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Bicarbonate Recycling by HIF-1-Dependent Carbonic Anhydrase Isoforms 9 and 12 Is Critical in Maintaining Intracellular pH and Viability of Nucleus Pulposus Cells

Authors :
Elizabeth S, Silagi
Zachary R, Schoepflin
Erin L, Seifert
Christophe, Merceron
Ernestina, Schipani
Irving M, Shapiro
Makarand V, Risbud
Source :
Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. 33(2)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Intervertebral disc degeneration is a ubiquitous condition closely linked to chronic low-back pain. The health of the avascular nucleus pulposus (NP) plays a crucial role in the development of this pathology. We tested the hypothesis that a network comprising HIF-1α, Carbonic anhydrase (CA) 9 and 12 isoforms, and sodium-coupled bicarbonate cotransporters (NBCs) buffer intracellular pH through coordinated bicarbonate recycling. Contrary to the current understanding of NP cell metabolism, analysis of metabolic-flux data from Seahorse XF analyzer showed that CO2 hydration contributes a significant source of extracellular proton production in NP cells, with a smaller input from glycolysis. Since enzymatic hydration of CO2 is catalyzed by plasma membrane-associated CAs we measured their expression and function in NP tissue. NP cells robustly expressed isoforms CA9/12 which were hypoxia-inducible. In addition to increased mRNA stability under hypoxia, we observed binding of HIF-1α to select hypoxia-responsive elements on CA9/12 promoters using genomic chromatin immunoprecipitation. Importantly, in vitro loss of function studies and analysis of discs from NP-specific HIF-1α null mice confirmed the dependency of CA9/12 expression on HIF-1α. As expected, inhibition of CA activity decreased extracellular acidification rate independent of changes in HIF activity or lactate/H+ efflux. Surprisingly, CA inhibition resulted in a concomitant decrease in intracellular pH which was mirrored by inhibition of sodium-bicarbonate importers. These results suggested that extracellular bicarbonate generated by CA9/12 is recycled to buffer cytosolic pH fluctuations. Importantly, long-term intracellular acidification from CA inhibition lead to compromised cell viability, suggesting that plasma-membrane proton extrusion pathways alone are not sufficient to maintain homeostatic pH in NP cells. Taken together, our studies show for the first time that bicarbonate buffering through the HIF-1α- Carbonic anhydrase axis is critical for NP cell survival in the hypoxic niche of the intervertebral disc.

Details

ISSN :
15234681
Volume :
33
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........f9e684754f2e08d2a329853bbe3e2cc1