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Featured researches published by Carel H. van Os.


The FASEB Journal | 2002

Modulation of renal Ca2+ transport protein genes by dietary Ca2+ and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in 25-hydroxyvitamin D3-1α-hydroxylase knockout mice

Joost G. J. Hoenderop; Olivier Dardenne; Monique van Abel; Annemiete W. C. M. van der Kemp; Carel H. van Os; René St.-Arnaud; René J. M. Bindels

Pseudovitamin D‐deficiency rickets (PDDR) is an autosomal disease characterized by hyperparathyroidism, rickets, and undetectable levels of 1,25‐dihydroxyvitaminD3 (1,25(OH)2D3). Mice in which the 25hydroxyvitamin D3‐1α‐hydroxylase (1α‐OHase) gene was inactivated presented the same clinical phenotype as patients with PDDR and were used to study renal expression of the epithelial Ca2+ channel (ECaC1), the calbindins, Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX1), and Ca2+‐ATPase (PMCA1b). Serum Ca2+ (1.20±0.05 mM) and mRNA/ protein expression of ECaC1 (41±3%), calbindin‐D28K (31±2%), calbindin‐D9K (58±7%), NCX1 (10±2%), PMCA1b (96±4%) were decreased in 1α‐OHase−/−mice compared with 1α‐OHase+/‐littermates. Feeding these miceaCa2+‐enriched diet normalized serum Ca2+ levels and expression of Ca2+ proteins except for calbindin‐D9K expression. 1,25(OH)2D3 repletion resulted in increased expression of Ca2+ transport proteins and normalization of serum Ca2+ levels. Localization of Ca2+ transport proteins was clearly polarized in which ECaC1 was localized along the apical membrane, calbindin‐D28K in the cytoplasm, and calbindin‐D9K along the apical and basolateral membranes, resulting in a comprehensive mechanism facilitating renal transcellular Ca2+ transport. This study demonstrated that high dietary Ca2+ intake is an important regulator of the renal Ca2+ transport proteins in 1,25(OH)2D3‐deficient status and thus contributes to the normalization of blood Ca2+ levels.—Hoenderop, J. G. J., Dardenne, O., van Abel, M., van der Kemp, A. W. C. M., van Os, C. H., St.—Arnaud, R., Bindels, R. J. M. Modulation of renal Ca2+ transport protein genes by dietary Ca2+ and 1,25‐dihydroxyvitamin D3 in 25 hydroxyvitamin D3‐1α‐hydroxylase knockout mice. FASEB J. 16, 1398–1406 (2002)


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D 3 -Independent Stimulatory Effect of Estrogen on the Expression of ECaC1 in the Kidney

Monique van Abel; Joost G. J. Hoenderop; Olivier Dardenne; René St. Arnaud; Carel H. van Os; Hans J. P. T. M. van Leeuwen; René J. M. Bindels

Estrogen deficiency results in a negative Ca(2+) balance and bone loss in postmenopausal women. In addition to bone, the intestine and kidney are potential sites for estrogen action and are involved in Ca(2+) handling and regulation. The epithelial Ca(2+) channel ECaC1 (or TRPV5) is the entry channel involved in active Ca(2+) transport. Ca(2+) entry is followed by cytosolic diffusion, facilitated by calbindin-D(28K) and/or calbindin-D(9k), and active extrusion across the basolateral membrane by the Na(+)/Ca(2+)-exchanger (NCX1) and plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA1b). In this transcellular Ca(2+) transport, ECaC1 probably represents the final regulatory target for hormonal control. The aim of this study was to determine whether 17beta-estradiol (17beta-E(2)) is involved in Ca(2+) reabsorption via regulation of the expression of ECaC1. The ovariectomized rat model was used to investigate the regulation of ECaC1, at the mRNA and protein levels, by 17beta-E(2) replacement therapy. Using real-time quantitative PCR and immunohistochemical analyses, this study demonstrated that 17beta-E(2) treatment at pharmacologic doses increased renal mRNA levels of ECaC1, calbindin-D(28K), NCX1, and PMCA1b and increased the protein abundance of ECaC1. Furthermore, the involvement of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) in the effects of 17beta-E(2) was examined in 25-hydroxyvitamin D(3)-1alpha-hydroxylase-knockout mice. Renal mRNA expression of calbindin-D(9K), calbindin-D(28K), NCX1, and PMCA1b was not significantly altered after 17beta-E(2) treatment. In contrast, ECaC1 mRNA and protein levels were both significantly upregulated. Moreover, 17beta-E(2) treatment partially restored serum Ca(2+) levels, from 1.63 +/- 0.06 to 2.03 +/- 0.12 mM. In conclusion, this study suggests that 17beta-E(2) is positively involved in renal Ca(2+) reabsorption via the upregulation of ECaC1, an effect independent of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3).


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

Reversed polarized delivery of an aquaporin-2 mutant causes dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

Erik-Jan Kamsteeg; Daniel G. Bichet; Irene B. M. Konings; Hubert Nivet; Michelle Lonergan; Marie-Françoise Arthus; Carel H. van Os; Peter M. T. Deen

Vasopressin regulates body water conservation by redistributing aquaporin-2 (AQP2) water channels from intracellular vesicles to the apical surface of renal collecting ducts, resulting in water reabsorption from urine. Mutations in AQP2 cause autosomal nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), a disease characterized by the inability to concentrate urine. Here, we report a frame-shift mutation in AQP2 causing dominant NDI. This AQP2 mutant is a functional water channel when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. However, expressed in polarized renal cells, it is misrouted to the basolateral instead of apical plasma membrane. Additionally, this mutant forms heterotetramers with wild-type AQP2 and redirects this complex to the basolateral surface. The frame shift induces a change in the COOH terminus of AQP2, creating both a leucine- and a tyrosine-based motif, which cause the reversed sorting of AQP2. Our data reveal a novel cellular phenotype in dominant NDI and show that dominance of basolateral sorting motifs in a mutant subunit can be the molecular basis for disease.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

Cell-Biologic and Functional Analyses of Five New Aquaporin-2 Missense Mutations that Cause Recessive Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus

Nannette Marr; Daniel G. Bichet; Susan Hoefs; Paul J. M. Savelkoul; Irene B. M. Konings; Fabrizio de Mattia; Michael P. J. Graat; Marie-Françoise Arthus; Michèle Lonergan; T. Mary Fujiwara; Nine V.A.M. Knoers; Daniel Landau; William J. Balfe; Alexander Oksche; Walter Rosenthal; Dominik Müller; Carel H. van Os; Peter M. T. Deen

Mutations in the Aquaporin-2 gene, which encodes a renal water channel, have been shown to cause autosomal nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), a disease in which the kidney is unable to concentrate urine in response to vasopressin. Most AQP2 missense mutants in recessive NDI are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), but AQP2-T125M and AQP2-G175R were reported to be nonfunctional channels unimpaired in their routing to the plasma membrane. In five families, seven novel AQP2 gene mutations were identified and their cell-biologic basis for causing recessive NDI was analyzed. The patients in four families were homozygous for mutations, encoding AQP2-L28P, AQP2-A47V, AQP2-V71M, or AQP2-P185A. Expression in oocytes revealed that all these mutants, and also AQP2-T125M and AQP2-G175R, conferred a reduced water permeability compared with wt-AQP2, which was due to ER retardation. The patient in the fifth family had a G>A nucleotide substitution in the splice donor site of one allele that results in an out-of-frame protein. The other allele has a nucleotide deletion (c652delC) and a missense mutation (V194I). The routing and function of AQP2-V194I in oocytes was not different from wt-AQP2; it was therefore concluded that c652delC, which leads to an out-of-frame protein, is the NDI-causing mutation of the second allele. This study indicates that misfolding and ER retention is the main, and possibly only, cell-biologic basis for recessive NDI caused by missense AQP2 proteins. In addition, the reduced single channel water permeability of AQP2-A47V (40%) and AQP2-T125M (25%) might become of therapeutic value when chemical chaperones can be found that restore their routing to the plasma membrane.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1979

Volume flows across gallbladder epithelium induced by small hydrostatic and osmotic gradients.

Carel H. van Os; Günther Wiedner; Ernest M. Wright

SummaryThe hydraulic conductivity of rabbit gallbladder epithelium has been studied using a continuous volumetric method based on capacitance measurements. The time resolution for measuring osmotic flows is in the range of seconds. Volume flows have been induced by osmotic gradients between 0 and 100 mosmol. In this range the flow-force relation is linear and thePf value is 9.3×10−3 cm/sec. After correction for solute polarization effects, thePf value amounts to 0.05 cm/sec. The observed flow is constant between 5 sec up to 20 min after a sudden increase in the osmolarity of the mucosal solution. The wet weight of the gallbladder tissue decreases by 22% and increases by 30% during osmotic flows from serosa to mucosa and from mucosa to serosa, respectively. Volume flows induced by hydrostatic pressure gradients on the mucosal surface are linearly related to the driving forces between 0 and 40 mbar. ThePf value is 0.15 cm/sec. The volume flows are constant between 2 sec and 15 min after pressure application. The flow-force relation for pressure gradients on the serosal surface is markedly nonlinear for gradients greater than 5 mbar. Below 5 mbar thePf value is 4.5 cm/sec. From electrical measurements, e.g., resistance and streaming potentials, and from flux studies with inulin and polyethylene glycol 4000, it is concluded that hydrostatic and osmotic gradients are not comparable when they are applied to gallbladder epithelium. They induce volume flows across different pathways, e.g., osmosis predominantly across the cellular route and pressure filtration predominantly across paracellular routes.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2000

Expression and immunolocalization of multidrug resistance protein 2 in rabbit small intestine

Rémon A. M. H. Van Aubel; A. Hartog; René J. M. Bindels; Carel H. van Os; Frans G. M. Russel

Multidrug resistance protein 2 (MRP2) is an ATP-dependent transporter of anionic drugs and conjugates. It functions as an efflux pump in the apical membranes of liver and kidney cells, but its membrane localization in small intestine has not yet been defined. The present study demonstrates exclusive localization of Mrp2 to the brush-border (apical) membrane of villi, decreasing in intensity from the villus tip to the crypts. In immunoblot analysis of crude membranes of various rabbit tissues, Mrp2 was only found in small intestine, kidney and liver. These results are in-line with the supposed function of Mrp2 in drug excretion.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990

Effects of dimethylsulfoxide and mercurial sulfhydryl reagents on water and solute permeability of rat kidney brush border membranes

Alfred N. van Hoek; Maarten D. de Jong; Carel H. van Os

The effects of dimethylsulfoxide, DMSO, and mercurial sulfhydryl reagents have been studied on water and small solute permeability of rat renal brush border membrane vesicles. Water and solute permeability was measured by mixing membrane vesicles with hypertonic solutions in a stopped-flow apparatus and following osmotically-induced changes in vesicular volume via changes in scattered light intensity. The rate constant of the fast osmotic shrinkage is proportional to the osmotic water permeability, while the rate constant of the slow reswelling phase is proportional to the solute permeability. Using mannitol as the osmotic agent, the osmotic shrinkage of rat renal brush border membrane vesicles followed a biphasic time course. 80% of the vesicles shrunk with a rate constant of approx. 50 s−1 and 20% with a rate constant of approx. 2 s−1, DMSO decreased dose-dependently the amplitude of the fast osmotic shrinkage, without affecting its rate constant. In contrast to DMSO, HgCl2 decreased the rate constant but not the amplitude of the fast osmotic shrinkage of renal brush border vesicles. Between 40–50 μM HgCl2, the inhibition of the fast osmotic shrinkage was completed. DMSO and HgCl2 increase the activation energy of water permeation in renal membranes from 3 to 12–15 kcal/mol. DMSO and HgCl2 did not affect the rate constant of the slow osmotic shrinkage of renal membrane vesicles and were also without effect on osmotic shrinkage of small intestinal brush border and pure phospholipid vesicles. In renal brush border membranes, HgCl2 at low concentrations (<10 μM) increased by 15-fold the permeability to NaCl and urea but not to mannitol, an effect which precedes the inhibition of water permeability at higher HgCl2 concentrations. The increase in small solute permeability was irreversible while the inhibition of water permeability could be reversed with cysteine and dithiothreitol. We conclude that water and small solute pathways in rat renal brush border membranes are completely separate entities, which are effected differently by DMSO and HgCl2. These pathways for water and solutes must be membrane proteins since neither DMSO nor HgCl2 affect the permeability properties of pure phospholipid vesicles.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2002

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is intracellularly located as a tetramer

Lisette Dijkink; A. Hartog; Carel H. van Os; René J. M. Bindels

Abstract. The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) plays an important role in Na+ homeostasis by determining the Na+ transport rate in so-called end-organs such as the renal collecting duct, distal colon, salivary and sweat gland ducts. ENaC is formed by heteromultimerization of three homologous subunits, termed α, β, and γ ENaC. The number of subunits and stoichiometry remain a matter of debate. In this study, sucrose gradient analysis of Xenopuslaevis oocytes expressing rENaC revealed that ENaC forms heterotetramers, when the membrane fraction was solubilized in 0.1% (wt/vol) Na-deoxycholate. However, solubilization of the membrane proteins in higher concentrations of detergents dissociated the ENaC subunits of the tetramers in dimers. Co-immunoprecipitation studies with FLAG-tagged ENaC subunits suggest that during dissociation of ENaC tetramers the composition of dimers is completely random. Glycosidase digestion studies show that the ENaC subunits are retarded in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and pre-Golgi, whereas only a small fraction is inserted into the plasma membrane. Immunocytochemical analysis confirmed that ENaC is primarily located intracellularly. In addition, these findings are not restricted to the oocyte expression system, since identical results were found in rabbit connecting tubule and cortical collecting duct cells in primary culture and in rabbit colon.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1992

Isolation of a edna for rat CHIP28 water channel: High mRNA expression in kidney cortex and inner medulla

Peter M. T. Deen; Jacqueline A. Dempster; Bé Wieringa; Carel H. van Os

The cDNA coding for the rat CHIP28 water channel was isolated from a kidney library. At the amino acid level, rat CHIP28 is 93% identical to the recently published human protein (1). Expression of rat CHIP28 mRNA was highest in the renal inner medulla, unchanged during antidiuresis and twice the level expressed in outer cortex, with lower expression levels also apparent in parotid gland, urinary bladder and prostate. The evidence suggests that CHIP28 water channels in the ADH-sensitive collecting tubules are identical to those of the ADH-insensitive proximal convoluted tubules and possibly other tissues specialised in fluid transport.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2000

Physiological relevance of aquaporins: luxury or necessity?

Carel H. van Os; Erik-Jan Kamsteeg; Nannette Marr; Peter M. T. Deen

Abstract. Aquaporins are members of a large family of pore-forming intrinsic membrane proteins, the MIP family. Based on their permeability properties they are now further subdivided into aquaporins, with real water-selective pores, and aquaglyceroporins with slightly less selective pores. Aquaporins are expressed in a large variety of tissues throughout the body but in most situations it is not clear whether their presence is necessary for the proper physiological function of these tissues. This review focuses on recent insight into the physiological relevance of aquaporins gained from studying aquaporin knockout mouse models and from diseases, on new surprising findings related to gating and selectivity, and on the consequences of tetramerization for routing and the genetics of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. The active fluid transport in proximal tubules and in salivary glands is seriously compromised by aquaporin deletion. This is in contrast to lung, airways and stomach, where active fluid transport proceeds unhindered in the face of greatly reduced water permeabilities due to aquaporin deletion. Therefore, aquaporins seem to be a necessity at extreme high rates of active fluid transport but appear to be more of a luxury at medium or low fluid transport rates.

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Peter M. T. Deen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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A. Hartog

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Frans G. M. Russel

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Peter M. T. Deen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Erik-Jan Kamsteeg

Radboud University Nijmegen

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