Abstract

Activity of the Epithelial Na+ Channel (ENaC) in the distal nephron fine-tunes renal sodium excretion. Appropriate sodium excretion is a key factor in the regulation of blood pressure. Consequently, abnormalities in ENaC function can cause hypertension. Casein Kinase II (CKII) phosphorylates ENaC. The CKII phosphorylation site in ENaC resides within a canonical “anchor” ankyrin binding motif. CKII-dependent phosphorylation of ENaC is necessary and sufficient to increase channel activity and is thought to influence channel trafficking in a manner that increases activity. We test here the hypothesis that phosphorylation of ENaC by CKII within an anchor motif is necessary for ankyrin-3 (Ank-3) regulation of the channel, which is required for normal channel locale and function, and the proper regulation of renal sodium excretion. This was addressed using a fluorescence imaging strategy combining total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy with fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) to quantify ENaC expression in the plasma membrane in living cells; and electrophysiology to quantify ENaC activity in split-open collecting ducts from principal cell-specific Ank-3 knockout mice. Sodium excretion studies also were performed in parallel in this knockout mouse. In addition, we substituted a key serine residue in the consensus CKII site in β-ENaC with alanine to abrogate phosphorylation and disrupt the anchor motif. Findings show that disrupting CKII signaling decreases ENaC activity by decreasing expression in the plasma membrane. In the principal cell-specific Ank-3 KO mouse, ENaC activity and sodium excretion were significantly decreased and increased, respectively. These results are consistent with CKII phosphorylation of ENaC functioning as a “switch” that favors Ank-3 binding to increase channel activity.

Highlights

  • Overexpression of CKII with ENaC in CHO cells, as shown in Fig. 2, is sufficient to increase ENaC activity

  • Combined these observations are consistent with the conserved CKII phosphorylation site embedded within the anchor motif of β-ENaC modulating ENaC trafficking to the plasma membrane and playing a central role in control of channel activity

  • Similar anchor motifs that contain conserved serine targets of CKII are found in the unrelated N­ aV and KCNQ ­channels[20]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Overexpression of CKII with ENaC in CHO cells, as shown in Fig. 2, is sufficient to increase ENaC activity. Overexpression of CKII with ENaC in CHO cells, as shown, is sufficient to increase ENaC activity. Overexpression of CKII does this by increasing the expression of ENaC in the plasma membrane. This is in agreement with earlier findings showing that activation of native CKII in Xenopus oocytes with polylysine increases ENaC ­activity[19]. Overexpression and knockdown of Ank-3 in the immortalized mCCD principal cell line increases and decreases, respectively, the ­Na+ current conducted by native ­ENaC23. Similar to changes in CKII activity, changes in Ank-3 levels are sufficient to change the activity of ENaC, and the expression of this cytoskeleton linker protein is necessary for ENaC activit

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call