Renal Tubular Cells Cultured from Genetically Modified Animals
- 28 October 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Nephron Experimental Nephrology
- Vol. 7 (5-6) , 407-412
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000020638
Abstract
The culture of renal tubular cells from genetically modified animals opens the opportunity of biochemical, cell biology and physiological studies under strictly controlled conditions. Either primary cultures or cell lines can be used. Through two examples of primary cultures of proximal tubular cells obtained from knock-out mice, important information about the function of proteins were obtained. Mice lacking vimentin, an intermediate filament normally reexpressed in tubular cells during regeneration and culture, have a normal tubular function under basal conditions. Proximal cells grown from these animals exhibit a defect in sodium-glucose cotransport activity, most likely related to alterations in the dimer/monomer ratio of the transporter in the apical membranes. These alterations may be important in terms of tubular function during the recovery phase following acute tubular necrosis. The situation is strikingly different with regard to mice lacking HNF-1, a transactivator involved in the transcription of multiple genes. These animals suffer from severe Fanconi syndrome related to decreased expression of proximal transporters including isoforms of sodium-glucose (SGLT2) and sodium-phosphate (NPT1) cotransporters. Whereas transport defects are observed in isolated tubules, they are no longer apparent in cultured proximal cells because the expression of these isoforms is suppressed under culture conditions. These observations illustrate the interest and limits of the in vitro models for studying renal function in transgenic animals.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transgenic Models in Renal Tubular PhysiologyNephron Experimental Nephrology, 1998
- Tubule Function in Transgenic MiceNephron Experimental Nephrology, 1998
- Targeted inactivation of Npt2 in mice leads to severe renal phosphate wasting, hypercalciuria, and skeletal abnormalitiesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998
- The Kidney Androgen-regulated Protein Promoter Confers Renal Proximal Tubule Cell-specific and Highly Androgen-responsive Expression on the Human Angiotensinogen Gene in Transgenic MicePublished by Elsevier ,1997
- The variability in activity of the universally expressed human cytomegalovirus immediate early gene 1 enhancer/promoter in transgenic miceNucleic Acids Research, 1991