Regulation of renal NaPi-2 expression and tubular phosphate reabsorption by growth hormone in the juvenile rat.
Woda. Craig B CB; Halaihel. Nabil N; Wilson. Paul V PV; Haramati. Aviad A; Levi. Moshe M; Mulroney. Susan E SE
Key Findings
- GH presence in juvenile rats raises kidney NaPi‑2 transporter levels, leading to greater phosphate re‑absorption.
- Suppressing GH in juveniles reduces NaPi‑2 expression and phosphate re‑absorption to adult‑like levels.
- Administering the GRF‑1‑29 analog (a GH‑releasing peptide) restores high NaPi‑2 expression and phosphate uptake in GH‑suppressed juveniles.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using GH‑releasing peptides, this study hints that elevated GH may increase phosphate retention, which could affect bone health and mineral balance. It suggests monitoring serum phosphate and kidney function if using GRF‑1‑29 long‑term, especially in younger individuals. However, the data are from juvenile rats, so direct human recommendations are limited.
Summary
In young rats, growth hormone (boosted by the peptide GRF‑1‑29) makes the kidneys re‑absorb more phosphate by increasing a transporter called NaPi‑2. When GH is blocked, phosphate handling looks like that of adult rats. Giving back the peptide restores the high phosphate re‑absorption seen in juveniles.
Abstract
Growth hormone (GH) is an important factor in the developmental adaptation to enhance P(i) reabsorption; however, the nephron sites and mechanisms by which GH regulates renal P(i) uptake remain unclear and are the focus of the present study. Micropuncture experiments were performed after acute thyroparathyroidectomy in the presence and absence of parathyroid hormone (PTH) in adult (14- to 17-wk old), juvenile (4-wk old), and GH-suppressed juvenile male rats. While the phosphaturic effect of PTH was blunted in the juvenile rat compared with the adult, suppression of GH in the juvenile restored fractional P(i) excretion to adult levels. In the presence or absence of PTH, GH suppression in the juvenile rat caused a significant increase in the fractional P(i) delivery to the late proximal convoluted (PCT) and early distal tubule, so that delivery was not different from that in adults. These data were confirmed by P(i) uptake studies into brush-border membrane (BBM) vesicles. Immunofluorescence studies indicate increased BBM type IIa NaP(i) cotransporter (NaPi-2) expression in the juvenile compared with adult rat, and GH suppression reduced NaPi-2 expression to levels observed in the adult. GH replacement in the [N-acetyl-Tyr(1)-d-Arg(2)]-GRF-(1-29)-NH(2)-treated juveniles restored high NaPi-2 expression and P(i) uptake. Together, these novel results demonstrate that the presence of GH in the juvenile animal is crucial for the early developmental upregulation of BBM NaPi-2 and, most importantly, describe the enhanced P(i) reabsorption along the PCT and proximal straight nephron segments in the juvenile rat.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-03-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1152/ajprenal.00357.2002