Renal aquaporins and sodium transporters with special focus on urinary tract obstruction

Jørgen Frøkiær, Chunling Li, Yimin Shi, Anja Jensen, Helle Prætorius, Helle Hansen, Oguz Topcu, Chrysanthi Sardeli, Weidong Wang, Tae Hwan Kwon, Søren Nielsen

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

The discovery of aquaporin-1 (AQP1) by Agre and colleagues explained the long-standing biophysical question of how water specifically crosses biological membranes. These studies led to the discovery and identification of a whole new family of membrane proteins, the aquaporins. At present, at least seven aquaporins are expressed at distinct sites in the kidney and 4 members of this family (AQP1-4) have been demonstrated to play pivotal roles in the physiology and pathophysiology for renal regulation of body water balance. Osmotic equilibration via renal aquaporins is maintained by active transport of NaCl. The major sodium transporters and channels in the individual renal tubule segments have been identified and the regulation of these transporters and channels are fundamental for renal sodium reabsorption and for establishing the driving force. In this mini-review the role of renal aquaporins and sodium transporters and channels is briefly described and their key role for the impaired urinary concentrating capacity in response to urinary tract obstruction is reviewed. Thus this review updates previous detailed reviews (1-5).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)71-79
Number of pages9
JournalAPMIS, Supplement
Volume111
Issue number109
StatePublished - 2003

Keywords

  • Aquaporins
  • Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
  • Renal sodium transporters
  • Urinary tract obstruction

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