[HTML][HTML] Major contribution of tubular secretion to creatinine clearance in mice

C Eisner, R Faulhaber-Walter, Y Wang… - Kidney international, 2010 - Elsevier
C Eisner, R Faulhaber-Walter, Y Wang, A Leelahavanichkul, PST Yuen, D Mizel, RA Star
Kidney international, 2010Elsevier
This study was performed to quantify the fraction of excreted creatinine not attributable to
creatinine filtration for accurately determining the glomerular filtration rate in mice. To
measure this we compared creatinine filtration with the simultaneous measurement of inulin
clearance using both single-bolus fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-inulin elimination
kinetics and standard FITC-inulin infusion. During anesthesia, creatinine filtration was found
to be systematically higher than inulin clearance in both male and female C57BL/6J mice …
This study was performed to quantify the fraction of excreted creatinine not attributable to creatinine filtration for accurately determining the glomerular filtration rate in mice. To measure this we compared creatinine filtration with the simultaneous measurement of inulin clearance using both single-bolus fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-inulin elimination kinetics and standard FITC-inulin infusion. During anesthesia, creatinine filtration was found to be systematically higher than inulin clearance in both male and female C57BL/6J mice. The secretion fraction was significantly less in female mice. Administration of either cimetidine or para-aminohippuric acid, competitors of organic cation and anion transport respectively, significantly reduced the secretion fraction in male and female mice and both significantly increased the plasma creatinine level. Creatinine secretion in both genders was not mediated by the organic cation transporters OCT1 or OCT 2 since secretion fraction levels were identical in FVB wild-type and OCT1/2 knockout mice. Thus, secretion accounts for about 50 and 35% of excreted creatinine in male and female mice, respectively. Increasing plasma creatinine threefold by infusion further increased the secretion fraction. Renal organic anion transporter 1 mRNA expression was higher in male than in female mice, reflecting the gender difference in creatinine secretion. Hence we show that there is a major secretory contribution to creatinine excretion mediated through the organic anion transport system. This feature adds to problems associated with measuring endogenous creatinine filtration in mice.
Elsevier