconeogenic organ.


Subject(s)
Fasting/metabolism , Gluconeogenesis/physiology , Glutamine/metabolism , Intestine, Small/metabolism , Alanine/blood , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Glucosamine/pharmacology , Glucose/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/blood , Glutamine/blood , Hexokinase/antagonists & inhibitors , In Vitro Techniques , Intestine, Small/cytology , Male , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Portal Vein , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rats, Wistar
4.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 17(2): 398-405, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16396963

ABSTRACT

Recent studies indicate that renal gluconeogenesis is substantially stimulated in patients with type 2 diabetes, but the mechanism that is responsible for such stimulation remains unknown. Therefore, this study tested the hypothesis that renal gluconeogenesis is intrinsically elevated in the Zucker diabetic fatty rat, which is considered to be an excellent model of type 2 diabetes. For this, isolated renal proximal tubules from diabetic rats and from their lean nondiabetic littermates were incubated in the presence of physiologic gluconeogenic precursors. Although there was no increase in substrate removal and despite a reduced cellular ATP level, a marked stimulation of gluconeogenesis was observed in diabetic relative to nondiabetic rats, with near-physiologic concentrations of lactate (38%), glutamine (51%) and glycerol (66%). This stimulation was caused by a change in the fate of the substrate carbon skeletons resulting from an increase in the activities and mRNA levels of the key gluconeogenic enzymes that are common to lactate, glutamine, and glycerol metabolism, i.e., mainly of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and, to a lesser extent, of glucose-6-phosphatase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase. Experimental evidence suggests that glucocorticoids and cAMP were two factors that were responsible for the long-term stimulation of renal gluconeogenesis observed in the diabetic rats. These data provide the first demonstration in an animal model that renal gluconeogenesis is upregulated by a long-term mechanism during type 2 diabetes. Together with the increased renal mass (38%) observed, they lend support to the view so far based only on in vivo studies performed in humans that renal gluconeogenesis may be stimulated by and crucially contribute to the hyperglycemia of type 2 diabetes.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/metabolism , Gluconeogenesis/physiology , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/metabolism , Animals , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Fructose-Bisphosphatase/genetics , Fructose-Bisphosphatase/metabolism , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/genetics , Glucose-6-Phosphatase/metabolism , Glutamine , Glycerol , Lactic Acid , Male , Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP)/genetics , Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP)/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Zucker , Tissue Culture Techniques
5.
Arch Toxicol ; 79(10): 587-94, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15991025

ABSTRACT

Cephaloridine, which accumulates in the renal proximal tubule, is a model compound used for studying the toxicity of antibiotics towards this nephron segment. Several studies have demonstrated that cephaloridine alters renal intermediary and energy metabolism, but the mechanism by which this compound interferes with renal metabolic pathways remains incompletely understood. In an attempt to improve our knowledge in this field, we have studied the influence of cephaloridine on the synthesis of glutamine, which represents a key metabolic process involving several important enzymatic steps in the rabbit kidney. For this, suspensions of rabbit renal proximal tubules were incubated for 90 and 180 min in the presence of 5 mM alanine, an important glutamine precursor, both in the absence and the presence of 10 mM cephaloridine. Glutamate accumulation and glutamine synthesis were found to be inhibited by cephaloridine after 90 and 180 min of incubation, and cephaloridine accumulation in the renal proximal cells occurred in a time-dependent manner. The renal proximal tubule activities of alanine aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase, which initiates alanine removal and releases the ammonia needed for glutamine synthesis, respectively, were inhibited to a significant degree and in a concentration-dependent manner by cephaloridine concentrations in the range found to accumulate in the renal proximal cells. Citrate synthase and glutamine synthetase activities were also inhibited by cephaloridine, but to a much lesser extent. The above enzymatic activities were not found to be inhibited when they were measured after successive dilutions of renal proximal tubules incubated for 180 min in the presence of 5 mM alanine and 10 mM cephaloridine. When microdissected segments (S1-S3) of rabbit renal proximal tubules were incubated for 180 min with 5 mM alanine with and without 5 and 10 mM cephaloridine, glutamate accumulation and glutamine synthesis were also inhibited in the three renal proximal segments studied; the latter cephaloridine-induced inhibitions observed were concentration-dependent except for glutamine in the S3 segment. These results are consistent with the view that cephaloridine accumulates and is toxic along the entire rabbit renal proximal tubule. They also demonstrate that cephaloridine interferes in a concentration-dependent and reversible manner mainly with alanine aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase, which are therefore newly-identified targets of the toxic effects of cephaloridine in the rabbit renal proximal tubule.


Subject(s)
Alanine/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/toxicity , Cephaloridine/toxicity , Glutamine/metabolism , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/drug effects , Alanine Transaminase/antagonists & inhibitors , Alanine Transaminase/metabolism , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Glutamate Dehydrogenase/antagonists & inhibitors , Glutamate Dehydrogenase/metabolism , Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase/antagonists & inhibitors , Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , In Vitro Techniques , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/enzymology , Rabbits , Time Factors
6.
J Biol Chem ; 278(40): 38159-66, 2003 Oct 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12871952

ABSTRACT

As part of a study on the regulation of renal ammoniagenesis in the mouse kidney, we investigated the effect of chronic metabolic acidosis on glutamine synthesis by isolated mouse renal proximal tubules. The results obtained reveal that, in tubules from control mice, glutamine synthesis occurred at high rates from glutamate and proline and, to a lesser extent, from ornithine, alanine, and aspartate. A 48 h, metabolic acidosis caused a marked inhibition of glutamine synthesis from near-physiological concentrations of both alanine and proline that were avidly metabolized by the tubules; metabolic acidosis also greatly stimulated glutamine utilization and metabolism. These effects were accompanied by a large increase (i) in alanine, proline, and glutamine gluconeogenesis and (ii) in ammonia accumulation from proline and glutamine. In the renal cortex of acidotic mice, the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase increased 4-fold, but that of glutamate dehydrogenase did not change; in contrast with what is known in the rat renal cortex, metabolic acidosis markedly diminished the glutamine synthetase activity and protein level, but not the glutamine synthetase mRNA level in the mouse renal cortex. These results strongly suggest that, in the mouse kidney, glutamine synthetase is an important regulatory component of the availability of the ammonium ions to be excreted for defending systemic acid-base balance. Furthermore, they show that, in rodents, the regulation of renal glutamine synthetase is species-specific.


Subject(s)
Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase/antagonists & inhibitors , Kidney/enzymology , Acidosis/metabolism , Actins/metabolism , Alanine/chemistry , Ammonia/metabolism , Animals , Carbon/chemistry , Female , Gluconeogenesis , Glutamate Dehydrogenase/biosynthesis , Glutamic Acid/chemistry , Glutamine/chemistry , Kidney Cortex/enzymology , Kidney Tubules/metabolism , Mice , Models, Biological , Nitrogen/chemistry , Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (ATP)/biosynthesis , Proline/chemistry , Proline/metabolism , Quaternary Ammonium Compounds/chemistry , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Rats , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Species Specificity , Time Factors
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