Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jul 2022)

Tolvaptan induces body fluid loss and subsequent water conservation in normal rats

  • Satoshi Kidoguchi,
  • Kento Kitada,
  • Yoshihide Fujisawa,
  • Daisuke Nakano,
  • Takashi Yokoo,
  • Jens Titze,
  • Akira Nishiyama

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 149, no. 3
pp. 115 – 123

Abstract

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We have recently reported that the urea osmolyte-associated water conservation system is activated in fluid loss models such as high salt-induced natriuresis, renal injury-induced impaired renal concentrating ability, or skin barrier dysfunction-induced transepidermal water loss. The system consists of the interaction of multiple organs including renal urea recycling, hepato-muscular ureagenesis, and suppression of cardiovascular energy expenditure. Here, we determined the effect of pharmacological fluid loss induced by tolvaptan, a selective vasopressin V2 receptor antagonist, on water conservation. We evaluated the water conservation system in rats that consumed a control diet or a diet containing 0.1% tolvaptan. Tolvaptan increased urine volume on day 1, but this renal water loss then gradually decreased. Body water and osmolyte content were decreased by tolvaptan on day 1 but had normalized by day 7. Tolvaptan induced fluid loss on day 1, and the following restoration of body fluid on day 7 was associated with an increase in urea transporter A1-associated renal urea recycling. Tolvaptan did not affect hepato-muscular ureagenesis on day 1 and day 7, or cardiovascular energy expenditure during treatment. Thus, tolvaptan-induced fluid loss leads to activation of the water conservation system via renal urea recycling.

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