Lama Al-Qusairi, Mohammed Z Ferdaus, Truyen D Pham, Dimin Li, P Richard Grimm, Ava M Zapf, Delaney C Abood, Ebrahim Tahaei, Eric Delpire, Susan M Wall, Paul A Welling
{"title":"Dietary anions control potassium excretion: it is more than a poorly absorbable anion effect.","authors":"Lama Al-Qusairi, Mohammed Z Ferdaus, Truyen D Pham, Dimin Li, P Richard Grimm, Ava M Zapf, Delaney C Abood, Ebrahim Tahaei, Eric Delpire, Susan M Wall, Paul A Welling","doi":"10.1152/ajprenal.00193.2023","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The urinary potassium (K<sup>+</sup>) excretion machinery is upregulated with increasing dietary K<sup>+</sup>, but the role of accompanying dietary anions remains inadequately characterized. Poorly absorbable anions, including [Formula: see text], are thought to increase K<sup>+</sup> secretion through a transepithelial voltage effect. Here, we tested if they also influence the K<sup>+</sup> secretion machinery. Wild-type mice, aldosterone synthase (AS) knockout (KO) mice, or pendrin KO mice were randomized to control, high-KCl, or high-KHCO<sub>3</sub> diets. The K<sup>+</sup> secretory capacity was assessed in balance experiments. Protein abundance, modification, and localization of K<sup>+</sup>-secretory transporters were evaluated by Western blot analysis and confocal microscopy. Feeding the high-KHCO<sub>3</sub> diet increased urinary K<sup>+</sup> excretion and the transtubular K<sup>+</sup> gradient significantly more than the high-KCl diet, coincident with more pronounced upregulation of epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC) and renal outer medullary K<sup>+</sup> (ROMK) channels and apical localization in the distal nephron. Experiments in AS KO mice revealed that the enhanced effects of [Formula: see text] were aldosterone independent. The high-KHCO<sub>3</sub> diet also uniquely increased the large-conductance Ca<sup>2+</sup>-activated K<sup>+</sup> (BK) channel β<sub>4</sub>-subunit, stabilizing BKα on the apical membrane, the Cl<sup>-</sup>/[Formula: see text] exchanger, pendrin, and the apical KCl cotransporter (KCC3a), all of which are expressed specifically in pendrin-positive intercalated cells. Experiments in pendrin KO mice revealed that pendrin was required to increase K<sup>+</sup> excretion with the high-KHCO<sub>3</sub> diet. In summary, [Formula: see text] stimulates K<sup>+</sup> excretion beyond a poorly absorbable anion effect, upregulating ENaC and ROMK in principal cells and BK, pendrin, and KCC3a in pendrin-positive intercalated cells. The adaptive mechanism prevents hyperkalemia and alkalosis with the consumption of alkaline ash-rich diets but may drive K<sup>+</sup> wasting and hypokalemia in alkalosis.<b>NEW & NOTEWORTHY</b> Dietary anions profoundly impact K<sup>+</sup> homeostasis. Here, we found that a K<sup>+</sup>-rich diet, containing [Formula: see text] as the counteranion, enhances the electrogenic K<sup>+</sup> excretory machinery, epithelial Na<sup>+</sup> channels, and renal outer medullary K<sup>+</sup> channels, much more than a high-KCl diet. It also uniquely induces KCC3a and pendrin, in B-intercalated cells, providing an electroneutral KHCO<sub>3</sub> secretion pathway. These findings reveal new K<sup>+</sup> balance mechanisms that drive adaption to alkaline and K<sup>+</sup>-rich foods, which should guide new treatment strategies for K<sup>+</sup> disorders.</p>","PeriodicalId":7588,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology","volume":"325 3","pages":"F377-F393"},"PeriodicalIF":3.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10639028/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00193.2023","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2023/7/27 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PHYSIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The urinary potassium (K+) excretion machinery is upregulated with increasing dietary K+, but the role of accompanying dietary anions remains inadequately characterized. Poorly absorbable anions, including [Formula: see text], are thought to increase K+ secretion through a transepithelial voltage effect. Here, we tested if they also influence the K+ secretion machinery. Wild-type mice, aldosterone synthase (AS) knockout (KO) mice, or pendrin KO mice were randomized to control, high-KCl, or high-KHCO3 diets. The K+ secretory capacity was assessed in balance experiments. Protein abundance, modification, and localization of K+-secretory transporters were evaluated by Western blot analysis and confocal microscopy. Feeding the high-KHCO3 diet increased urinary K+ excretion and the transtubular K+ gradient significantly more than the high-KCl diet, coincident with more pronounced upregulation of epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC) and renal outer medullary K+ (ROMK) channels and apical localization in the distal nephron. Experiments in AS KO mice revealed that the enhanced effects of [Formula: see text] were aldosterone independent. The high-KHCO3 diet also uniquely increased the large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channel β4-subunit, stabilizing BKα on the apical membrane, the Cl-/[Formula: see text] exchanger, pendrin, and the apical KCl cotransporter (KCC3a), all of which are expressed specifically in pendrin-positive intercalated cells. Experiments in pendrin KO mice revealed that pendrin was required to increase K+ excretion with the high-KHCO3 diet. In summary, [Formula: see text] stimulates K+ excretion beyond a poorly absorbable anion effect, upregulating ENaC and ROMK in principal cells and BK, pendrin, and KCC3a in pendrin-positive intercalated cells. The adaptive mechanism prevents hyperkalemia and alkalosis with the consumption of alkaline ash-rich diets but may drive K+ wasting and hypokalemia in alkalosis.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Dietary anions profoundly impact K+ homeostasis. Here, we found that a K+-rich diet, containing [Formula: see text] as the counteranion, enhances the electrogenic K+ excretory machinery, epithelial Na+ channels, and renal outer medullary K+ channels, much more than a high-KCl diet. It also uniquely induces KCC3a and pendrin, in B-intercalated cells, providing an electroneutral KHCO3 secretion pathway. These findings reveal new K+ balance mechanisms that drive adaption to alkaline and K+-rich foods, which should guide new treatment strategies for K+ disorders.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology publishes original manuscripts on timely topics in both basic science and clinical research. Published articles address a broad range of subjects relating to the kidney and urinary tract, and may involve human or animal models, individual cell types, and isolated membrane systems. Also covered are the pathophysiological basis of renal disease processes, regulation of body fluids, and clinical research that provides mechanistic insights. Studies of renal function may be conducted using a wide range of approaches, such as biochemistry, immunology, genetics, mathematical modeling, molecular biology, as well as physiological and clinical methodologies.