Literature DB >> 15265765

Dopamine recruits D1A receptors to Na-K-ATPase-rich caveolar plasma membranes in rat renal proximal tubules.

Meghna Trivedi1, Vihang A Narkar, Tahir Hussain, Mustafa F Lokhandwala.   

Abstract

Activation of dopamine D(1A) receptors in renal proximal tubules causes inhibition of sodium transporters (Na-K-ATPase and Na/H exchanger), leading to a decrease in sodium reabsorption. In addition to being localized on the plasma membrane, D(1A) receptors are mainly present in intracellular compartments under basal conditions. We observed, using [(3)H]SCH-23390 binding and immunoblotting, that dopamine recruits D(1A) receptors to the plasma membrane in rat renal proximal tubules. Furthermore, radioligand binding and/or immunoblotting experiments using pharmacological modulators showed that dopamine-induced D(1A) receptor recruitment requires activation of cell surface D(1)-like receptors, activation of adenylyl cyclase, and intact endocytic vesicles with internal acidic pH. A key finding of this study was that these recruited D(1A) receptors were functional because they potentiated dopamine-induced [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding, cAMP accumulation, and Na-K-ATPase inhibition. Interestingly, dopamine increased immunoreactivity of D(1A) receptors specifically in caveolin-rich plasma membranes isolated by a sucrose density gradient. In support of this observation, coimmunoprecipitation studies showed that D(1A) receptors interacted with caveolin-2 in an agonist-dependent fashion. The caveolin-rich plasma membranes had a high content of the alpha(1)-subunit of Na-K-ATPase, which is a downstream target of D(1A) receptor signaling in proximal tubules. These results show that dopamine, via the D(1)-like receptor-adenylyl cyclase pathway, recruits D(1A) receptors to the plasma membrane. These newly recruited receptors couple to G proteins, increase cAMP, and participate in dopamine-mediated inhibition of Na-K-ATPase in proximal tubules. Moreover, dopamine-induced recruitment of D(1A) receptors to the caveolin-rich plasma membranes brings them in close proximity to targets such as Na-K-ATPase in proximal tubules of Sprague-Dawley rats.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15265765     DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00023.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol        ISSN: 1522-1466


  12 in total

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9.  Caveolin-1 and dopamine-mediated internalization of NaKATPase in human renal proximal tubule cells.

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10.  Novel role of sorting nexin 5 in renal D(1) dopamine receptor trafficking and function: implications for hypertension.

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