Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-5-2024
Publication Title
Physiological Genomics
Abstract
Atrial and brain natriuretic peptides (ANP and BNP) bind to guanylyl cyclase A/natriuretic peptide receptor A (GC-A/NPRA), stimulating natriuresis and diuresis and reducing blood pressure (BP), but the role of ANP/NPRA signaling in podocytes (highly specialized epithelial cells covering the outer surfaces of renal glomerular capillaries) remains unclear. This study aimed to determine the effect of conditional deletion of podocyte-specific Npr1 (encoding NPRA) gene knockout (KO) in male and female mice. Tamoxifen-treated wild-type control (PD Npr1 f/f; WT), heterozygous (PD-Cre-Npr1 f/+; HT), and KO (PD-Cre-Npr1 f/-) mice were fed a normal-, low-, or high-salt diet for 4 wk. Podocytes isolated from HT and KO male and female mice showed complete absence of Npr1 mRNA and NPRA protein compared with WT mice. BP, plasma creatinine, plasma sodium, urinary protein, and albumin/creatinine ratio were significantly increased, whereas plasma total protein, albumin, creatinine clearance, and urinary sodium levels were significantly reduced in the HT and KO male and female mice compared with WT mice. These changes were significantly greater in males than in females. On a normal-salt diet, glomerular filtration rate was significantly decreased in PD Npr1 HT and KO male and female mice compared with WT mice. Immunofluorescence of podocin and synaptopodin was also significantly reduced in HT and KO mice compared with WT mice. These observations suggest that in podocytes, ANP/NPRA signaling may be crucial in the maintenance and regulation of glomerular filtration and BP and serve as a biomarker of renal function in a sex-dependent manner.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our results demonstrate that the podocyte-specific deletion of Npr1 showed increased blood pressure (BP) and altered biomarkers of renal functions, with greater magnitudes in animals fed a high-salt diet in a sex-dependent manner. The results suggest a direct and sex-dependent effect of Npr1 ablation in podocytes on the regulation of BP and renal function and reveal that podocytes may be considered an important target for the ANP-BNP/NPRA/cGMP signaling cascade.
First Page
672
Last Page
690
PubMed ID
39101921
Volume
56
Issue
10
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Ramasamy, Chandramohan; Neelamegam, Kandasamy; Ramachandran, Samivel; Xia, Huijing; Kapusta, Daniel R.; Danesh, Farhad R.; and Pandey, Kailash N., "Podocyte cell-specific Npr1 is required for blood pressure and renal homeostasis in male and female mice: role of sex-specific differences" (2024). School of Graduate Studies Faculty Publications. 312.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/sogs_facpubs/312
10.1152/physiolgenomics.00137.2023
Included in
Circulatory and Respiratory Physiology Commons, Medical Pharmacology Commons, Medical Physiology Commons, Urogenital System Commons