Department of Medical Genetics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Correspondence: Prof. Fiona E. Karet, Cambridge Institute for Medical Research (Room 4.3), Addenbrooke's Hospital Box 139, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 0XY, UK. Phone: +44-1223-762617; Fax: +44-1223-331206; E-mail: fek1000{at}cam.ac.uk
The form of renal tubular acidosis associated with hyperkalemiais usually attributable to real or apparent hypoaldosteronism.It is therefore a common feature in diabetes and a number ofother conditions associated with underproduction of renin oraldosterone. In addition, the close relationship between potassiumlevels and ammonia production dictates that hyperkalemia perse can lead to acidosis. Here I describe the modern relationshipbetween molecular function of the distal portion of the nephron,pathways of ammoniagenesis, and hyperkalemia.
To begin, we need a definition and differential diagnosis forhyperkalemic (type IV) renal tubular acidosis (RTA). Inabilityof the kidney either to excrete sufficient net acid or to retainsufficient bicarbonate results in a group of disorders knownas RTAs.1 These all are normal anion gap hyperchloremic acidoses;in their traditional classification, type IV refers to the onlyvariant associated with hyperkalemia. Unlike other distal RTAs,the collecting duct here fails to excrete both protons and potassium.Such a situation arises when aldosterone is insufficient ineither quantity or activity and/or because of some intrinsic(genetic) or acquired molecular defect in relevant transporters.Sufficiency of aldosterone is both quantitatively and functionallynecessary for adequate sodium reabsorption by the epithelialsodium channel (ENaC) located on the luminal surface of principalcells in the terminal portions of the nephron, which under normalconditions leads to the lumen-negative potential essential forpotassium and proton secretion (Figure 1A). In addition, aldosteronehas a direct, Na-independent, nongenomic effect on proton secretionthrough upregulation of apical proton pumps on intercalatedcells, in rodents at least.2,3
Figure 1. Factors involved in hyperkalemic acidosis. (A) Proper function of the ENaC at the apical surface of principal cells is necessary for K+ secretion by ROMK in these same cells and H+ secretion by adjacent intercalated cells. Inherited or acquired loss of ENaC function or its regulation by aldosterone via the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) gives rise to hyperkalemic acidosis. (B) Hyperkalemia raises intracellular pH by exchange with protons, impairing enzymes involved in ammoniagenesis. (C) Ammoniagenesis in the proximal tubule is chiefly by deamidation of filtered or secreted glutamine (Gln). Ammonia (NH3) diffusing into the nascent urine assists in buffering H+; both NH3 and NH4+ undergo further reabsorption in the medullary loop followed by distal nephron movement into the final urine. Glu, glutamate; aKG, -ketoglutarate.
Low levels of aldosterone or tubular unresponsiveness to thishormone are present in the majority of patients with hyperkalemiaand impaired renal function before end stage.4,5 The most commonmedical conditions associated with hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronisminclude diabetes and various forms of interstitial disease,including amyloid, monoclonal gammopathies, and particularlythe interstitial nephritis associated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatoryagents. In the last case, renin levels may be normal, and somepatients with diabetes fail to respond with aldosterone synthesisor release despite hyperkalemia. Other situations in which hypoaldosteronismis present but not matched by hyporeninism include adrenal destruction(whether surgical, malignant, or hemorrhagic), Addison disease,angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy or angiotensinreceptor blockade, critical illness (because of direct adrenalsuppression), and inhibition of aldosterone synthesis by heparin.6,7Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism is also predictable with βblockade.8
Functional hypoaldosteronism occurs in the context either ofvarious inherited disorders (see next section) or of a numberof drugs that affect aldosterone activity, either directly byinterference with its receptor or by affecting its target pathway.9For example, mineralocorticoid receptors on the basolateralsurface of distal nephron epithelia (Figure 1A) are antagonizedby spironolactone and eplerenone, whereas the ENaC itself isblocked not only by amiloride and triamterene but also by trimethoprimand pentamidine.10,11 Cyclosporine therapy interferes with thesodium gradient in the collecting duct by interference withthe basolateral Na/K-ATPase and possibly NKCC2 and/or distalK+ channels.12
Single-gene disorders that affect the renal transporters mentionedin the previous section also contribute to knowledge of thecomplex interplay between salt handling and acid-base balance.A good example is pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 (OMIM 264350,177735). Here, despite activation of the renin-aldosterone axis,renal salt wasting is accompanied by hyperkalemia and hyperchloremicmetabolic acidosis, all of which are due either to loss of functionof ENaC because of mutations in one of the three genes encodingits subunits in the severe, recessive form of the disease13,14or to abnormalities in the mineralocorticoid receptor in themilder, dominant form.15 These phenotypes are recapitulatedin mouse models.16,17
Pseudohypoaldosteronism type 2 (OMIM 145260), also known asGordon syndrome, represents a different problem: that of dominantlyinherited hyperkalemic hypertension with an associated (usuallymild) acidosis, in which either removal of the distal NaCl co-transporterfrom the distal convoluted tubule apical surface or insertionof ROMK into the collecting duct membrane is impaired becauseof mutation in one of their regulators, the WNK (with no lysine[K] kinases.18 Both of these defects have the effect of impairingdistal K+ secretion—the former because distal sodium deliveryfalls and the latter because K+ secretion fails.19 In eithercase, the renin-aldosterone axis fails to compensate. WhetherWNK kinases also regulate proton pumps in the collecting ductis unknown.
Rare nonrenal conditions that impair mineralocorticoid synthesisinclude inherited enzyme defects such as 21-hydroxylase, 3β-hydroxysteroiddehydrogenase, and corticosterone methyloxidase deficiency (OMIM201910, 201810, 203400, 610600).
Thirty-five years ago, normal men who were fed a high-K+ dietwere observed to decrease their urine pH, ammonium, and netacid excretion. This was interpreted as being due to decreasedrenal ammonia production.20,21 In the presence of normal aldosteroneproduction, however, a high intake of K+ does not commonly leadto metabolic acidosis per se in humans compared with rodents,in which dietary manipulation results in a much bigger K+ load.Reduction in ammonia production in humans is offset by an increasein distal sodium delivery and aldosterone upregulation, whichpromote K+ and H+ excretion as discussed already.
The roles of aldosterone and hyperkalemia in the physiologyof human hyperkalemic acidosis were considered in a case reportin the New England Journal of Medicine.22 The case concerneda patient with hyperkalemic hypoaldosteronism but only moderaterenal impairment. The authors demonstrated reduced urinary ammoniumexcretion that resolved with the use of ion exchange resinsto correct the hyperkalemia, whereas replacing the mineralocorticoidonly partly corrected the biochemical and acid-base disturbance.This finding implicated hyperkalemia itself in the pathophysiology.
The mechanism of this observation was not addressed in the article,and the vast majority both of in vivo and in vitro studies fromwhich conventional wisdom is extracted concern the kidneys ofexperimental animals. Experiments in dogs were probably thefirst to reveal that mineralocorticoid deficiency led not onlyto hyperkalemia but also to diminished ammonia production andproton secretion23,24 and revealed a species difference in thatdogs are unable to lower urine pH in this context, whereas humansdo. Kamm reported to the American Society of Nephrology in a1971 abstract that chronic K+ loading in rats reduced ammoniumexcretion.25 A variety of studies thereafter agreed, albeitwith differing percentage falls, DuBose and Good26 reportinga 40% drop in urinary ammonium excretion with 50% fall in whole-kidneyammonium production; however, the fine details of how this happensmechanistically are still to some extent unclear, in part becauseof methodologic as well as species differences between studies.For example, rats fed a high-K+ diet for 1 wk showed diminisheddistal nephron ammonium secretion in the isolated perfused kidney,although this was not significantly different from control animals,whereas perfusing individual kidney tubules with K+ led to a30% fall in ammoniagenesis.27 The finding was amiloride independent,28but the role of aldosterone was not addressed at that point.
Looking at the role of the proximal tubule at the level of thesingle nephron, both acute and chronic K+ loading in rats diminishesproximal ammonia generation but does not affect the rate ofits transport in easily accessible cortical nephrons,26,29 leadingto the suggestion that deeper nephrons contribute a greaternet effect on ammonia physiology. Isolated perfused mouse nephronsyielded similar findings: a significant fall in proximal tubularammonia production without affecting the rate of secretion.30
Despite agreement that proximal production is affected, howthis is achieved is unclear. It probably involves potassiumentry into cells, displacing protons and thereby raising intracellularpH,31,32 which by extrapolation from the opposite effects ofacidosis likely leads to reduced enzyme function (Figure 1B);however, a number of unresolved issues remain. First, it isnot clear whether this would be an acute or a chronic adaptation:In an early study, long-term K+ loading of rats led to dropsin ammonia levels in kidney slices of 5% in cortex and 36% inmedulla, whereas acutely treating kidney slices with K+ solutionex vivo did not have the same effect33 Conversely, another studyshowed rat cortical slices acutely exposed to K+ up to 10 mmol/Linhibited ammonia formation.34
Second, there has been controversy as to the actual mechanismmodulating ammonia production, a large proportion of which normallytakes place through deamidation of glutamine within mitochondriain proximal tubular cells (Figure 1C). Although there is supportin the literature for lower levels of glutamate deaminationin cortical tissue in hyperkalemic rat and dog,35 a study ofisolated mitochondrial function in vitro concluded that overallglutamine metabolism was not greatly affected by high potassium.36These differing observations are in contrast to increased mitochondrialactivity repeatedly observed in K+ depletion. The differencesmay be accountable by in vitro experimental variations and/oreffects of build-up of intermediate metabolites,37 and it isnotable that assessments of changes in systemic and/or intracellularpH have not in general been reported in dietary K+ studies.
In addition, the reported effects of direct pH change on isolatedmitochondria do not necessarily mirror those on intact cells,as exemplified by Tannen and Kunin's36 finding that loweringmedium pH seems to inhibit isolated mitochondrial ammonia productionin rats, whereas, contrary to expectation, it was alkalosisthat had this effect in a dog study.38 Again, most studies areconcerned with metabolic acidosis as the primary insult ratherthan hyperkalemia. Overall, however, there is agreement thatammonia production in the proximal tubule is indeed decreasedby hyperkalemia, with the caveat that many studies have focusedmore on states of K+ depletion.
Further down the nephron, interstitial accumulation of bothammonia and ammonium by their movement out of the loop of Henleand their subsequent reappearance in the final urine play importantroles in normal acid-base and fluid balance that may be disturbedin hyperkalemia and therefore contribute to the acidosis. Becausea proportion of proximally produced ammonia is protonated bythe extruded H+ ions exchanged for Na+ by NHE3 (Figure 1C),both nonionic diffusion of ammonia and ionic transport of ammoniumare required for transport from lumen to interstitium and backagain. These have been the subject of large bodies of work thatin normal animals together demonstrate relative predominanceof ammonium transport in the loop but ammonia diffusion in thecollecting duct, both of which are subject to alterations thatdepend on pH, lumen voltage, and electrolyte concentrations.
The transport of ammonium in both loop and collecting duct hasbeen implicated in the acidosis of hyperkalemia.39 In the loop,ammonium reabsorption is furosemide sensitive, suggesting arole for the apical Na/K/2Cl co-transporter.40 Hyperkalemiadiminishes this transcellular transport, probably by directcompetition between elevated luminal K+ and ammonium for theK+ binding site on the co-transporter.41,42 Similarly, in theinner medulla, failure of normal, transcellular ammonium secretioninto urine in the context of hyperkalemia has been linked toimpaired capacity of the collecting duct's basolateral sodiumpump to carry the NH4+ ion.43 In addition, reduced availabilityin the collecting duct lumen of ammonia will preclude bufferingof directly secreted protons (Figure 1A).
Thus, interplay between renal potassium and acid-base homeostaticfunction is complex,44 involving direct effects of one on theother through modulation of ion transport by aldosterone, loweringof ammonia formation, and defective medullary ammonium handling.In the clinical context, hypoaldosteronism is the dominant factorin human hyperkalemic RTA, and rodent studies of hyperkalemicmetabolic alterations must be extrapolated with caution.
F.E.K. is a Senior Clinical Research Fellow of the WellcomeTrust. With thanks to Tom DuBose and Kevin O'Shaughnessy forhelpful discussion and Andy Fry for editorial assistance.
Footnotes
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