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Aurora kinase A activates the vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) in kidney carcinoma cells

Authors :
Al-bataineh, Mohammad M.
Alzamora, Rodrigo
Ohmi, Kazuhiro
Ho, Pei-Yin
Marciszyn, Allison L.
Gong, Fan
Li, Hui
Hallows, Kenneth R.
Pastor-Soler, Núria M.
Source :
American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology; June 2016, Vol. 310 Issue: 11 pF1216-F1228, 13p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Extracellular proton-secreting transport systems that contribute to extracellular pH include the vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase). This pump, which mediates ATP-driven transport of H+across membranes, is involved in metastasis. We previously showed (Alzamora R, Thali RF, Gong F, Smolak C, Li H, Baty CJ, Bertrand CA, Auchli Y, Brunisholz RA, Neumann D, Hallows KR, Pastor-Soler NM. J Biol Chem285: 24676–24685, 2010) that V-ATPase A subunit phosphorylation at Ser-175 is important for PKA-induced V-ATPase activity at the membrane of kidney intercalated cells. However, Ser-175 is also located within a larger phosphorylation consensus sequence for Aurora kinases, which are known to phosphorylate proteins that contribute to the pathogenesis of metastatic carcinomas. We thus hypothesized that Aurora kinase A (AURKA), overexpressed in aggressive carcinomas, regulates the V-ATPase in human kidney carcinoma cells (Caki-2) via Ser-175 phosphorylation. We found that AURKA is abnormally expressed in Caki-2 cells, where it binds the V-ATPase A subunit in an AURKA phosphorylation-dependent manner. Treatment with the AURKA activator anacardic acid increased V-ATPase expression and activity at the plasma membrane of Caki-2 cells. In addition, AURKA phosphorylates the V-ATPase A subunit at Ser-175 in vitro and in Caki-2 cells. Immunolabeling revealed that anacardic acid induced marked membrane accumulation of the V-ATPase A subunit in transfected Caki-2 cells. However, anacardic acid failed to induce membrane accumulation of a phosphorylation-deficient Ser-175-to-Ala (S175A) A subunit mutant. Finally, S175A-expressing cells had decreased migration in a wound-healing assay compared with cells expressing wild-type or a phospho-mimetic Ser-175-to-Asp (S175D) mutant A subunit. We conclude that AURKA activates the V-ATPase in kidney carcinoma cells via phosphorylation of Ser-175 in the V-ATPase A subunit. This regulation contributes to kidney carcinoma V-ATPase-mediated extracellular acidification and cell migration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1931857x and 15221466
Volume :
310
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs39464110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00061.2016