Cargando…

Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats

The anti-diuretic hormone arginine vasopressin is thought to be a detrimental factor in polycystic kidney disease (PKD). We previously reported that high water intake (HWI) reduced urine osmolality and urinary arginine vasopressin, improved renal function, and reduced the kidney/body weight ratio in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nagao, Shizuko, Kugita, Masanori, Kumamoto, Kanako, Yoshimura, Aya, Nishii, Kazuhiro, Yamaguchi, Tamio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6417693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30870430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207461
_version_ 1783403606511190016
author Nagao, Shizuko
Kugita, Masanori
Kumamoto, Kanako
Yoshimura, Aya
Nishii, Kazuhiro
Yamaguchi, Tamio
author_facet Nagao, Shizuko
Kugita, Masanori
Kumamoto, Kanako
Yoshimura, Aya
Nishii, Kazuhiro
Yamaguchi, Tamio
author_sort Nagao, Shizuko
collection PubMed
description The anti-diuretic hormone arginine vasopressin is thought to be a detrimental factor in polycystic kidney disease (PKD). We previously reported that high water intake (HWI) reduced urine osmolality and urinary arginine vasopressin, improved renal function, and reduced the kidney/body weight ratio in PCK rats, an orthologous model of human PKD. In PKD patients, however, it is reported that HWI increases total kidney volume, urine volume, and urine sodium excretion, which could be a consequence of high salt intake. In the current study, we loaded PCK rats with high salt concurrently with HWI to determine whether this human-imitated condition exacerbates disease progression. PCK rats were assigned into 4 groups: control group (CONT: distilled water), HWI group (HWI: 5% glucose in water), HWI with 0.2% NaCl group (HWI+0.2%NaCl), and HWI with 0.45% NaCl group (HWI+0.45%NaCl). Total water intake during the experimental period was increased by 1.86-, 2.02-, and 2.42-fold in HWI, HWI+0.2%NaCl, and HWI+0.45%NaCl, and sodium intake was increased by 2.55- and 5.83-fold in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl, respectively, compared with CONT. Systolic blood pressure was higher in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl than in both CONT and HWI. Serum urea nitrogen, kidney/body weight ratio, cAMP, cystic area, and fibrosis index were significantly lower in HWI compared with CONT, and these ameliorative effects were not abrogated in either HWI+0.2%NaCl or HWI+0.45%NaCl. The amount of sodium excreted into the urine was increased by 2.50- and 8.38-fold in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl, respectively, compared with HWI. Serum sodium levels were not different between the groups. These findings indicate that the beneficial effect of HWI against the progression of cystic kidney disease was not affected even by high salt-overload in this rodent model of PKD.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6417693
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64176932019-04-01 Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats Nagao, Shizuko Kugita, Masanori Kumamoto, Kanako Yoshimura, Aya Nishii, Kazuhiro Yamaguchi, Tamio PLoS One Research Article The anti-diuretic hormone arginine vasopressin is thought to be a detrimental factor in polycystic kidney disease (PKD). We previously reported that high water intake (HWI) reduced urine osmolality and urinary arginine vasopressin, improved renal function, and reduced the kidney/body weight ratio in PCK rats, an orthologous model of human PKD. In PKD patients, however, it is reported that HWI increases total kidney volume, urine volume, and urine sodium excretion, which could be a consequence of high salt intake. In the current study, we loaded PCK rats with high salt concurrently with HWI to determine whether this human-imitated condition exacerbates disease progression. PCK rats were assigned into 4 groups: control group (CONT: distilled water), HWI group (HWI: 5% glucose in water), HWI with 0.2% NaCl group (HWI+0.2%NaCl), and HWI with 0.45% NaCl group (HWI+0.45%NaCl). Total water intake during the experimental period was increased by 1.86-, 2.02-, and 2.42-fold in HWI, HWI+0.2%NaCl, and HWI+0.45%NaCl, and sodium intake was increased by 2.55- and 5.83-fold in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl, respectively, compared with CONT. Systolic blood pressure was higher in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl than in both CONT and HWI. Serum urea nitrogen, kidney/body weight ratio, cAMP, cystic area, and fibrosis index were significantly lower in HWI compared with CONT, and these ameliorative effects were not abrogated in either HWI+0.2%NaCl or HWI+0.45%NaCl. The amount of sodium excreted into the urine was increased by 2.50- and 8.38-fold in HWI+0.2%NaCl and HWI+0.45%NaCl, respectively, compared with HWI. Serum sodium levels were not different between the groups. These findings indicate that the beneficial effect of HWI against the progression of cystic kidney disease was not affected even by high salt-overload in this rodent model of PKD. Public Library of Science 2019-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6417693/ /pubmed/30870430 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207461 Text en © 2019 Nagao et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nagao, Shizuko
Kugita, Masanori
Kumamoto, Kanako
Yoshimura, Aya
Nishii, Kazuhiro
Yamaguchi, Tamio
Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title_full Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title_fullStr Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title_full_unstemmed Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title_short Increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded PCK rats
title_sort increased salt intake does not worsen the progression of renal cystic disease in high water-loaded pck rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6417693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30870430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207461
work_keys_str_mv AT nagaoshizuko increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats
AT kugitamasanori increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats
AT kumamotokanako increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats
AT yoshimuraaya increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats
AT nishiikazuhiro increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats
AT yamaguchitamio increasedsaltintakedoesnotworsentheprogressionofrenalcysticdiseaseinhighwaterloadedpckrats