Publication: Response of Npt2a knockout mice to dietary calcium and phosphorus
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Date
2017
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Public Library of Science
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Citation
Li, Yuwen, Daniel Caballero, Julian Ponsetto, Alyssa Chen, Chuanlong Zhu, Jun Guo, Marie Demay, Harald Jüppner, and Clemens Bergwitz. 2017. “Response of Npt2a knockout mice to dietary calcium and phosphorus.” PLoS ONE 12 (4): e0176232. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0176232. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176232.
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Abstract
Mutations in the renal sodium-dependent phosphate co-transporters NPT2a and NPT2c have been reported in patients with renal stone disease and nephrocalcinosis, but the relative contribution of genotype, dietary calcium and phosphate to the formation of renal mineral deposits is unclear. We previously reported that renal calcium phosphate deposits persist and/or reappear in older Npt2a-/- mice supplemented with phosphate despite resolution of hypercalciuria while no deposits are seen in wild-type (WT) mice on the same diet. Addition of calcium to their diets further increased calcium phosphate deposits in Npt2a-/-, but not WT mice. The response of PTH to dietary phosphate of Npt2a-/- was blunted when compared to WT mice and the response of the urinary calcium x phosphorus product to the addition of calcium and phosphate to the diet of Npt2a-/- was increased. These finding suggests that Npt2a-/- mice respond differently to dietary phosphate when compared to WT mice. Further evaluation in the Npt2a-/- cohort on different diets suggests that urinary calcium excretion, plasma phosphate and FGF23 levels appear to be positively correlated to renal mineral deposit formation while urine phosphate levels and the urine anion gap, an indirect measure of ammonia excretion, appear to be inversely correlated. Our observations in Npt2a-/- mice, if confirmed in humans, may be relevant for the optimization of existing and the development of novel therapies to prevent nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis in human carriers of NPT2a and NPT2c mutations.
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Keywords
Biology and Life Sciences, Nutrition, Diet, Medicine and Health Sciences, Physical Sciences, Chemistry, Chemical Compounds, Phosphates, Anatomy, Body Fluids, Urine, Physiology, Physiological Processes, Excretion, Experimental Organism Systems, Model Organisms, Mouse Models, Animal Models, Ecology, Community Ecology, Trophic Interactions, Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Physical Chemistry, Ions, Anions, Mathematical and Statistical Techniques, Statistical Methods, Regression Analysis, Linear Regression Analysis, Mathematics, Statistics (Mathematics)
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