Renal cortical phenol injection provokes acute sympathetic nervous system-dependent hypertension and a shift of proximal tubule Na(+)/H(+) exchanger isoform 3 (NHE3) and Na(+)-P(i) cotransporter type 2 (NaPi2) to apical microvilli. This study aimed to determine whether proximal tubule (PT) Na(+) transporter redistribution persists chronically and whether the pool sizes of renal Na(+) transporters are altered. At 5 wk after a 50-microl 10% phenol injection, blood pressure is elevated: 154 +/- 8 vs. 113 +/- 11 mmHg after saline injection. Cortical membranes were fractionated into three "windows" enriched in apical brush border (WI), mixed apical and intermicrovillar cleft (WII), and intracellular membranes (WIII). NHE3 relative distribution in these windows, assessed by immunoblots and expressed as %total, remained shifted to apical from intracellular membranes (WI: 25.3 +/- 3 in phenol vs.12.7 +/- 3% in saline and WIII: 9.1 +/- 1.3 in phenol vs. 18.9 +/- 3% in saline). NaPi2 and dipeptidyl-peptidase IV also remained shifted to WI, and alkaline phosphatase activity increased 100.9 +/- 29.7 (WI) and 51.4 +/- 17.5% (WII) in phenol-injected membranes. Na(+) transporter total abundance [NHE3, NaPi2, thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter, bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-2Cl cotransporter, Na-K-ATPase alpha(1)- and beta(1)-subunits, and epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) alpha- and beta-subunits] was profiled by immunoblotting. Only cortical NHE3 abundance was altered, decreasing to 0.56 +/- 0.06. The results demonstrate that phenol injury provokes a persistant shift of PT NHE3 and NaPi2 to the apical microvilli, along with a 44% decrease in total NHE3, evidence for an escape mechanism that would counteract the redistribution of a larger fraction of NHE3 to the apical surface by normalizing the total amount of NHE3 in apical membranes.