Glycolysis inhibition by palmitate in renal cells cultured in a two-chamber system

1997 ◽  
Vol 273 (5) ◽  
pp. C1732-C1738 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Bolon ◽  
Catherine Gauthier ◽  
Hélène Simonnet

A major shortcoming of renal proximal tubular cells (RPTC) in culture is the gradual modification of their energy metabolism from the oxidative type to the glycolytic type. To test the possible reduction of glycolysis by naturally occurring long-chain fatty acids, RPTC were cultured in a two-chamber system, with albumin-bound palmitate (0.4 mM) added to the basolateral chamber after confluency. Twenty-four hours of contact with palmitate decreased glycolysis by 38% provided that carnitine was present; lactate production was decreased by 38%, and the decrease in glycolysis resulted from a similar decrease of basolateral and apical net uptake of glucose. In contrast to the previously described effect of the nonphysiological oxidative substrate heptanoate, palmitate promoted a long-term decrease in lactate production and sustained excellent cellular growth. After 4 days of contact, decreased glycolysis was maintained even in the absence of carnitine and resulted from a decrease of basolateral uptake only, suggestive of long-term regulation different from the earlier effects. Thus, although cultured RPTC lost their oxidative phenotype, they exhibited a type of regulation (Randle effect) that is found in the oxidative-type but not in the glycolytic-type tissues, therefore unmasking a regulative capacity barely detectable in fresh RPTC. Low Po 2 (50 mmHg in the apical chamber) could be a major cause of elevated glycolysis and could hinder the effects of palmitate.

1986 ◽  
Vol 251 (3) ◽  
pp. C455-C464 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Larsson ◽  
A. Aperia ◽  
C. Lechene

The ontogeny of effective Na and K permeability has been studied in renal epithelial cells isolated from the outermost superficial cortex from adult and young (10-15 days) rats. The cells were cultured for 2-4 days and exhibited phloridzin-inhibitable alpha-methylglucoside uptake, characteristic of renal proximal tubular cells (RPTC). Intracellular concentrations of K, Na, Cl, and P and kinetics of changes in intracellular ionic content after inhibition of Na-K-ATPase with 1 mM ouabain (or by incubation in low-K medium) were measured in individual cells using electron probe analysis. Intracellular concentrations of K, Na, Cl, and P were equivalent in young and adult rat RPTC. Adult rat and young rat cells preincubated in K-free medium rapidly recovered normal intracellular K and Na contents when returned to 5.5 mM K medium. The recovery was almost immediately blocked by ouabain. Effective permeabilities measured as half time of K efflux and Na influx after ouabain inhibition of Na-K-ATPase were higher in adult than in young RPTC cultured for less than 4 days. Effective K and Na permeabilities decreased significantly with increasing time in culture in adult but not in young rat RPTC. Among young rat RPTC, half times of Na and K fluxes were significantly correlated to age. Effective K and Na permeabilities were lower in both young and adult rat RPTC that had been serum deprived for 24 h than in cells that had been continuously cultured in serum. In cells cultured for 3 days and serum deprived for 1 day, the addition of serum significantly increased K and Na permeability both in young and adult RPTC, but the effect was more pronounced in young RPTC where permeability reached the same high values as in adult RPTC continuously cultured in serum. In conclusion, effective Na and K permeabilities and serum activation of "permeability units" change during ontogeny. These ontogenic changes might be blunted after a few days in culture due to dedifferentiation of adult rat RPTC.


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