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Title: Glucocorticoid upregulates Na-K-ATPase alpha- and beta-mRNA via an indirect mechanism in proximal tubule cell primary cultures. Author: Lee YC, Lin HH, Tang MJ. Journal: Am J Physiol; 1995 May; 268(5 Pt 2):F862-7. PubMed ID: 7771515. Abstract: Adrenalectomy leads to the decline in the levels of renal Na-K-adenosinetriphosphatase (Na-K-ATPase) alpha- and beta-subunit protein and mRNA. Both alpha- and beta-mRNA, however, return to the control level within 1 h after corticosterone administration. Whether or not glucocorticoid acts directly on a specific segment of nephron to upregulate Na-K-ATPase has not been determined. Studies were undertaken in an attempt to elucidate this problem. Using primary cultures of renal proximal tubules, we found that 24-h treatment with dexamethasone augmented Na-K-ATPase activity and induced coordinate increase of alpha- and beta-protein and mRNA abundance dependent on the doses in the range of 10(-8) to 10(-6) M. We further demonstrated that 24-h incubation of dexamethasone (10(-7) M) enhanced Na-K-ATPase activity by 58 +/- 14%, alpha- and beta-protein abundance by 70 +/- 18 and 51 +/- 10%, and alpha- and beta-mRNA levels by 87 +/- 12 and 62 +/- 11%, respectively. The time course studies revealed that significant increase of Na-K-ATPase activity and alpha and beta-protein abundance was reached within 4 hr of dexamethasone treatment. Pretreatment of cultured proximal tubule cells with cycloheximide (20 micrograms/ml) completely inhibited dexamethasone-induced increase of Na-K-ATPase alpha- and beta-mRNA. Our results indicate that dexamethasone upregulates Na-K-ATPase in proximal tubule cells via pretranslational mechanisms, which may be mediated by proteins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]