Abstract

Adhesion of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystals on renal tubular epithelial cells is a critical event for kidney stone disease that triggers many cascades of cellular response. Our previous expression proteomics study identified several altered proteins in MDCK renal tubular cells induced by CaOx crystals. However, functional significance of those changes had not been investigated. The present study thus aimed to define functional roles of such proteome data. Global protein network analysis using STRING software revealed α-tubulin, which was decreased, as one of central nodes of protein-protein interactions. Overexpression of α-tubulin (pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A) was then performed and its efficacy was confirmed. pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A could maintain levels of α-tubulin and its direct interacting partner, vimentin, after crystal exposure. Also, pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A successfully reduced cell death to almost the basal level and increased cell proliferation after crystal exposure. Additionally, tissue repair capacity was improved in pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A cells. Moreover, cell-crystal adhesion was reduced by pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A. Finally, levels of potential crystal receptors (HSP90, HSP70, and α-enolase) on apical membrane were dramatically reduced to basal levels by pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A. These findings implicate that α-tubulin has protective roles in kidney stone disease by preventing cell death and cell-crystal adhesion, but on the other hand, enhancing cell proliferation and tissue repair function.

Highlights

  • From our previous study[7], we have identified a number of proteins with significantly altered levels when the cells were exposed to Calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystals

  • Α-tubulin was decreased by CaOx crystal exposure

  • Α-tubulin (55 kDa) is a cytoskeletal protein and major component of microtubules that plays a crucial role in regulation of cell shape, intracellular transport, cell motility, cell migration and cell division[14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

Effect of pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A on levels of α-tubulin, vimentin and ANXA2 in CaOx-treated cells. Based on these direct and indirect interactions predicted by STRING analysis and confirmed by immunofluorescence study, levels of these interacting proteins were examined upon exposure to CaOx crystals in both WT and pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A cells. For ANXA2, which was indirectly interacted with α-tubulin but directly interacted with vimentin, the data showed that the increase of ANXA2 upon CaOx treatment in WT was almost unaffected by pcDNA6.2-TUBA1A (Fig. 3E).

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