Abstract

We have previously shown that inhibiting protein-tyrosine kinase increased whereas inhibiting protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) decreased renal outer medullary potassium channel 1 (ROMK1) channel activity (1). We have now used confocal microscopy, the patch clamp technique, and biotin labeling to further examine the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in regulating ROMK1 trafficking. Human embryonic kidney 293 cells were cotransfected with c-Src and green fluorescent protein-ROMK1, which has the same biophysical properties as those of ROMK1. Patch clamp studies have shown that phenylarsine oxide (PAO), an inhibitor of PTP, decreased the activity of ROMK1. Moreover, addition of PAO reduced the cell surface localization of green fluorescent protein-ROMK1 detected by confocal microscopy and diminished the surface ROMK1 density by 65% measured by biotin labeling. Also, PAO treatment significantly increased the phosphorylation of ROMK1. The notion that the effect of PAO is mediated by stimulating tyrosine phosphorylation-induced endocytosis of ROMK1 has also been supported by findings that mutating the tyrosine residue 337 of ROMK1 to alanine abolished the effect of PAO. Finally, the inhibitory effect of PAO on ROMK1 was completely blocked in the cells co-transfected with dominant negative dynamin (dynaminK44A). This indicates that the tyrosine phosphorylation-induced endocytosis of ROMK1 is dynamin-dependent. We conclude that inhibiting PTP increases ROMK1 phosphorylation and results in a dynamin-dependent internalization of the channel.

Highlights

  • Crease in Kϩ secretion is at least partially achieved by reducing the number of small conductance Kϩ (SK) channels in the apical membrane of the collecting duct (CCD) [8]

  • We have demonstrated previously that the inhibitory effect of phenylarsine oxide (PAO) was absent in the CCDs treated with hypertonic solution, indicating that the effect of PAO on channel activity was mediated by stimulation of endocytosis [9]

  • This strongly indicates that inhibiting proteintyrosine phosphatase (PTP) stimulates the endocytosis of ROMK1 in cells transfected with c-Src and GFP-ROMK1

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Summary

Introduction

Crease in Kϩ secretion is at least partially achieved by reducing the number of SK channels in the apical membrane of the CCD [8]. This conclusion is supported by the observation that inhibition of PTK increased the number of the SK channels in the apical membrane of the CCD from rats on a Kϩ-deficient diet [8].

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