Pflugers Archiv | 2021

Abnormal neonatal sodium handling in skin precedes hypertension in the SAME rat

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


We discovered high Na+ and water content in the skin of newborn Sprague–Dawley rats, which reduced\u2009~\u20092.5-fold by 7 days of age, indicating rapid changes in extracellular volume (ECV). Equivalent changes in ECV post birth were also observed in C57Bl/6 J mice, with a fourfold reduction over 7 days, to approximately adult levels. This established the generality of increased ECV at birth. We investigated early sodium and water handling in neonates from a second rat strain, Fischer, and an Hsd11b2-knockout rat modelling the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (SAME). Despite Hsd11b2−/− animals exhibiting lower skin Na+ and water levels than controls at birth, they retained\u2009~\u200930% higher Na+ content in their pelts at the expense of K+ thereafter. Hsd11b2−/− neonates exhibited incipient hypokalaemia from 15 days of age and became increasingly polydipsic and polyuric from weaning. As with adults, they excreted a high proportion of ingested Na+ through the kidney, (56.15\u2009±\u20098.21% versus control 34.15\u2009±\u20098.23%; n\u2009=\u20094; P\u2009<\u20090.0001), suggesting that changes in nephron electrolyte transporters identified in adults, by RNA-seq analysis, occur by 4 weeks of age. Our data reveal that Na+ imbalance in the Hsd11b2−/− neonate leads to excess Na+ storage in skin and incipient hypokalaemia, which, together with increased, glucocorticoid-induced Na+ uptake in the kidney, then contribute to progressive, volume contracted, salt-sensitive hypertension. Skin Na+ plays an important role in the development of SAME but, equally, may play a key physiological role at birth, supporting post-natal growth, as an innate barrier to infection or as a rudimentary kidney.

Volume 473
Pages 897 - 910
DOI 10.1007/s00424-021-02582-7
Language English
Journal Pflugers Archiv

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