Null Mutation of PCLN-1/Claudin-16 Results in Bovine Chronic Interstitial Nephritis

  1. Takashi Hirano1,3,
  2. Naohiko Kobayashi2,3,
  3. Tomohito Itoh1,
  4. Akiko Takasuga1,
  5. Teruhiko Nakamaru2,
  6. Shinji Hirotsune1, and
  7. Yoshikazu Sugimoto1,4
  1. 1Shirakawa Institute of Animal Genetics, Odakura, Nishigo, Nishi-shirakawa, Fukushima 961-8061, Japan; 2Gifu Prefectural Beef Cattle Research Institute, Makigahora, Kiyomi, Gifu 506-0101, Japan

Abstract

Inherited chronic renal diseases are associated with failures in glomerular filtration and tubular resorption. Such failures invariably result from defects in selective filtration and absorption in surface renal epithelium. Recently, we described an autosomal recessive chronic interstitial nephritis with diffuse zonal fibrosis (CINF) in cattle. Bovine CINF, characterized by increased blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, and urinary proteins, leads to lethality before puberty, usually within the first 6 months or year of life. Here, we demonstrate that the first four exons of PCLN-1/Claudin-16(CL-16), which encodes a member of the claudin family of tight junction proteins, were deleted in CINF-affected cattle. CL-16was expressed preferentially in kidneys of normal cattle, but transcripts were totally absent in affected offspring. This observation suggests that the lack of CL-16 protein contributes to the dysfunction of paracellular renal transport systems.

[The CL-16cDNA sequence has been deposited at GenBank under accession no. AB030082.]

Footnotes

  • 3 These authors contributed equally to this work.

  • 4 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL kazusugi{at}cocoa.ocn.ne.jp; FAX 81-248-25-5725.

    • Received August 18, 1999.
    • Accepted February 25, 2000.
| Table of Contents

Preprint Server