Urinary citrate, which inhibits calcium nephrolithiasis, is determined by proximal reabsorption via an apical dicarboxylate transporter. Citrate is predominantly trivalent at physiological pH, but citrate-2 is transported at the apical membrane. We now demonstrate that low-Ca solutions induce transport of citrate-2 and succinate in opossum kidney cells. With 1.2 mM extracellular Ca, citrate uptake was pH insensitive and not competed by succinate-2. In contrast, with low extracellular Ca, citrate uptake increased twofold, was inhibited by succinate (and other dicarboxylates), was stimulated by lowering extracellular pH (consistent with citrate-2 transport), and increased further by lowering extracellular Mg. The effect of Ca was incrementally concentration dependent, between 0 and 1.2 mM. The effect of Ca was not simply complexation with citrate because succinate (which is complexed significantly less) was affected by Ca similarly. Incubation of cells for 48 h in a low-pH media increased citrate transport (studied at control pH) more than twofold, suggesting induction of transporters.
CITATION STYLE
Hering-Smith, K. S., Gambala, C. T., & Hamm, L. L. (2000). Citrate and succinate transport in proximal tubule cells. American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology, 278(3 47-3). https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.2000.278.3.f492
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