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Importance of Extra-Renal CYP24A1 Expression for Maintaining Mineral Homeostasis
Author(s) -
Melody Shi,
Alexander Grabner,
Myles Wolf
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the endocrine society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.046
H-Index - 20
ISSN - 2472-1972
DOI - 10.1210/jendso/bvab048.476
Subject(s) - cyp24a1 , endocrinology , medicine , parathyroid hormone , calcium metabolism , vitamin d and neurology , kidney , homeostasis , calcium , population , biology , calcitriol receptor , environmental health
Calcium homeostasis involves a complex interplay between kidneys, parathyroid glands, intestine and bone. Specifically, 1,25(OH)2D3 is a key calciotropic hormone which stimulates intestinal calcium absorption. A growing body of evidence suggests that circulating levels of 1,25(OH)2D3 depend not only on its synthesis under the action of PTH in the kidneys, but also its catabolism by 24-hydroxylase, herein referred to as CYP24A1. The clinical importance of CYP24A1 has been demonstrated by human loss-of-function mutations, which lead to severe hypercalcemia due to exaggerated levels of 1,25(OH)2D3. Despite its growing importance, little is known about its tissue-specific contributions to normal vitamin D metabolism. To explore the physiology of CYP24A1 and delineate renal-specific effects of CYP24A1 in calcium metabolism, we generated a mouse with constitutive kidney-specific deletion of Cyp24a1 (Six2Cre-Cyp24flox). Six2 marks the nephron progenitor population throughout nephrogenesis. We hypothesized that hypercalcemia as seen in CYP24A1 inactivating mutations is related to lack of both renal and extrarenal expression, and that renal deletion does not lead to severe hypercalcemia. To confirm Cyp24a1 deletion, we measured mRNA expression in the kidney using qPCR and RNA in situ hybridization. All mice were fed a standard commercial rodent diet and followed longitudinally for five months with interval calcium measurements. At time of termination, serum PTH levels were measured along with vitamin D-dependent calcium transporters as a functional measure of 1,25(OH)2D3 action. Cyp24a1 expression was significantly knocked down in total kidneys from Six2Cre-Cyp24flox mice as compared to intestinal expression suggesting successful gene deletion. Compared to age-matched wildtype controls, Six2Cre-Cyp24flox mice were mildly but persistently hypercalcemic (diff between means= 0.46 mg/dL, p-value: 0.03, n=8 per group). As expected, 1,25D-dependent calcium transporters in the kidney (Calb1, Trpv5, Slc8a1, Atp2b1) and intestine (Trpv6, s100g) were all increased, consistent with increased systemic 1,25(OH)2D3 activity. PTH levels were appropriately suppressed in the Six2Cre-Cyp24flox mice (diff between means=83 pg/mL, p-value 0.2, n=9 control, n=3 exp) as were renal cyp27b1 mRNA expression. These data suggest that renal CYP24A1 is important for systemic 1,25(OH)2D3 regulation, but the lack of severe hypercalcemia supports critical contributions of extra-renal CYP24A1.

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