J R Soc Med 2001;94:221-225
© 2001 Royal Society of Medicine
The renal tubular acidoses
Robert J Unwin PhD FRCP
Giovambattista Capasso MD 1
Centre for Nephrology, Royal Free and University College Medical School,
University College London, UK
1
Department of Nephrology, Second University of Naples, Italy
Correspondence to: Professor R J Unwin, Centre for Nephrology, Royal Free and
University College Medical School, Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street, London
W1N 8AA, UK E-mail:
robert.unwin{at}ucl.ac.uk
 |
INTRODUCTION
|
|---|
The past decade has seen much progress in our understanding
of the cellular
mechanisms responsible for renal tubular acidosis
(RTA), although the
mechanism of the common complication of
nephrocalcinosis remains unclear. In
this brief overview, we
discuss RTA from the standpoint of applied or
clinical
renal tubular physiology, since this represents a
synthesis
of over 50 years of clinical description and classification,
more
than 30 years of segmental renal tubular physiology, and
almost 10 years of
applied molecular genetics. We begin by defining
RTA and its current clinical
classification, and we review this
in the context of normal urinary
acidification and how it might
go wrong.
 |
DEFINITION
|
|---|
RTA signifies an inability of the kidney to excrete adequately
an acid
(H
+) load and so contribute to maintaining normal acidbase
balance.
Defined in this way, it could also include the low acid excretion
of
renal failure, but RTA is distinguished from uraemic acidosis
by a normal or
only slightly reduced glomerular filtration rate
(GFR) and a hyperchloraemic
normal (rather than increased) anion
gap metabolic acidosisthe
only other important cause
of which is loss of alkali (bicarbonate) from
diarrhoea. In
uraemic acidosis H
+ excretion per functioning nephron
is
increased;
the underlying cellular mechanisms of H
+
secretion are preserved
and responding normally to a systemic acid-load that
cannot
be excreted because of too few
nephrons
1.
The current classification of RTA can be confusing, especially the older
terminology of types, which was originally chronological (Box 1). This terminology gives no hint as to the process of renal acid excretion
and therefore to the potentially defective underlying cellular
mechanism2. Advances
in renal physiology, and most recently in molecular genetics as applied to
renal tubular cell physiology, have now made it possible to describe RTA in
more functional terms and even to predict likely causes. To illustrate this,
we must first describe how the kidney maintains long-term acidbase
balance.
 |
RENAL ACID EXCRETION
|
|---|
The following equation, a loose version of the HendersonHaselbalch
relationship,
highlights the kidney's critical role in bicarbonate balance
as
well as its place in normal acidbase
balance
3:
What determines the presence of systemic acidosis is summarized in Box 2.
To produce urine that is normally acid relative to blood, the kidney must
excrete net acid (ingested and metabolically generated H+ of around
40-70 mmol/day, depending on diet)a process facilitated by the main
urinary buffers of phosphate and ammonium
(NH4+)and must reclaim filtered bicarbonate. The
main sites of H+ secretion that sustain these two components of
acidbase balance are the proximal and distal tubules, where the
reclamation of filtered bicarbonate and the excretion of net acid occur,
respectively; these nephron sites are also the basis of proximal
versus distal RTA (Figure
1).
Figure 2 shows the major
pathways of acidification along the renal tubule. At each site the secreted
H+ is generated inside the renal tubular cell from CO2
and H2O, catalysed by the enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA-II). This
enzyme is especially important along the proximal tubule, where its presence
on the luminal cell membrane surface (as another isoform, CA-IV) promotes the
combination of filtered bicarbonate with secreted H+ by dehydrating
the carbonic acid (H2CO3) produced, leading to net
bicarbonate reabsorption (via CO2 diffusion).

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2. Current cellular models of tubule acidification (proximal versus
distal). CA=carbonic anhydrase; PC=principal cell; -IC=intercalated
cell; p.d.=potential difference
|
|
In addition to secreting H+, the proximal tubular cells can
generate new bicarbonate from the metabolism of glutamine, which also produces
ammonium (NH4+), the key urinary buffer (see Box 2).
Ammonium reaches the urine by a complex route that involves proximal tubular
secretion, subsequent reabsorption along the thick ascending limb of the loop
of Henle and lastly diffusion trapping within the collecting duct lumen and so
to the final urine. Its journey to urine can be disrupted at each step and
thereby impair net acid excretion, even when cellular H+ secretion
is normal. As an example, hyperkalaemia (especially when due to a lack of
aldosterone, see Box 1) can reduce acid excretion by inhibiting
NH4+
production4.
The actual mechanisms of cellular H+ secretion described so far
are illustrated in Figure 3. In
the proximal tubule most of the H+ secretion is coupled to
Na+ absorption via the Na+-H+ exchanger
(which also transports NH4+ to secrete it from the
proximal tubular cells) of which several isoforms have been
cloned5,6.
Isoform 3 (NHE-3) appears to be the main transporter responsible for luminal
H+ (and NH4+)
secretion7, but so
far has not been linked to a form of clinical RTA. In addition to the
Na+-H+ exchanger there is an Na+-independent
H+ secretory mechanism, the electrogenic
H+-ATPase8,
although this proton pump is functionally much more important in
H+ secretion along the distal tubule and collecting duct, where its
activity also depends on aldosterone.
To achieve luminal H+ secretion, bicarbonate must leave the cell
across the opposite (basolateral) cell membrane. In the proximal tubule this
is mainly via the Na+-HCO3- co-transporter,
whereas in the distal nephron (distal tubule and collecting duct) it is via
the Cl--HCO3- exchanger. Each of the
transporters shown in Figure 3
is a potential target in acquired or inherited forms of RTA. However, to date
only the
H+-ATPase9,10,11,12,
Cl--HCO3-
exchanger13,14,15,16
and Na+-HCO3-
co-transporter17
have been causally linked to RTA, largely on the basis of studies of inherited
RTA (Box 3). Defective H+ secretion (direct or secondary to reduced
bicarbonate transport) is only one potential mechanism of RTA; others are set
out in Box 4.
 |
DIAGNOSIS
|
|---|
An important clue in RTA is the relationship between plasma
bicarbonate
concentration and urine pH. In proximal RTA, bicarbonate
is lost in the urine
and urine pH may initially be high but
will fall to <5.5 as the plasma
bicarbonate concentration
decreases; in contrast, in distal RTA, urine pH
remains raised
despite a low plasma bicarbonate
(
Figure 4). The diagnosis of
RTA
is usually suspected when the urine pH is inappropriately, or
persistently,
alkaline; but remember that urine pH also depends on time of
day
and diet. A more useful random or spot urine pH value is
that of an early
morning urine sample (second void), when acid
excretion is usually maximal and
pH normally <5.5. A clinic
dipstick urine pH is a very rough
guide and is often unreliable:
urine pH must be measured with a pH electrode
soon after voiding;
if urine is left standing or there is infection, it can be
misleadingly
high, at 8 or more.
In proximal RTA, urine pH may be high or appropriately low, depending on
the plasma bicarbonate concentration (see earlier). In the absence of other
clues suggesting a Fanconi-like defect of proximal tubular function, such as
glycosuria, aminoaciduria, phosphate wasting, or tubular
(low-molecular-weight) proteinuria, it may be necessary to do intravenous
bicarbonate loading and measure the fractional excretion of bicarbonate.
Normally urinary bicarbonate is barely detectable and fractional excretion is
<5% of the (glomerular) filtered load, but in proximal RTA it is usually
around 15%. In distal RTA, urine pH will be high, but plasma bicarbonate
concentration can be low (complete distal RTA) or normal
(incomplete distal
RTA)20. For
a clear demonstration of impaired renal net acid excretion a urinary
acidification test must be done, either by acute administration of an acid
load as oral ammonium chloride (NH4Cl, 0.1
g/kg)21 or by the
combination of oral fludrocortisone (0.1 mg) and frusemide (40
mg)22. In both
tests urine pH is measured as urine is voided for at least 5 hours; in the
NH4Cl test, up to 8 hours may be necessary because of the time
needed to ingest it without nausea or vomiting. A normal response is a fall in
urine pH at some point to <5.5.
Underlying distal RTA is an important cause of nephrocalcinosis and renal
stone disease. In the most comprehensive clinical series published,
Wrong23 reported
that approximately 20% of over 300 patients with nephrocalcinosis had
underlying distal RTA, inherited or acquired. Of the inherited type most were
dominantly inherited, and of the acquired type most were autoimmune (e.g.
Sjögren's
syndrome)9,24.
It is therefore important to consider the possibility of distal RTA in any
patient with renal stones, particularly if nephrocalcinosis is also present. A
diagnosis of medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is often incorrectly made when
renal medullary calcification is seen on a plain abdominal X-ray. MSK is a
radiological diagnosis and depends on identifying ectatic terminal collecting
ducts on intravenous urography. However, the associated calcification and
medullary damage (and loss of normal collecting duct function) can produce a
secondary form of distal RTA. In isolated nephrocalcinosis in women, the cause
is often autoimmune and the condition is commonly associated with symptomatic
hypokalaemia23.
The reason for nephrocalcinosis and renal stones in RTA is not completely
understood, but hypercalciuria (usually confined to those patients with
systemic acidosis) and low urinary excretion of citrate are important factors.
Indeed a low urinary citrate concentration in the presence of an alkaline pH
is an important clue to underlying distal RTA, since there is normally a
direct relationship between urinary citrate concentration and urine pH.
Citrate reaches the urine by filtration but is partly reabsorbed in the
proximal tubule, where its absorption depends on pH, systemic and
intracellular, such that acidosis increases citrate reabsorption and also its
intracellular
metabolism25. It is
probably for this reason that kidney stones and nephrocalcinosis are less
common in proximal RTA: citrate reabsorption is often reduced and urinary
citrate excretion increased, although this may be offset by any associated
hypokalaemia and intracellular acidosis. In distal RTA, systemic and/or
intracellular acidosis leads to increased citrate reabsorption in the proximal
tubule and thus reduced urinary citrate excretion; hence a potential benefit
of alkali therapy in correcting this.
As already mentioned, hypokalaemia is often associated with RTA. In
proximal RTA, the most likely reason is the increase in bicarbonate delivery
and flow rate to the main site of K+ secretion, the distal nephron.
However, there is no clear explanation for the hypokalaemia commonly observed
in distal RTA. In both forms of RTA, treatment with oral bicarbonate or
citrate (which is converted to bicarbonate in the liver) tends to exacerbate
the hypokalaemia.
 |
TREATMENT OF RTA
|
|---|
The main reasons for treatment are to protect the bones and
help heal
rickets or osteomalacia in those patients with metabolic
acidosis, and to
promote citrate excretion, which may reduce
the risk of renal stones and
progression of
nephrocalcinosis
26.
Box 5 lists common management strategies. Ideally, in those patients
with
metabolic acidosis, plasma bicarbonate concentration should
be maintained
above 20 mmol/L. In proximal RTA, a thiazide diuretic
can be helpful by
causing mild volume depletion, which enhances
proximal tubular reabsorption of
bicarbonate; however, as with
bicarbonate supplements, it will increase the
tendency to hypokalaemia.
 |
THE FUTURE
|
|---|
Monogeneic disorders of renal tubular function will continue
to provide
insights into the complexities and subtleties of
urinary acidification, even
when RTA is not the main clinical
feature. For example, the tubulopathy now
known as Dent's disease,
genetically characterized by
Thakker
27 and
co-workers, can sometimes
be confused with distal RTA. Its mutated protein, an
intracellular
Cl
- channel, ClC-5, may regulate H
+
secretion by a mechanism
akin to that well-described for water channels
(aquaporin 2)
28,
with
insertion and retrieval of proton pumps into the luminal plasma
membranean
interpretation that may also be consistent with a recent
finding
by Karet
et
al.12 in a
recessively inherited form of distal
RTA.
The puzzle of exactly how and why nephrocalcinosis occurs in distal RTA
remains unsolved. Now that specific H+ transporter defects are
known to be important in clinical RTA, it should be possible to reproduce such
abnormalities in isolated renal collecting duct cells and study the process of
microcrystallization leading to nephrocalcinosis and renal stone
formation.
Finally, knowledge of the gene targets holds out the prospect of gene
therapy29,30,
not just for those with inherited defects of renal acidification, but also as
supplementary therapy in those with secondary forms of RTA and renal stone
disease.
 |
Acknowledgments
|
|---|
We thank Professor O M Wrong for many valuable discussions and
the Wellcome
Trust for collaborative support.
 |
REFERENCES
|
|---|
-
Madias NE, Kraut JA. Uremic acidosis. In Seldin DW, Giebisch G,
eds. The Regulation of AcidBase Balance. New
York: Raven Press, 1989:285
-317
-
Kamel KS, Briceno LF, Sanchez MI, et al. A new
classification for renal defects in net acid excretion. Am J Kidney
Dis 1997;29:136
-46[Medline]
-
Boron WF. Chemistry of buffer equilibria in blood plasma. In Seldin
DW, Giebisch G, eds. The Regulation of Acid-Base
Balance. New York: Raven Press, 1989:3
-32
-
DuBose TDJ. Hyperkalemic metabolic acidosis. Am J Kidney
Dis 1999;33:XLV
-XLVIII[Medline]
-
Alpern RJ. Cell mechanisms of proximal tubule acidification.
Physiol Rev1990; 70:79
-114[Free Full Text]
-
Amemiya M, Loffing J, Lotscher M, et al. Expression of
NHE-3 in the apical membrane of rat renal proximal tubule and thick ascending
limb. Kidney Int1995; 48:1206
-15[Medline]
-
Wang T, Yang CL, Abbiati T, et al. Mechanism of proximal
tubule bicarbonate absorption in NHE3 null mice. Am J
Physiol 1999;277:F297
-F302
-
Gluck SL, Underhill DM, Iyori M, Halliday LS, Kostrominova TY, Lee
BS. Physiology and biochemistry of the kidney vacuolar H+ATPase.
Annu Rev Physiol1996; 58:427
-45[Medline]
-
Cohen EP, Bastani B, Cohen MR, Kolner S, Hemken P, Gluck SL.
Absence of H(+)ATPase in cortical collecting tubules of a patient with
Sjogren's syndrome and distal renal tubular acidosis. J Am Soc
Nephrol 1992;3:264
-71[Abstract]
-
Jordan M, Cohen EP, Roza A, et al. An immunocytochemical
study of H+ ATPase in kidney transplant rejection. J Lab
Clin Med 1996;127:310
-14[Medline]
-
Karet FE, Finberg KE, Nelson RD, et al. Mutations in the
gene encoding BI subunit of H+-ATPase cause renal tubular acidosis
with sensorineural deafness. Nat Genet1999; 21:84
-90[Medline]
-
Smith AN, Skaug J, Choate KA, et al. Mutations in ATP6NIB,
encoding a new kidney vacuolar proton pump 116-kD subunit, cause recessive
distal renal tubular acidosis with preserved hearing. Nat
Genet 2000;26:71
-5[Medline]
-
Karet FE, Gainza FJ, Gyory AZ, et al. Mutations in the
chloride-bicarbonate exchanger gene AE1 cause autosomal dominant but not
autosomal recessive distal renal tubular acidosis. Proc Natl Acad
Sci USA 1998;95:6337
-42[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Bruce LJ, Cope DL, Jones GK, et al. Familial distal renal
tubular acidosis is associated with mutations in the red cell anion exchanger
(Band 3, AE1) gene. J Clin Invest1997; 100:1693
-707[Medline]
-
Jarolim P, Shayakul C, Prabakaran D, et al. Autosomal
dominant distal renal tubular acidosis is associated in three families with
heterozygosity for the R589H mutation in the AE1 (band 3) Cl-/HCO3-exchanger.
J Biol Chem1998; 273:6380
-8[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Tamphaichitr VS, Sumboonnanonda A, Ideguchi H, et al.
Novel AE1 mutations in recessive distal renal tubular acidosis.
Loss-of-function is rescued by glycophorin A. J Clin
Invest 1998;102:2173
-9[Medline]
-
Igarashi T, Inatomi J, Sekine T, et al. Mutations in
SLC4A4 cause permanent isolated proximal renal tubular acidosis with ocular
abnormalities. Nat Genet1999; 23:264
-6[Medline]
-
Sly WS, Hewett-Emmett D, Whyte MP, Yu YS, Tashian RE. Carbonic
anhydrase II deficiency identified as the primary defect in the autosomal
recessive syndrome of osteopetrosis with renal tubular acidosis and cerebral
calcificatioin. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA1983; 80:2752
-6[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Soriano JR, Boichis H, Edelmann CM, Jr. Bicarbonate reabsorption
and hydrogen ion excretion in children with renal tubular acidosis.
J Pediatr1967; 71:802
-13[Medline]
-
Wrong OM, Feest TG. The natural history of distal renal tubular
acidosis. Contrib Nephrol1980; 21:137
-44[Medline]
-
Wrong O, Davies HEF. The excretion of acid in renal disease.
Q J Med1959; 28:259
-313[Free Full Text]
-
Walter SJ, Shirley DG, Unwin RJ, Wrong OM. Assessment of urinary
acidification. Kidney Int1999; 55:2092A
-
Wrong O. Nephrocalcinosis. In: Cameron S, Davison AM, Grunefeld
J-P, Kerr DS, Ritz E, eds. Oxford Textbook of
Nephrology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998:1375
-96
-
DeFranco PE, Haragsim L, Schmitz PG, Bastania B. Absence of
vacuolar H(+)-ATPase pump in the collecting duct of a patient with hypokalemic
distal renal tubular acidosis and Sjögren's
syndrome. J Am Soc Nephrol1995; 6:295
-301[Abstract]
-
Hamm LL. Renal handling of citrate. Kidney
Int 1990;38:728
-35[Medline]
-
Richards P, Chamberlain MJ, Wrong OM. Treatment of osteomalacia of
renal tubular acidosis by sodium bicarbonate alone.
Lancet1972; ii:994
-7
-
Lloyd SE, Pearce SH, Fisher SE, et al. A common molecular
basis for three inherited kidney stone diseases.
Nature1996; 379:445
-9[Medline]
-
Nielsen S, Kwon TH, Christensen BM, Promeneur D, Frokiaer J,
Marples D. Physiology and pathophysiology of renal aquaporins. J Am
Soc Nephrol 1999;10:647
-63[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Lai LW, Chan DM, Erickson RP, Hsu SJ, Lien YH. Correction of renal
tubular acidosis in carbonic anhydrase II-deficient mice with gene therapy.
J Clin Invest1998; 101:1320
-5[Medline]
-
Lien YH, Lai LW. Liposome-mediated gene transfer into the tubules.
Exp Nephrol1997; 5:132
-6[Medline]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
C. M. Laing, R. Roberts, S. Summers, J. S. Friedland, L. Lighstone, and R. J. Unwin
Distal renal tubular acidosis in association with HIV infection and AIDS
Nephrol. Dial. Transplant.,
May 1, 2006;
21(5):
1420 - 1422.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
B. A Hemstreet
Antimicrobial-Associated Renal Tubular Acidosis
Ann. Pharmacother.,
June 1, 2004;
38(6):
1031 - 1038.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|