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Metformin improves urine concentration in rodents with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
Orhan Efe, … , Huiwen Ren, Jeff M. Sands
Orhan Efe, … , Huiwen Ren, Jeff M. Sands
Published July 21, 2016
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2016;1(11):e88409. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.88409.
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Research Article Nephrology

Metformin improves urine concentration in rodents with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

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Abstract

Urine concentration is regulated by vasopressin. Congenital nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI) is caused by vasopressin type 2 receptor (V2R) mutations. We studied whether metformin could improve urine concentration in rodent models of congenital NDI by stimulating AMPK. To block the V2R in rats, tolvaptan (10 mg/kg/d) was given by oral gavage with or without metformin (800 mg/kg/d). Control rats received vehicle with or without metformin. Tamoxifen-induced V2R KO mice were given metformin (600 mg/kg) or vehicle twice daily. Urine osmolality in tolvaptan-treated rats (1,303 ± 126 mOsM) was restored to control levels by metformin (2,335 ± 273 mOsM) within 3 days and was sustained for up to 10 days. Metformin increased protein abundance of inner medullary urea transporter UT-A1 by 61% and aquaporin 2 (AQP2) by 44% in tolvaptan-treated rats, and immunohistochemistry showed increased membrane accumulation of AQP2 with acute and chronic AMPK stimulation. Outer medullary Na+-K+-2Cl– cotransporter 2 (NKCC2) abundance increased (117%) with AMPK stimulation in control rats but not in V2R-blocked rats. Metformin increased V2R KO mouse urine osmolality within 3 hours, and the increase persisted for up to 12 hours. Metformin increased AQP2 in the V2R KO mice similar to the tolvaptan-treated rats. These results indicate that AMPK activators, such as metformin, might provide a promising treatment for congenital NDI.

Authors

Orhan Efe, Janet D. Klein, Lauren M. LaRocque, Huiwen Ren, Jeff M. Sands

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Figure 3

Urine osmolality of V2R KO mice.

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Urine osmolality of V2R KO mice.
Top: Linear dot plot comparing hourly u...
Top: Linear dot plot comparing hourly urine osmolality of V2R KO mice after sham (red, n = 5) versus metformin treatment (blue, n = 5). Each animal sample is indicated by a single dot. Average of each group is designated by a line bordered by lines showing the SEM. Bottom: Twenty-four–hour urine osmolality (left) and urine volume (right) of V2R KO mice before (circles) and after (squares) sham (n = 3) or metformin treatment (n = 5). Average values ± SEM are designated by orange lines. Student’s t test was used to determine statistical significance, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 for metformin-treated compared with the sham controls.

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