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1 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716; 2 Department of Physiology, University of Iceland, IS-101 Reykjavík, Iceland; and 3 Department of Anatomy and Physiology, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, DK-1870 Frederiksberg C, Denmark
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ABSTRACT |
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Transport in the colon of the domestic fowl
switches from sodium-linked hexose and amino acid cotransport on
high-salt intake to amiloride-sensitive sodium channel expression on
low-salt (LS) diets. The present experiments were designed to
investigate the role of aldosterone in suppression of the colonic
sodium-glucose luminal cotransporter (SGLT). LS-adapted hens were
resalinated with or without simultaneous aldosterone treatment. Changes
in the electrophysiological responses and SGLT protein expression levels were examined at 1, 3, and 7 days of treatment. Serum
aldosterone levels fell from ~400 pmol/l in LS-adapted hens to values
below the detection limit (<44 pmol/l) after 1 day of resalination. At
the same time, glucose-stimulated short circuit current
(ISC) increased from 20.9 ± 8.7 to
56.3 ± 15.5 µA/cm2, whereas amiloride-sensitive
ISC decreased from
68.9 ± 12.7 µA/cm2 on LS to +0.6 ± 12.0 µA/cm2.
Glucose-stimulated ISC increased further at 3 and 7 days of resalination, whereas amiloride-sensitive
ISC remained suppressed. When resalinated birds
were simultaneously treated with aldosterone, the LS pattern of high
amiloride-sensitive ISC and low
glucose-stimulated ISC was maintained.
Immunoblotting results from the same tissues demonstrated that
SGLT-like protein expression increased following resalination.
Aldosterone treatment completely blocked this effect. These results
demonstrate that aldosterone suppresses both activity and protein
expression of hen colonic SGLT. Resalination either through decreased
aldosterone or other factors may be able to activate SGLT activity
independently of increases in protein expression.
hen colon; sodium-glucose luminal cotransporter; low-salt diets; sodium channel expression; resalination
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INTRODUCTION |
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BIRDS LACK A URINARY BLADDER and instead allow for potential postrenal modification of urine by retrograde movement into segments of the lower intestine, i.e., colon and ceca (6, 26, 30, 32). Because of its role in modifying the final composition of both intestinal chyme and ureteral urine, the avian lower intestine has been referred to as the "integrating segment" (32). In the domestic fowl, the colonic epithelium is clearly adapted for high-capacity transport, with villi and microvilli amplifying the mucosal surface area (10) and evidence for a number of organic substrate and electrolyte transport pathways. These include sodium-coupled transport of hexoses and amino acids (3, 10, 24, 27) and short-chain fatty acid (22) and dipeptide (7) transport, possibly driven by H+ ion secretion (22, 25). Organic substrates for these transport pathways may originate from either intestinal chyme or ureteral urine.
It is not clear what the actual physiological role(s) of these transport processes are, but they could serve either osmoregulatory or nutritional homeostatic functions, or both. For example, it is known that significant amounts of protein are excreted in the ureteral urine, associated with urate spheres. This protein is subsequently degraded by microbial activity in the colon and ceca (6) and likely recycled as amino acids and peptides by colonic cotransporter activities. Furthermore, recent studies with the sodium-glucose luminal cotransporter (SGLT) provide evidence for high-capacity water transport, even against osmotic gradients (28). This raises the possibility of an osmoregulatory role for similar transporters in the avian colon.
However, a puzzling aspect of this system is the repeated observation that low-salt (LS) diets reduce or even eliminate the colonic sodium-linked cotransporter activities, while concurrently inducing the expression of electrogenic amiloride-sensitive sodium channels (ENaCs) (3, 10, 27, 34). The upregulation of ENaC activity is also seen in coprodeum (the more distal segment of the avian lower intestine), and it resembles the aldosterone-mediated regulation of ENaCs in mammalian colon and other target tissues (4, 9, 15, 16, 33-35). When hens are acutely resalinated or adapted to high-salt (HS) diets, the colonic transport pattern reverts to one of sodium-linked substrate cotransport, with little or no amiloride-sensitive ENaC activity (3, 10, 27, 33, 34).
Although the inverse correlation between circulating aldosterone levels and dietary salt is very strong (3), it is not clear that all of the changes in the colonic transport pathways are mediated by this hormone alone (1, 10, 26, 33, 34). Aldosterone treatment, for example, has not been able to completely induce the LS pattern of transport in chronically HS-adapted hens (10, 33), although it does appear able to maintain this pattern in LS hens that are acutely resalinated (8). Recent studies on dehydrated hens actually found increased, rather than decreased, sodium-dependent colonic glucose transport, despite modestly elevated aldosterone levels (11).
Several attempts have been made recently to detect and quantify changes in SGLT-like transporter expression in the avian colon. One antibody to the rabbit intestinal SGLT-1 (21), widely used to study expression in a variety of species (29), was found to lack cross-reactivity in the hen colon, while detecting expression in the jejunum and ileum (13, 14, 20). However, a second antibody, directed against a different epitope of the same rabbit SGLT-1 (31), has been successfully used to immunodetect SGLT-like expression in the hen colon (5, 20). Studies with this antibody have shown that SGLT expression correlates directly with sodium-linked glucose transport activity and inversely with dietary NaCl (5).
Our goal in the present study was to quantify changes in both protein expression and transport activity of the hen colonic SGLT during an acute resalination/aldosterone treatment protocol in LS-adapted hens. The results demonstrate that aldosterone directly suppresses this transporter at the protein expression level.
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METHODS AND MATERIALS |
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Animals and experimental treatments.
Forty-eight White Leghorn hens (mean body wt = 1,561 ± 35 g) were divided into eight groups of six birds each for this
study. Seven of these groups were adapted for at least 4 wk to a LS
diet, made up of corn, wheat, barley, and soy (total protein = 16%) with mineral and vitamin supplements and a sodium content
measured at 0.2 g/kg. The eighth, HS group was kept on the same diet,
but with 1% NaCl added to the feed and 0.5% NaCl to the drinking
water, for 6-8 wk. After 4 wk of LS acclimation, six of these
groups were acutely resalinated, with or without aldosterone treatment, whereas the remaining LS group was maintained on this diet with no
further treatment. Resalination consisted of an acute oral load of 10 ml/kg body wt of 0.75 M NaCl, followed by addition of 1% NaCl to
drinking water for 1 day thereafter and 0.5% NaCl in the water plus
1% NaCl in feed for all subsequent days. Resalinated birds were
assayed at 1, 3, and 7 days after the resalination procedure
(designated R1, R3, and R7, respectively). Parallel groups were treated
in the same way, but they were simultaneously administered 43 µg/kg
D-aldosterone (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), given intramuscularly
in 0.9% saline three times daily (8-h intervals), again for 1, 3, or 7 days (designated RA1, RA3, and RA7). The last aldosterone injection was
given 2-6 h before death of the animal. A summary of the
experimental groups and treatments is presented in Table
1.
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Tissue and blood sampling. At the time of the experiment, a heparinized blood sample was taken by cardiac puncture, after which the bird was immediately killed by decapitation. The lower intestine (colon and coprodeum) was removed, opened along its length, and washed in ice-cold, preoxygenated saline Ringer solution. The colonic epithelium was then stripped of the underlying muscle layers by scraping with glass slides, washed again in a glucose-free Ringer solution, and then cut into several 1-cm2 segments, running along the proximal to distal axis. An adjacent lateral strip of tissue, parallel to these squares, was isolated for use in immunoblotting. Three of the square segments were used for electrophysiological analysis. For some hens, a segment was obtained and processed for histological or ultrastructural studies. The coprodeum was similarly stripped and divided, one piece being used for the electrophysiological measurements.
Stripped epithelium designated for immunoblotting was frozen at
70°C for later processing. The samples (wet wt = 0.2-0.5 g) were homogenized on ice in 10 ml of a protein-stabilization buffer,
containing 50 mM Tris, 1 mM 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT), and 50 µM EGTA,
pH 7.8 (5), using a Polytron (Kinematica, Lucerne, Switzerland) set to 80% power for two 10-s periods. The
homogenate was diluted with this same buffer and centrifuged (4°C) at
800 g for 10 min to remove debris and large organelles. The
supernatant was then centrifuged for 20 min at 48,000 g,
yielding a crude membrane fraction. This pellet was resuspended in an
appropriate volume of Tris/DTT/EGTA buffer by repeated trituration
through a 23-gauge needle. Membrane extracts were adjusted to contain ~5 mg/ml total protein, measured by the Bradford method, and stored at
70°C. In addition to colonic tissues, membrane extracts were identically prepared from chicken coprodeum, duodenum, and jejunum, and
from rabbit jejunum, the latter serving as a positive control material.
Plasma samples were obtained by centrifugation of the heparinized blood
samples at 4°C and stored at
20°C for later analysis of plasma
electrolytes and circulating aldosterone concentrations.
Electrophysiology.
Most of these techniques were slightly modified from those previously
described (3). Briefly, three segments of stripped colon
and one of coprodeum from each animal were mounted in Ussing chambers
with an aperture diameter of 0.62 cm. The tissues were bathed in a
Ringer solution containing (in mM): 140 Na+, 8 K+, 2.6 Ca2+, 1.0 Mg2+, 139 Cl
, 8 PO

Immunoblotting. A polyclonal antiserum was commercially prepared in rabbits (Quality Controlled Biochemicals, Hopkinton, MA), using a synthetic peptide corresponding to amino acids 564-575 of the rabbit intestinal SGLT (31) conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. Antibodies directed against this same epitope have been successfully used to study expression of hen colonic SGLT (5, 20). Various crude serum bleeds were screened in our laboratory for optimal cross-reactivity against chicken colonic membrane preparations, then purified to an IgG fraction using protein A columns (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA).
Membrane extracts were diluted and denatured in a Laemmli sample buffer containing
-mercaptoethanol to a total protein
concentration of 1 mg/ml. Ten microliters (i.e., 10 µg total protein)
of these extracts were then electrophoresed on an 8% SDS-PAGE minigel. Each 10-lane gel contained one sample from each of the eight groups, plus a separate lane with biotinylated molecular weight standards (Bio-Rad 161-0311). All tissue sample extracts for each bird were run twice on separate gels. The proteins were then electrotransferred overnight onto nitrocellulose membranes. The blots were blocked for
3-4 h in a Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing 0.5% nonfat powdered milk and 0.05% Tween 20, then probed with our anti-SGLT antibody (IgG fraction diluted 1:200 in blocking solution) for 3 h
at room temperature (with rocking) followed by overnight exposure at
4°C. They were then repetitively washed in TBS and TBS-Tween and
exposed to horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG (Sigma
Chemical, A-0545), diluted 1:2,000, for 2 h. After a second series
of washing steps, the bands were visualized using an enhanced peroxidase substrate (Opti-4CN, Bio-Rad) for 10 min. The biotinylated molecular weight standards were localized on the blots with
avidin-horseradish peroxidase.
Quantitative analysis of the Western blots was performed with an
Imaging Densitometer (Bio-Rad model GS-700) with associated "Molecular Analyst" software. The molecular weight of the SGLT band
was determined from the quadratic regression of the molecular weight
standard curve. Relative amounts of protein in the band were quantified
by densitometry.
In preliminary experiments, controls were performed that included
preadsorption of antibody with the antigenic SGLT peptide (20 µg/ml),
dilution series with both rabbit and chicken jejunum membranes, and
exposure of blots to preimmune serum. All of these controls indicated a
peptide-protectable, highly specific immunoreactive band centered at a
molecular mass of 60 kDa.
Histology and ultrastructure. For both light microscopy (LM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), tissue samples were pinned to flat pieces of polystyrene and immersion fixed in 3% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, followed by postfixation in 1% osmium tetraoxide. Tissues were dehydrated, then embedded in epon, and cut into 1-µm sections for LM. These sections were stained with toluidine blue to highlight the different cell types present. For TEM, 40- to 70-nm ultrathin sections were cut, stained with 2% uranyl-acetate and Reynold's lead-citrate, and examined with a Phillips CM 100 electron microscope. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was also performed on colonic tissue samples. After washing and fixation in 3% glutaraldehyde/phosphate buffer, the samples were dehydrated in a graded acetone series and critical-point dried. Samples were coated with a 20-nm gold layer and examined in a JEOL 840A scanning electron microscope.
We also attempted immunohistochemical staining of colonic tissues, using both our antiserum and a sample of the purified anti-SGLT (564) antibody previously produced by Takata et al. (31). Both hen colon and rabbit duodenum (positive control) samples were fixed (4% buffered formalin or Bouin's) and processed and embedded in paraffin according to conventional protocols. Immunostaining (double layered) was performed on 4- to 5-µm thick sections. Both antibody preparations localized apical brush-border staining of SGLT in rabbit duodenum, but, in all cases, staining of hen colon as well as coprodeum (negative control) was negative (see DISCUSSION).Analytic methods and statistics.
Plasma electrolytes were measured by flame photometry (Na+
and K+) and titration (Cl
) methods.
Osmolarity was measured in triplicate by freezing-point depression, and
aldosterone was determined with a standard radioimmunoassay with a
detection limit of 44 pmol/l. Total protein was assayed using a
modified Bradford reagent in a microplate format (SpectraMax 250, Molecular Devices).
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RESULTS |
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The colonic epithelium of the domestic fowl has, in many respects,
the appearance of a typical high-capacity transporting epithelium, not
unlike that of the small intestine. Figures
1 and 2
present images of this tissue at both light microscopic and EM levels.
The tissue is characterized by leaf-shaped villi and shallow
intervillus crypts and by a simple columnar epithelium. Three major
cell types are present, absorptive epithelial cells (AEC), "dark"
mitochondria-rich cells, formerly referred to as "brush" cells
(MR), and mucus-secreting goblet cells (GC). In addition, occasional
enteroendocrine and migrating lymphoid cells can be observed. These
structural features somewhat resemble those of the coprodeum, the more
distal segment of the avian lower intestine, which has been much more
extensively studied (15-17). The coprodeum, however,
has much flatter villi (or mucosal folds) and, of interest, demonstrates a marked shortening and loss of number of apical microvilli in hens adapted to HS diets (15, 17).
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Figure 2 presents TEM images of the colonic epithelium. In Fig. 2a, structural details of the three major cell types, AEC, MR, and GC, are visible, along with the well-developed microvillus brush border. Figures 2, b, c, d, and e are representative, same-magnification images of tissues from HS, LS, RA3, and RA7 hens, respectively, focusing on the microvillus brush border. There appears to be little structural difference between HS and LS tissues, but in RA3 and RA7, there is an apparent reduction in the density and height of microvilli.
Table 2 presents the plasma electrolytes,
osmolarity, and circulating aldosterone concentrations for the eight
experimental groups. HS-adapted hens had plasma aldosterone levels that
were below the detectable limit (44 pmol/l), whereas the LS-adapted group averaged just over 400 pmol/l. The resalination protocol used in
this study reduced aldosterone levels to the detection limit within
24 h (with one R3 hen as the only exception). The aldosterone-injected groups (RA) had highly variable levels, in part,
due to variation in the time between the last hormone injection and
blood sampling. Nevertheless, these mean values (470-900 pmol/l) are within the range of those reported here and previously (2, 3,
9) for LS-adapted hens.
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In general, acute resalination resulted in elevated plasma
[Na+], whereas aldosterone administration, particularly
after 7 days, lowered plasma [K+] and elevated the plasma
[Cl
] and osmolarity (Table 2). Of note is the fact that
there were no significant differences in plasma electrolytes between
the chronically adapted LS and HS groups, despite at least a 10-fold difference in steady-state circulating aldosterone concentrations. This
observation presumably reflects other compensatory processes that may
act to stabilize plasma volume and electrolyte concentrations.
The baseline electrophysiological data (before addition of 20 mM
glucose) are presented in Table 3.
Resalination with simultaneous aldosterone treatment caused, after 1 day (RA1), a large increase in baseline ISC and
PD, to values similar to those seen in the LS group. However, prolonged
aldosterone treatment resulted in a subsequent decrease in PD (RA7),
relative to LS and RA1 groups, and also decreased the TER, relative to
HS or resalinated groups. TER is the only baseline parameter that was
significantly different between the chronically adapted HS and LS
groups.
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Figure 3 shows the changes in
ISC from baseline, caused by addition of 20 mM
glucose to the mucosal bathing solution (glucose was already present on
the serosal side). Comparison of the LS and HS groups demonstrates the
marked difference in physiological expression of SGLT activity. The
glucose response in hens adapted to LS averaged 20.9 ± 8.7 µA/cm2, whereas the response in hens on HS diets was
nearly fivefold higher at 97.2 ± 11.3 µA/cm2
(P < 0.025). When LS-adapted hens were resalinated for
1, 3, or 7 days, the ISC response to mucosal
glucose addition showed a progressive increase, approaching the HS
value by 7 days of resalination. However, parallel groups that were
resalinated with simultaneous aldosterone treatment showed no
difference in the ISC response from the
chronically adapted LS group (Fig. 3, stippled bars). These data
indicate that aldosterone alone can maintain the LS pattern of
low-glucose cotransport, even when superimposed on acute resalination.
In this study, a small glucose-stimulated current was also observed in
coprodeum from HS hens (<20 µA/cm2) but not in any of
the other experimental groups.
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In contrast to hexose stimulation, amino acid-stimulated ISC was not significantly affected by any of the treatments. Mean values for the change in ISC were 40.5 ± 8.5 and 58.0 ± 7.8 µA/cm2 for the LS and HS groups, respectively, 37.4 ± 12.0, 46.5 ± 3.8, and 32.8 ± 7.6 µA/cm2 for the R1, R3, and R7 groups, and 88.2 ± 37.3, 24.4 ± 10.1, and 30.3 ± 6.8 µA/cm2 for RA1, RA3, and RA7 groups.
The changes in ISC in response to
amiloride (100 µM) are shown in Fig. 4.
It can be seen that the pattern of responses is nearly opposite to that
of Fig. 3, with low amiloride-sensitive current in the HS group and
high sensitivity (inhibitory) in the LS group (
15.1 ± 17.2 vs.
68.9 ± 12.7 µA/cm2, respectively). Even more
striking is the complete supression of amiloride sensitivity in
response to resalination of LS-adapted hens (R1 group) and the marked
stimulation of this sensitivity by simultaneous aldosterone treatment.
Very high amiloride-sensitive currents are sustained throughout the 7 days of aldosterone treatment, whereas there is a slight rebound seen
in the 3- and 7-day resalinated groups, to levels close to that of the
HS group.
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Colonic tissue samples taken from the same animals used in the
electrophysiological studies were processed into crude membrane preparations and subjected to Western blot analysis for SGLT activity. Figure 5 shows immunoblotting results for
chicken jejunum, duodenum, colon, and coprodeum, as well as a dilution
series of membranes extracted from rabbit jejunum (positive control).
This antiserum consistently localized a major diffuse band at 60 kDa in
all tissues except coprodeum. A second nonspecific band localized at 66 kDa can also be seen in extracts from the avian tissues. The 60-kDa band, but not the 66-kDa band, was completely blockable by
preadsorption of the antiserum with the antigenic SGLT peptide.
Preimmune serum taken from the same rabbit used to raise this antiserum
was also negative for all tissues (data not shown).
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When colonic membrane preparations from the different treatment groups
(equal total protein) are assayed under identical conditions, a pattern
consistent with that of glucose-stimulated ISC
(Fig. 3) is seen. An example of a single blot with samples from all eight groups is shown in Fig. 6. There is
a clear difference in the band density between the HS and LS tissue and
a complete suppression of the specific 60-kDa band in all
aldosterone-treated groups (RA1, RA3, and RA7). Figure 6 also shows
increasing band density with time after resalination (R1-R7).
Quantitative densitometry results for all tissues taken are presented
in Fig. 7. Average optical density values
for the HS tissues were significantly higher than those of LS
(P < 0.05) and those of all aldosterone-treated groups
(P < 0.025). Overall, the pattern reflects the
increases in glucose-stimulated ISC following
resalination (Fig. 3), although, on average, there is an apparent delay
in the increased SGLT protein expression through the third day of
resalination.
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DISCUSSION |
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The present study confirms and expands on the findings of Bindslev et al. (5), in which protein expression levels of hen colonic SGLT were shown to be clearly correlated with dietary NaCl levels. The present results demonstrate further that aldosterone, possibly acting through one or more aldosterone-sensitive proteins, suppresses the activity and protein expression of this SGLT transporter of hen colon.
A number of earlier studies had shown that the hen colon possesses both sodium-hexose and sodium-amino acid cotransporters but that the activities of these transport processes, as measured by substrate-induced changes in ISC, were largely suppressed or abolished in hens adapted to LS diets (3, 10, 24, 27). With decreasing dietary NaCl, there is, instead, a progressive increase in ENaC activity, correlating with a rise in circulating plasma aldosterone (3). This increase in ENaC activity has been further shown to be regulated at the mRNA level (4).
Because of the prominent changes in circulating aldosterone that accompany the variations in dietary NaCl, it may be hypothesized that aldosterone alone accounts for all of these effects, both inductive and supressive. However, this hypothesis has been difficult to demonstrate conclusively. It is still not known, for example, whether Na+-coupled cotransporter activity is upregulated by default on HS diets (i.e., absence of aldosterone) or if other factors positively affect expression under these conditions.
Similarly, it is unclear whether LS diets could suppress cotransporter activity independently of elevated aldosterone. In this regard, earlier studies with short-term aldosterone treatment of HS-adapted hens were unable to reproduce all of the effects, at least quantitatively, of LS adaptation (10, 33, 34). Furthermore, in our study of hens chronically adapted to six different dietary NaCl levels, there was a marked discrepancy in the half-maximal salt intake values for circulating aldosterone vs. amiloride-sensitive ISC (3). More recently, a study of dehydrated hens demonstrated increased, rather than decreased, colonic SGLT activity, despite elevated aldosterone levels in these birds (11). Although the authors reached the conclusion that aldosterone does not regulate avian intestinal SGLT activity, it should be pointed out that aldosterone levels in the dehydrated birds were elevated to only 195 pmol/l (11), whereas LS diets can often raise aldosterone levels to 400-500 pmol/l (see Table 2 and Refs. 2, 3, 9). Moreover, not only circulating levels of aldosterone are increased by dehydration, but also those of arginine vasotocin, prolactin, and corticosterone as shown in our previous study (2). Thus it is possible, as mentioned above, that changes in other hormones could positively regulate the SGLT activity and override or minimize the effects of moderate aldosterone rises. Further studies will be needed to clarify the role of other potential regulatory factors for this system.
The discrepancy in responses between LS diets and aldosterone treatment may be explained by slow changes in target cell sensitivity or by very late effects of aldosterone, such as tissue remodeling (15-17). For this reason, we chose a protocol in which LS-adapted hens are switched to HS intake, with or without simultaneous aldosterone treatment, thus subjecting these birds to both HS "signals" and high aldosterone (1, 8). The results clearly show that aldosterone alone is able to maintain the LS transport pattern, i.e., supressed SGLT activity (Figs. 3 and 7) and high levels of amiloride-sensitive ISC (Fig. 4).
These results do not rule out the possibilty of other factors in contributing to the induction of SGLT and other cotransporters on HS intake. Moreover, there may be important differences among the various transport systems in their sensitivity to the effects of aldosterone. A recent similar resalination study by Árnason (1) found, for example, partial "escape" of cotransporter activity (an increase in combined hexose and amino acid-stimulated ISC) from ongoing aldosterone treatment. Clauss et al. (10) had earlier demonstrated that 24-h aldosterone treatment, given to HS-adapted hens, fully induced amiloride-sensitive ISC, but had no effect on amino acid-stimulated ISC. Furthermore, in our earlier study of hens chronically adapted to varying NaCl intake levels, it was demonstrated that galactose-stimulated ISC was more sensitive to LS suppression than was amino acid-stimulated ISC, i.e., half-maximal suppression occurred at higher NaCl intake levels for the hexoses (3). In our current study, neither LS nor aldosterone treatment significantly affected the amino acid cotransporter activity. Thus, although some studies have demonstrated transient suppression of amino acid-stimulated ISC (8, 27), this system is clearly less sensitive to the suppressing effects of aldosterone than the SGLT transporter.
We have also observed in the current study a possible lability in the morphology of the hen colon, with an apparent decrease in microvillus height and density in hens that were simultaneously resalinated and aldosterone treated (Fig. 2). In coprodeum, on the other hand, the microvillus brush border is strongly induced, along with Na+ transport activity, by aldosterone or LS diets, and it regresses on HS (16, 17). It is not clear whether aldosterone differentially affects microvillus structure in these two tissues, or if there is a transient effect associated with resalination per se. We were unable to obtain late-resalination group tissues (R3, R7) in the present study. Thus these observations are only preliminary, but clearly the possibilty of tissue remodeling under various treatments deserves further study. It is notable that there appears to be little difference in microvilli structure between the LS and HS groups (Fig. 2, b and c).
In its major target tissues, the distal convoluted tubule and
collecting duct of the kidney and colon, aldosterone is usually regarded as an "anabolic" hormone, upregulating both transport activity and expression of ENaC subunits,
Na+-K+-ATPase, and other transport systems
(35). However, there have been other studies implicating
aldosterone in suppression of transport activities. In rat distal
colon, hyperaldosteronism secondary to LS diets inhibits electroneutral
NaCl absorption, thought to be mediated by parallel
Na+/H+ and
Cl
/HCO
/HCO
The mechanism by which aldosterone suppresses the activity of the hen colonic SGLT is unknown at this time. However, both the present study and that of Bindslev et al. (5) indicate that LS diets and aldosterone treatment reduce the protein expression level of SGLT in this tissue. This is supported by kinetic studies demonstrating a reduced Vmax but unchanged Km for glucose uptake in brush-border membrane vesicles from LS- vs. HS-adapted hens (13, 19). The reduction in transporter expression on LS diets would also imply an increased synthesis of SGLT in hens undergoing resalination. However, it is also possible that aldosterone might independently inactivate a basal pool of SGLT transporters through the actions of regulatory proteins or by removal from the plasma membrane. This could account for the apparent delay in increased SGLT protein expression during our resalination protocol (between 3 and 7 days, see Fig. 7), even while Na+-glucose cotransporter activity rises after only 1 day of resalination (Fig. 3). Thus, during the early stages of resalination, basal SGLT activity may be reactivated or reinserted into the apical microvillus membrane, whereas induction of new SGLT protein would require a longer period of treatment.
There have been several recent studies attempting to use immunologic approaches to quantify changes in hen colonic SGLT. An antibody prepared against the rabbit intestinal SGLT-1 amino acid sequence 402-420 (21), which has been widely used in comparative studies (29), was shown to react with hen jejunal and ileal SGLT, but not to the colonic SGLT (13, 14, 20). However, a second antibody prepared against amino acid sequence 564-575 of the same rabbit intestinal SGLT-1 (31) has been successfully used in immunoblotting of both hen colon and small intestine (5, 20). This antibody was also able to block Na+-dependent glucose uptake in brush-border membrane vesicles from hen colon (20). In the present study, we used a commercially prepared antiserum (QCB) against this same epitope. This antibody was highly effective in quantitatively detecting a 60-kDa SGLT from hen colon and an identical band in samples of rabbit jejunum, serving as a positive control (Fig. 5). As expected, coprodeum, which expresses only minimal Na+-dependent glucose uptake, was negative for SGLT. The 60-kDa band could be abolished by preincubation of the antibody with the synthetic peptide antigen, indicating SGLT specificity. Our results, similar to those of Bindslev et al. (5), demonstrate a reduced but finite expression of SGLT protein in LS- compared with HS-adapted hens. Exogenous aldosterone treatment during resalination results in nearly identical expression levels as those seen in the LS group (Fig. 7), again supporting the possibility of a basal pool of transport protein.
We also attempted to localize the hen colonic SGLT by immunohistostaining procedures on paraffin sections (see METHODS AND MATERIALS). With the use of both our antibody and a purified sample of the original anti-SGLT (564) (a generous gift from T. Kasahara), we were able to localize staining in the apical brush border of rabbit small intestine but not in the hen colon. Thus, although the epitope appears to be conserved across species, there may be differences in the tertiary structure or position of the protein in the membrane that preclude antibody binding in hen colonic cells.
The aldosterone sensitivity of the colonic SGLT and the inability of a widely used SGLT antibody (402) to react with it may indicate that this transporter is a unique isoform of the SGLT family. The actual physiological function of this system, however, is still unclear. Although it seems likely that the colonic SGLT as well as the Na+-amino acid cotransporters would be involved in conservation of nutrient substrates derived from ureteral urine, the suppression of these transport systems by LS diets remains puzzling. There is no such suppression of hen duodenal or jejunal SGLT (5, 20). Previously, it has been considered that the colonic cotransporters were important in offsetting osmotic water loss to hyperosmotic urine in the lower intestine by providing a mechanism for solute-linked water movement (3, 26, 30, 32). The recent demonstration of water transport by SGLT proteins expressed in Xenopus oocytes (28) would clearly support this possibility. It will be of considerable interest to extend studies of these colonic transport systems to address questions of regulation and physiological function.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank J. Jóhannesdóttir, A. Theodórs, H. Simonsen, and H. Holm for excellent technical assistance. LS diet was
kindly provided by Fódurblandan, Reykjavík, and the hens
by Gudmundur Jónsson, Mosfellsb
. Purified anti-SGLT
used in some of the immunohistochemistry trials was kindly donated by
Prof. Michihiro Kasahara.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was carried out on a Fulbright Research Grant to G. Laverty and was made possible with the support of the Iceland-United States Educational Commission and the Icelandic Research Council (S. S. Árnason). Additional support was from National Science Foundation Grant IBN-9870810 (G. Laverty) and from the Danish Agricultural and Veterinary Research Council (V. S. Elbrønd).
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. Laverty, Dept. of Biological Sciences, Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716 (E-mail: laverty{at}udel.edu).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 25 September 2000; accepted in final form 21 May 2001.
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