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Liang Fang, Rita Garuti, Bo-Young Kim, James B. Wade, Paul A. Welling
Published in Volume 119, Issue 11
J Clin Invest. 2009; 119(11):3278–3289 doi:10.1172/JCI37950
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Figure 9
ARH is regulated by dietary potassium and controls ROMK in the kidney.

(A) Representative anti-ARH Western blot of mouse kidney cortex isolated from WT mice fed either a low-potassium diet or a high-potassium diet. Each lane is from a different mouse. Cox IV was used as loading control. (B) Quantification of all experiments like those shown in A, indicating ARH protein abundance in the kidney (n = 6/group; *P < 0.001). (C) Representative anti-ARH Western blot in WT and ARH-knockout mice (Arh–/–). (D) Representative anti-ROMK Western blot of mouse kidney cortex isolated from WT or ARH-knockout mice fed either a low-potassium diet or a high-potassium diet. Each lane is from a different mouse. Cox IV was used as loading control. (E) Quantification of total ROMK protein abundance (complex glycosylated plus unglycosylated) from all experiments like those shown in D (n = 6/group; difference between high- and low-potassium diet, *P < 0.001; the difference between either Arh–/– group is not significant, just as the difference between either Arh–/– group and WT mice fed the high-potassium diet is not significant.