| Literature DB >> 19776390 |
Judith Blaine1, Kayo Okamura, Hector Giral, Sophia Breusegem, Yupanqui Caldas, Andrew Millard, Nicholas Barry, Moshe Levi.
Abstract
Parathyroid hormone (PTH) plays a critical role in the regulation of renal phosphorous homeostasis by altering the levels of the sodium-phosphate cotransporter NaPi2a in the brush border membrane (BBM) of renal proximal tubular cells. While details of the molecular events of PTH-induced internalization of NaPi2a are emerging, the precise events governing NaPi2a removal from brush border microvilli in response to PTH remain to be fully determined. Here we use a novel application of total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to examine how PTH induces movement of NaPi2a out of brush border microvilli in living cells in real time. We show that a dynamic actin cytoskeleton is required for NaPi2a removal from the BBM in response to PTH. In addition, we demonstrate that a myosin motor that has previously been shown to be coregulated with NaPi2a, myosin VI, is necessary for PTH-induced removal of NaPi2a from BBM microvilli.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19776390 PMCID: PMC2793059 DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00260.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Cell Physiol ISSN: 0363-6143 Impact factor: 4.249