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Quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis reveals cAMP/vasopressin-dependent signaling pathways in native renal thick ascending limb cells

Authors :
Gunaratne, Ruwan
Braucht, Drew W.W.
Rinschen, Markus M.
Chou, Chung-Lin
Hoffert, Jason D.
Pisitkun, Trairak
Knepper, Mark A.
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. August 31, 2010, Vol. 107 Issue 35, p15653, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Quantitative mass spectrometry was used to identify hormone-dependent signaling pathways in renal medullary thick ascending limb (mTAL) cells via phosphoproteomic analysis. Active transport of NaCI across the mTAL epithelium is accelerated by hormones that increase cAMP levels (vasopressin, glucagon, parathyroid hormone, and calcitonin), mTAL suspensions from rat kidneys were exposed (15 min) to a mixture of these four hormones. Tryptic phosphopeptides (immobilized metal affinity chromatography-enriched) were identified and quantified by mass spectrometry (LTQ-Orbitrap) using label-free methodology. We quantified a total of 654 phosphopeptides, of which 414 were quantified in three experimental pairs (hormone vs. vehicle). Of these phosphopeptides, 82% were statistically unchanged in abundance in response to the hormone mixture. In contrast, 48 phosphopeptides were significantly increased, whereas 28 were significantly decreased. The population of up-regulated phosphopeptides was highly enriched in basophilic kinase substrate motifs (AGC or calmodulin-sensitive kinase families), whereas the down-regulated sites were dominated by 'proline-directed' motifs (cyclin-dependent or MAP kinase families). Bioinformatic classification uncovered overrepresentation of transmembrane transporters, protein phosphatase regulators, and cytoskeletal binding proteins among the regulated proteins: Immunoblotting with phospho-specific antibodies confirmed cAMP/vasopressin-dependent phosphorylation at Thr96, Ser126, and Ser874 of the [Na.sup.+]:[K.sup.+]:2[CI.sup.-] cotransporter NKCC2, at Ser552 of the [Na.sup.+]:[H.sup.+] exchanger NHE3, and at Ser552 of [beta]-catenin. Vasopressin also increased phosphorylation of NKCC2 at both Ser126 (more than fivefold) and Ser874 (more than threefold) in rats in vivo. Both sites were phosphorylated by purified protein kinase A during in vitro assays. These results support the view that, although protein kinase A plays a central role in mTAL signaling, additional kinases, including those that target proline-directed motifs, may be involved. protein phosphatase | glucose transporters | mass spectrometry | ion transporters | protein kinase doi/ 10.1073/pnas.1007424107

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
107
Issue :
35
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.237303803