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Departments of Medicine and Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
Correspondence to Dr. Franklyn G. Knox, Departments of Medicine and Physiology & Biophysics, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905. Phone: 507-284-2908; Fax: 507-266-4710; E-mail: knox.franklyn{at}mayo.edu
Abstract. To determine whether endogenous intrarenal
5-hydroxytryptamine affects phosphate excretion, the serotonin receptor
antagonist methiothepin (20 µg/kg, +6 µg/kg per h) was infused into the
renal interstitium of rats fed a normal phosphate diet (0.7% phosphate [Pi])
in the presence of endogenous parathyroid hormone (PTH). Renal interstitial
infusion of methiothepin significantly increased fractional phosphate
excretion (FEPi) from 23 ± 4 to 30 ± 4% (n =
8, P < 0.05). To determine whether serotonin modulates the
phosphaturic response to PTH during conditions of dietary phosphate excess or
deprivation, rats were fed either a high (1.8% Pi, HPD) or low (0.07% Pi, LPD)
phosphate diet, and methiothepin (100 µg/kg, +30 µg/kg per h) or saline
vehicle was infused intravenously before and during PTH infusion (33 U/kg, +1
U/kg per min). Methiothepin infusion significantly increased FEPi
in thyroparathyroidectomized rats fed a HPD from 25 ± 4 to 32 ±
4% (n = 9, P < 0.05), and the subsequent administration
of PTH further increased the FEPi to 64 ± 3% (P
< 0.05). The increase in FEPi during PTH infusion was similar in
the absence (
27 ± 5%, n = 7) and presence (
33
± 6%) of methiothepin, P > 0.05. In
thyroparathyroidectomized rats fed a LPD, methiothepin infusion did not
increase phosphate excretion (0.8 ± 0.4 to 1.3 ± 0.9%,
n = 7, P > 0.05). However, the increase in
FEPi during PTH infusion was significantly greater in the presence
of methiothepin (1.3 ± 0.9 to 20.0 ± 4.0%,
18.7 ±
3.5%) than in the vehicle-infused rats (0.5 ± 0.2 to 8.8 ± 1.1%,
8.3 ± 1.2%; n = 8, P < 0.05). In
conclusion, these observations suggest that endogenous intrarenal serotonin
enhances phosphate reabsorption in phosphate-replete rats, and attenuates the
phosphaturic response to PTH in phosphate-deprived rats.
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