Back to Search Start Over

Insulin Receptor-Related Receptor as an Extracellular Alkali Sensor

Authors :
Sergey Zozulya
E. B. Burova
Eugenio Bertelli
Pascal Houillier
I. E. Deyev
Dmitry I. Rzhevsky
Arkady N. Murashev
O. V. Serova
Nadezhda V. Popova
Alexander G. Petrenko
Roman G. Efremov
Anastasiya A. Berchatova
Anton O. Chugunov
Dominique Eladari
N. N. Nikolsky
Konstantin P. Vassilenko
Fabien Sohet
Source :
Cell Metabolism. 13:679-689
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

SummaryThe insulin receptor-related receptor (IRR), an orphan receptor tyrosine kinase of the insulin receptor family, can be activated by alkaline media both in vitro and in vivo at pH >7.9. The alkali-sensing property of IRR is conserved in frog, mouse, and human. IRR activation is specific, dose-dependent and quickly reversible and demonstrates positive cooperativity. It also triggers receptor conformational changes and elicits intracellular signaling. The pH sensitivity of IRR is primarily defined by its L1F extracellular domains. IRR is predominantly expressed in organs that come in contact with mildly alkaline media. In particular, IRR is expressed in the cell subsets of the kidney that secrete bicarbonate into urine. Disruption of IRR in mice impairs the renal response to alkali loading attested by development of metabolic alkalosis and decreased urinary bicarbonate excretion in response to this challenge. We therefore postulate that IRR is an alkali sensor that functions in the kidney to manage metabolic bicarbonate excess.

Details

ISSN :
15504131
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f46ba2792eb677470343f43e53213cf