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| Title: | Lack of arginine vasopressin-induced phosphorylation of aquaporin-2 mutant AQP2-R254L explains dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. |
| Author(s): | Mattia, F.P. de (298977532) Savelkoul, P.J.M. (270138269) Kamsteeg, E.J. (21334162X) Konings, I.B.M. (298206005) Sluijs, P. van der Mallmann, R. Oksche, A. Deen, P.M.T. (089267591) |
| Publication year: | 2005 |
| Document type: | Article / Letter to editor |
| Journal: | Journal of the American Society of Nephrology |
| ISSN: | 1046-6673 |
| Volume: | vol. 16 |
| Issue: | iss. 10 |
| Start page: | p. 2872 |
| End page: | p. 2880 |
| Abstract: | Water homeostasis in humans is regulated by vasopressin, which induces the translocation of homotetrameric aquaporin-2 (AQP2) water channels from intracellular vesicles to the apical membrane of renal principal cells. For this process, phosphorylation of AQP2 at S256 by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A is thought to be essential. Mutations in the AQP2 gene cause recessive and dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), a disease in which the kidney is unable to concentrate urine in response to vasopressin. Here, a family in which dominant NDI was caused by an exchange of arginine 254 by leucine in the intracellular C terminus of AQP2 (AQP2-R254L), which destroys the protein kinase A consensus site, was identified. Expressed in oocytes, AQP2-R254L appeared to be a functional water channel but was impaired in its transport to the cell surface to the same degree as AQP2-S256A, which mimics nonphosphorylated AQP2. In polarized renal cells, AQP2-R254L was retained intracellularly and was distributed similarly as AQP2-S256A or wild-type AQP2 in unstimulated cells. Upon co-expression in MDCK cells, AQP2-R254L interacted with and retained wild-type AQP2 in intracellular vesicles. Furthermore, AQP2-R254L had a low basal phosphorylation level, which was not increased with forskolin, and mimicking constitutive phosphorylation in AQP2-R254L with the S256D mutation shifted its expression to the basolateral and apical membrane. These data indicate that dominant NDI in this family is due to a R254L mutation, resulting in the loss of arginine vasopressin-mediated phosphorylation of AQP2 at S256, and illustrates the in vivo importance of phosphorylation of AQP2 at S256 for the first time. |
| Subject: | UMCN 5.1: Genetic defects of metabolism UMCN 5.4: Renal disorders |
| Organization: | Cell Physiology Physiology UMCN Extern |
| Appears in Collections: | Academic bibliography
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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2066/48640
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