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Renal tubule insulin receptor modestly promotes elevated blood pressure and markedly stimulates glucose reabsorption
Jonathan M. Nizar, Blythe D. Shepard, Vianna T. Vo, Vivek Bhalla
Jonathan M. Nizar, Blythe D. Shepard, Vianna T. Vo, Vivek Bhalla
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Research Article Endocrinology Nephrology

Renal tubule insulin receptor modestly promotes elevated blood pressure and markedly stimulates glucose reabsorption

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Abstract

Although the cause of hypertension among individuals with obesity and insulin resistance is unknown, increased plasma insulin, acting in the kidney to increase sodium reabsorption, has been proposed as a potential mechanism. Insulin may also stimulate glucose uptake, but the contributions of tubular insulin signaling to sodium or glucose transport in the setting of insulin resistance is unknown. To directly study the role of insulin signaling in the kidney, we generated inducible renal tubule–specific insulin receptor–KO mice and used high-fat feeding and mineralocorticoids to model obesity and insulin resistance. Insulin receptor deletion did not alter blood pressure or sodium excretion in mice on a high-fat diet alone, but it mildly attenuated the increase in blood pressure with mineralocorticoid supplementation. Under these conditions, KO mice developed profound glucosuria. Insulin receptor deletion significantly reduced SGLT2 expression and increased urinary glucose excretion and urine flow. These data demonstrate a direct role for insulin receptor–stimulated sodium and glucose transport and a functional interaction of insulin signaling with mineralocorticoids in vivo. These studies uncover a potential mechanistic link between preserved insulin sensitivity and renal glucose handling in obesity and insulin resistance.

Authors

Jonathan M. Nizar, Blythe D. Shepard, Vianna T. Vo, Vivek Bhalla

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Figure 2

Blood pressure in high-fat–fed iTIRKO mice.

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Blood pressure in high-fat–fed iTIRKO mice.
(A) Experimental scheme. Aft...
(A) Experimental scheme. After high-fat feeding and doxycycline administration to induce Cre expression, we implanted radiotelemetric blood pressure catheters in control (black, n = 7) and iTIRKO (red, n = 5) mice. We measured mean arterial pressure (MAP) on high-fat–fed normal or high-sodium diets and, subsequently, on high-sodium diet supplemented with fludrocortisone or vehicle for the intervals as indicated. Blue line denotes duration of the blood pressure recording. (B) Twenty-four–hour MAP on a normal- and high-sodium diet in control and iTIRKO mice. (C and D) Time-averaged MAP tracing over 24 hours on vehicle (C) and (D) fludrocortisone in the same mice. (E) Change in 24-hour MAP between vehicle and fludrocortisone. Control, age-matched littermates of iTIRKO mice; iTIRKO, inducible renal tubular insulin receptor–KO mice; w, week; d, day. Black *P < 0.05, control > iTIRKO mice by 2-tailed t test; red *P < 0.05, iTIRKO > control mice by 2-tailed t test. #P < 0.05 by 2-way ANOVA with repeated measures and Tukey correction for multiple comparisons. In box and whisker plots, the whiskers represent minimum and maximum values, and box borders represent the 25th percentile, median, and 75th percentile.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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