Deakin University
Browse

File(s) under permanent embargo

Multiple urea transporter proteins in the kidney of holocephalan elephant fish (Callorhinchus milii)

journal contribution
posted on 2009-10-01, 00:00 authored by K Kakumura, S Watanabe, Justin Bell, John DonaldJohn Donald, Marie-Therese Toop, T Kaneko, S Hyodo
Reabsorption of filtered urea by the kidney is essential for retaining high levels of urea in marine cartilaginous fish. Our previous studies on the shark facilitative urea transporter (UT) suggest that additional UT(s) comprising the urea reabsorption system could exist in the cartilaginous fish kidney. Here, we isolated three cDNAs encoding UTs from the kidney of elephant fish, Callorhinchus milii, and termed them efUT-1, efUT-2 and efUT-3. efUT-1 is orthologous to known elasmobranch UTs, while efUT-2 and efUT-3 are novel UTs in cartilaginous fish. Two variants were found for efUT-1 and efUT-2, in which the NH2-terminal intracellular domain was distinct between the variants. Differences in potential phosphorylation sites were found in the variant-specific NH2-terminal domains. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, all five UT transcripts including the efUT-1 and efUT-2 variants induced more than a 10-fold increase in [14C] urea uptake. Phloretin inhibited dose-dependently the increase of urea uptake, suggesting that the identified UTs are facilitative UTs. Molecular phylogenetic analysis revealed that efUT-1 and efUT-2 had diverged in the cartilaginous fish lineage, while efUT-3 is distinct from efUT-1 and efUT-2. The present finding of multiple UTs in elephant fish provides a key to understanding the molecular mechanisms of urea reabsorption system in the cartilaginous fish kidney.

History

Journal

Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Biochemistry & molecular biology

Volume

154

Issue

2

Pagination

239 - 247

Publisher

Elsevier Inc.

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1096-4959

eISSN

1879-1107

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Elsevier Inc.