Literature DB >> 19657284

Blocking the salt-inducible kinase 1 network prevents the increases in cell sodium transport caused by a hypertension-linked mutation in human alpha-adducin.

Karin Stenström1, Hiroshi Takemori, Giuseppe Bianchi, Adrian I Katz, Alejandro M Bertorello.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Because a newly described salt-inducible kinase 1 (SIK1) network is responsible for increases in active cell sodium transport in response to elevated intracellular sodium, we hypothesized that this network could mediate the effects of the mutant (hypertensive) form of alpha-adducin on Na,K-ATPase activity.
METHODS: Studies were performed in normotensive and hypertensive Milan rats and in a cell line of proximal tubule origin expressing transiently variants of alpha-adducin (human G460W/S586C; rat F316Y) that are associated with elevated blood pressure and result in increased Na,K-ATPase activity. Na,K-ATPase activity was determined as ouabain-sensitive rubidium transport.
RESULTS: SIK1 activity (T182 phosphorylation) was significantly elevated in renal proximal tubule cells from Milan hypertensive rats (carrying a alpha-adducin mutation) when compared with normotensive controls. Similarly, SIK1 activity (T182 phosphorylation) was elevated in a normal renal proximal tubule cell line when transfected with the alpha-adducin variant carrying the human hypertensive mutation. Blocking the SIK1 network using negative mutants as well as different stages of its activation pathway prevented the effects induced by the hypertensive alpha-adducin.
CONCLUSION: The SIK1 network may constitute an alternative target by which agents can modulate active sodium transport in renal epithelia and avoid the increases in systemic blood pressure that are associated with genetic mutations in the human alpha-adducin molecule.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19657284     DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0b013e328330cf15

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hypertens        ISSN: 0263-6352            Impact factor:   4.844


  13 in total

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