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WNK kinases sense molecular crowding and rescue cell volume via phase separation

Authors :
Cary R. Boyd-Shiwarski
Daniel J. Shiwarski
Shawn E. Griffiths
Rebecca T. Beacham
Logan Norrell
Daryl E. Morrison
Jun Wang
Jacob Mann
William Tennant
Eric N. Anderson
Jonathan Franks
Michael Calderon
Kelly A. Connolly
Claire J. Weaver
Claire C. Weckerly
Udai Bhan Pandey
Christopher J. Donnelly
Dandan Sun
Aylin R. Rodan
Arohan R. Subramanya
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

When challenged by hypertonicity, dehydrated cells must defend their volume to survive. This process requires the phosphorylation-dependent regulation of SLC12 cation chloride transporters by WNK kinases, but how these kinases are activated by cell shrinkage remains unknown. Within seconds of cell exposure to hypertonicity, WNK1 concentrates into membraneless droplets, initiating a phosphorylation-dependent signal that drives net ion influx via the SLC12 cotransporters to rescue volume. The formation of WNK1 condensates is driven by its intrinsically disordered C-terminus, whose evolutionarily conserved signatures are necessary for efficient phase separation and volume recovery. This disorder-encoded phase behavior occurs within physiological constraints and is activated in vivo by molecular crowding rather than changes in cell size. This allows WNK1 to bypass a strengthened ionic milieu that favors kinase inactivity and reclaim cell volume through condensate-mediated signal amplification. Thus, WNK kinases are physiological crowding sensors that phase separate to coordinate a cell volume rescue response.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7f4d294301292b66699564856e988b7d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.01.10.475707