Abstract

Ouabain is a cardiotonic steroid with a history of medical uses. It acts as a ligand to the ubiquitous ion pump Na+,K+‐ATPase which it inhibits at high concentrations. At lower concentrations it triggers calcium oscillations and activation of MAP kinases, stimulates cell proliferation as well as adhesion and acts anti‐apoptotic. In light of this, it has been proposed that the pump may have a dual function as a signaling transducer. To investigate this, we have analyzed the phosphoproteome of COS‐7 kidney cells after treatment with sub‐saturating levels (100 nM) of ouabain, which were high enough to induce Ca2+ oscillations but below those needed to modulate the ion pumping function of Na+,K+‐ATPase. Gene ontology analysis was performed to find distinct cellular processes regulated by ouabain after 10 and 20 min of treatment in the phopshoproteomic analysis. The analysis revealed 2580 ouabain‐regulated phosphorylation sites, many of which were associated with cell adhesion and proliferation. Two of the regulated phospho‐proteins were the inositol triphosphoate receptor (InsP3) and stromal interaction molecule (STIM), both of which are essential for ouabain‐induced calcium oscillations. We used siRNA and Western blotting for target confirmation. One confirmed target, calcium/calmodulin‐dependent protein kinase II gamma (CAMK2γ), were shown to be involved in the anti‐apoptotic effect of ouabain; siRNA silencing of CaMK2γ in primary renal cells eliminates the protective effect of ouabain against apoptosis induced by either serum starvation or glucose. In conclusion, our findings support a role for Na+,K+‐ATPase as a signal transducer that serves to protect cell and tissue integrity.Support or Funding InformationThis study was supported by the Swedish Research Council and Erling‐Persson Family Foundation. D.S. is supported by a Novo Nordisk postdoctoral fellowship run in partnership with Karolinska Institutet.This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.

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