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Dietary potassium stimulates Ppp1Ca-Ppp1r1a dephosphorylation of kidney NaCl cotransporter and reduces blood pressure

Authors :
P. Richard Grimm
Anamaria Tatomir
Lena L. Rosenbaek
Bo Young Kim
Dimin Li
Eric J. Delpire
Robert A. Fenton
Paul A. Welling
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol 133, Iss 21 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2023.

Abstract

Consumption of low dietary potassium, common with ultraprocessed foods, activates the thiazide-sensitive sodium chloride cotransporter (NCC) via the with no (K) lysine kinase/STE20/SPS1-related proline-alanine–rich protein kinase (WNK/SPAK) pathway to induce salt retention and elevate blood pressure (BP). However, it remains unclear how high-potassium “DASH-like” diets (dietary approaches to stop hypertension) inactivate the cotransporter and whether this decreases BP. A transcriptomics screen identified Ppp1Ca, encoding PP1A, as a potassium-upregulated gene, and its negative regulator Ppp1r1a, as a potassium-suppressed gene in the kidney. PP1A directly binds to and dephosphorylates NCC when extracellular potassium is elevated. Using mice genetically engineered to constitutively activate the NCC-regulatory kinase SPAK and thereby eliminate the effects of the WNK/SPAK kinase cascade, we confirmed that PP1A dephosphorylated NCC directly in a potassium-regulated manner. Prior adaptation to a high-potassium diet was required to maximally dephosphorylate NCC and lower BP in constitutively active SPAK mice, and this was associated with potassium-dependent suppression of Ppp1r1a and dephosphorylation of its cognate protein, inhibitory subunit 1 (I1). In conclusion, potassium-dependent activation of PP1A and inhibition of I1 drove NCC dephosphorylation, providing a mechanism to explain how high dietary K+ lowers BP. Shifting signaling of PP1A in favor of activation of WNK/SPAK may provide an improved therapeutic approach for treating salt-sensitive hypertension.

Subjects

Subjects :
Nephrology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
133
Issue :
21
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8541e6222ebc4280b2bd08dad965885b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI158498