Kidney-specific claudin-2 deficiency leads to medullary nephrocalcinosis in mice

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2025-10-09
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American English
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American Society for Clinical Investigation
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Abstract

Deposits of hydroxyapatite called Randall's plaques are found in the renal papilla of calcium oxalate kidney stone formers and likely serve as the nidus for stone formation, but their pathogenesis is unknown. Claudin-2 is a paracellular ion channel that mediates calcium reabsorption in the renal proximal tubule. To investigate the role of renal claudin-2, we generated kidney tubule-specific claudin-2 conditional KO mice (KS-Cldn2 KO). KS-Cldn2 KO mice exhibited transient hypercalciuria in early life. Normalization of urine calcium was accompanied by a compensatory increase in expression and function of renal tubule calcium transporters, including in the thick ascending limb. Despite normocalciuria, KS-Cldn2 KO mice developed papillary hydroxyapatite deposits, beginning at 6 months of age, that resembled Randall's plaques and tubule plugs. Bulk chemical tissue analysis and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry revealed a gradient of intrarenal calcium concentration along the corticomedullary axis in normal mice that was accentuated in KS-Cldn2 KO mice. Our findings provide evidence for the "vas washdown" hypothesis for Randall's plaque formation and identify the corticomedullary calcium gradient as a potential target for therapies to prevent kidney stone disease.

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Behm CV, Nyimanu D, Galdino OA, et al. Kidney-specific claudin-2 deficiency leads to medullary nephrocalcinosis in mice. J Clin Invest. 2025;135(23):e197807. Published 2025 Oct 9. doi:10.1172/JCI197807
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The Journal of Clinical Investigation
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