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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 276: F857-F863, 1999;
0363-6127/99 $5.00
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Vol. 276, Issue 6, F857-F863, June 1999

D-Serine is reabsorbed in rat renal pars recta

Stefan Silbernagl1, Katharina Völker1, and William H. Dantzler2

1 Physiologisches Institut der Universität Würzburg, D-97070 Würzburg, Germany; and 2 Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85724-5051

D-Serine normally contributes up to 3% to total plasma serine and up to 23% in chronic renal failure. D-Serine is metabolized by tubular D-amino acid oxidase (D-AAO), and high D-serine plasma levels are nephrotoxic; both events are localized in the straight part of the proximal tubule. We therefore investigated if and how D-serine is reabsorbed there. We microinfused 14C-labeled D- or -L-serine + [3H]inulin into early proximal (EP), late proximal (LP), or early distal (ED) tubule sections of superficial nephrons and into long loops of Henle (LLH) of rats in vivo and in situ. The fractional reabsorption (FR) of the 14C label was determined from the 14C:3H ratio in the final urine. At 0.36 mM, FR of D-[14C]serine was 86% (EP), 90% (LP), and approx 0 (ED, LLH). FR of D-serine could be saturated and inhibited by L-serine (and vice versa). D-methionine, but not D-glutamate or D-arginine, blocked FR of D-serine (LP). We conlude that filtered D-serine is able to enter the pars recta cells, thereby getting access to D-AAO. The uptake carrier has a very low stereospecificity and is, therefore, different from that in the proximal convolution. The colocalization of exclusive reabsorption and metabolism makes the pars recta the tubule site for the recycling of the carbon structure of D-amino acids and, at the same time, the target of D-serine nephrotoxicity.

kidney; D-amino acid transport; nephrotoxicity; Henle's loop


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Am. J. Physiol. Renal Physiol.Home page
A. W. Krug, K. Volker, W. H. Dantzler, and S. Silbernagl
Why is D-serine nephrotoxic and {alpha}-aminoisobutyric acid protective?
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol, July 1, 2007; 293(1): F382 - F390.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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