Abstract

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), in addition to its well defined Cl- channel properties, regulates other ion channels. CFTR inhibits murine or rat epithelial Na+ channel (mENaC or rENaC) currents in many epithelial and non-epithelial cells, whereas murine or rat ENaC increases CFTR functional expression. These regulatory interactions are reproduced in Xenopus oocytes where both the open probability and surface expression of wild type CFTR Cl- channels are increased when CFTR is co-expressed with alphabetagamma mENaC, and conversely the activity of mENaC is inhibited after wild type CFTR activation. Using the Xenopus oocyte expression system, differences in functional regulatory interactions were observed when CFTR was co-expressed with either alphabetagamma mENaC or alphabetagamma human ENaC (hENaC). Co-expression of CFTR and alphabetagamma mENaC or hENaC resulted in an approximately 3-fold increase in CFTR Cl- current compared with oocytes expressing CFTR alone. Oocytes co-injected with both CFTR and mENaC or hENaC expressed an amiloride-sensitive whole cell current that was decreased compared with that observed with the injection of mENaC or hENaC alone before CFTR activation with forskolin/3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. CFTR activation resulted in a further 50% decrease in mENaC-mediated currents, an approximately 20% decrease in alpha-T663-hENaC-mediated currents, and essentially no change in alpha-A663-hENaC-mediated currents. Changes in ENaC functional expression correlated with ENaC surface expression by oocyte surface biotinylation experiments. Assessment of regulatory interactions between CFTR and chimeric mouse/human ENaCs suggest that the 20 C-terminal amino acid residues of alpha ENaC confer species specificity regarding ENaC inhibition by activated CFTR.

Highlights

  • Regulatory Interactions between mouse ENaC (mENaC) and CFTR in Xenopus Oocytes—Several groups have reported that when wild type CFTR and rodent ENaC were co-expressed in Xenopus oocytes, ENaC-mediated Naϩ currents were inhibited in response to CFTR activation in two-electrode voltage clamp (TEV) experiments (7, 9 –11)

  • Oocytes co-injected with mENaC and CFTR had reduced amiloridesensitive current (Ϫ1.36 Ϯ 0.20 ␮A, n ϭ 10) compared with oocytes injected with mENaC alone (Ϫ3.23 Ϯ 0.75 ␮A, p ϭ 0.03), and this amiloride-sensitive current was further reduced in co-injected oocytes upon activation of CFTR with forskolin/ IBMX (Ϫ0.89 Ϯ 0.20 ␮A, p ϭ 0.01, Fig. 1A)

  • In agreement with our previous data [10, 11], co-injection of mENaC with CFTR increased the functional expression of CFTR (Ϫ10.08 Ϯ 1.07 ␮A, n ϭ 10) compared with oocytes injected with CFTR alone (Ϫ2.12 Ϯ 0.42 ␮A, n ϭ 10, p Ͻ 0.001, Fig. 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Using the Xenopus oocyte expression system, differences in functional regulatory interactions were observed when CFTR was co-expressed with either ␣␤␥ mENaC or ␣␤␥ human ENaC (hENaC). Regulatory Interactions between mENaC and CFTR in Xenopus Oocytes—Several groups have reported that when wild type CFTR and rodent (murine or rat) ENaC were co-expressed in Xenopus oocytes, ENaC-mediated Naϩ currents were inhibited in response to CFTR activation in two-electrode voltage clamp (TEV) experiments (7, 9 –11).

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