Abstract

The sodium hydrogen exchanger isoform 3 (NHE3) mediates absorption of sodium, bicarbonate and water from renal and intestinal lumina. This activity is fundamental to the maintenance of a physiological plasma pH and blood pressure. To perform this function NHE3 must be present in the apical membrane of renal tubular and intestinal epithelia. The molecular determinants of this localization have not been conclusively determined, although linkage to the apical actin cytoskeleton through ezrin has been proposed. We set out to evaluate this hypothesis. Functional studies of NHE3 activity were performed on ezrin knockdown mice (Vil2kd/kd) and NHE3 activity similar to wild-type animals detected. Interpretation of this finding was difficult as other ERM (ezrin/radixin/moesin) proteins were present. We therefore generated an epithelial cell culture model where ezrin was the only detectable ERM. After knockdown of ezrin expression with siRNA, radixin and moesin expression remained undetectable. Consistent with the animal ultrastructural data, cells lacking ezrin retained an epithelial phenotype but had shortened and thicker microvilli. NHE3 localization was identical to cells transfected with non-targeting siRNA. The attachment of NHE3 to the apical cytoskeleton was unaltered as assessed by fluorescent recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) and the solubility of NHE3 in Triton X-100. Baseline NHE3 activity was unaltered, however, cAMP-dependent inhibition of NHE3 was largely lost even though NHE3 was phosphorylated at serines 552 and 605. Thus, ezrin is not necessary for the apical localization, attachment to the cytoskeleton, baseline activity or cAMP induced phosphrylation of NHE3, but instead is required for cAMP mediated inhibition.

Highlights

  • The sodium/proton exchanger (NHE) family of proteins mediates the exchange of extracellular sodium for intracellular protons

  • Using a variety of biochemical and immunofluorescent microscopic methodologies we demonstrate that ezrin is not necessary for the apical localization, tethering to the apical actin cytoskeleton, nor for baseline activity of NHE3 in cell culture

  • This is unlikely to be due to an increased expression of, or functional redundancy between ezrin and the other ERM proteins since the cell culture model employed lacked detectable levels of radixin and moesin, even in the absence of ezrin

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Summary

Introduction

The sodium/proton exchanger (NHE) family of proteins mediates the exchange of extracellular sodium for intracellular protons. Unlike the ubiquitously expressed housekeeping isoform NHE1, NHE3 is localized exclusively to the apical region of renal and intestinal epithelia [3,4,5]. This apical localization is prerequisite to its function: the vectorial absorption of sodium, bicarbonate and osmotically driven water from intestinal and renal tubular lumina. These NHE3 driven processes are thought to be essential for the maintenance of both plasma pH and blood pressure. Genetic ablation of NHE3 in mice leads to acidosis and hypotension [6] consistent with a major role for this transporter in systemic electrolyte, fluid and acid-base homeostasis

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