Abstract

The Ca2+-sensing receptor protein and the Ca2+-inhibitable type 6 adenylyl cyclase mRNA are present in a defined segment of the rat renal tubule leading to the hypothesis of their possible functional co-expression in a same cell and thus to a possible inhibition of cAMP content by extracellular Ca2+. By using microdissected segments, we compared the properties of regulation of extracellular Ca2+-mediated activation of Ca2+ receptor to those elicited by prostaglandin E2 and angiotensin II. The three agents inhibited a common pool of hormone-stimulated cAMP content by different mechanisms as follows. (i) Extracellular Ca2+, coupled to phospholipase C activation via a pertussis toxin-insensitive G protein, induced a dose-dependent inhibition of cAMP content (1.25 mM Ca2+ eliciting 50% inhibition) resulting from both stimulation of cAMP hydrolysis and inhibition of cAMP synthesis; this latter effect was mediated by capacitive Ca2+ influx as well as release of intracellular Ca2+. (ii) Angiotensin II, coupled to the same transduction pathway, also decreased cAMP content; however, its inhibitory effect on cAMP was mainly accounted for by an increase of cAMP hydrolysis, although angiotensin II and extracellular Ca2+ can induce comparable release of intracellular Ca2+. (iii) Prostaglandin E2, coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein, inhibited the same pool of adenylyl cyclase units as extracellular Ca2+ but by a different mechanism. The functional properties of the adenylyl cyclase were similar to those described for type 6. The results establish that the co-expression of a Ca2+-inhibitable adenylyl cyclase and of a Ca2+-sensing receptor in a same cell allows an inhibition of cAMP accumulation by physiological concentrations of extracellular Ca2+.

Highlights

  • The Ca2؉-sensing receptor protein and the Ca2؉-inhibitable type 6 adenylyl cyclase mRNA are present in a defined segment of the rat renal tubule leading to the hypothesis of their possible functional co-expression in a same cell and to a possible inhibition of cAMP content by extracellular Ca2؉

  • This is consistent with previous quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) results showing that the type 6 adenylyl cyclase (AC) mRNA was more abundant in cortical thick ascending limb (CTAL) than in proximal tubule and that type 5 AC mRNA was not detected in CTAL (14)

  • This study demonstrates that in a same epithelial cell of the rat renal tubule prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), angiotensin II and the activation of the Ca2ϩ receptor inhibit the same pool of arginine vasopressin (AVP)-dependent intracellular cAMP content by different mechanisms, i.e. G␣i-mediated or Ca2ϩ-mediated inhibition of AC activity and PDEmediated hydrolysis of cAMP

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Summary

Introduction

The Ca2؉-sensing receptor protein and the Ca2؉-inhibitable type 6 adenylyl cyclase mRNA are present in a defined segment of the rat renal tubule leading to the hypothesis of their possible functional co-expression in a same cell and to a possible inhibition of cAMP content by extracellular Ca2؉. All the G␣s-coupled receptors studied so far in this segment activate a single pool of AC catalytic units (15, 16), and in addition, electron microscopy studies describe a single cell type in this epithelium (17) These observations lead to the hypothesis that the functional expression of the type 6 AC mRNA accounts for the hormone-dependent cAMP synthesis in the rat CTAL. The second agent, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), inhibits hormone-dependent cAMP synthesis (19) likely as a result of the interaction of the PGE2 receptor with a GTP-dependent, pertussis toxin-sensitive G␣i protein as demonstrated in the medullary portion of the rat thick ascending limb (20)

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