Catherine B Xie1, Lalarukh Haris Shaikh1, Sumedha Garg1, Gizem Tanriver1, Ada E D Teo1, Junhua Zhou1, Carmela Maniero1, Wanfeng Zhao2, Soosung Kang3, Richard B Silverman3, Elena A B Azizan1,4, Morris J Brown1,5. 1. Clinical Pharmacology Unit, University of Cambridge, Box 110, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, CB2 2QQ, UK. 2. Human Research Tissue Bank, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, CB2 0QQ, UK. 3. Department of Chemistry, Chemistry of Life Processes Institute, and Center for Molecular Innovation and Drug Discovery, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3113, USA. 4. Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, The National University of Malaysia (UKM) Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur 56000, Malaysia. 5. Barts Heart Centre, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University London, London EC1M 6BQ, UK.
Abstract
Aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs) vary in phenotype and genotype. Zona glomerulosa (ZG)-like APAs frequently have mutations of an L-type calcium channel (LTCC) CaV1.3. Using a novel antagonist of CaV1.3, compound 8, we investigated the role of CaV1.3 on steroidogenesis in the human adrenocortical cell line, H295R, and in primary human adrenal cells. This investigational drug was compared with the common antihypertensive drug nifedipine, which has 4.5-fold selectivity for the vascular LTCC, CaV1.2, over CaV1.3. In H295R cells transfected with wild-type or mutant CaV1.3 channels, the latter produced more aldosterone than wild-type, which was ameliorated by 100 μM of compound 8. In primary adrenal and non-transfected H295R cells, compound 8 decreased aldosterone production similar to high concentration of nifedipine (100 μM). Selective CaV1.3 blockade may offer a novel way of treating primary hyperaldosteronism, which avoids the vascular side effects of CaV1.2-blockade, and provides targeted treatment for ZG-like APAs with mutations of CaV1.3.
Aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs) vary in phenotype and genotype. Zona glomerulosa (ZG)-like APAs frequently have mutations of an L-type calcium channel (LTCC) CaV1.3. Using a novel antagonist of CaV1.3, compound 8, we investigated the role of CaV1.3 on steroidogenesis in the humanadrenocortical cell line, H295R, and in primary human adrenal cells. This investigational drug was compared with the common antihypertensive drug nifedipine, which has 4.5-fold selectivity for the vascular LTCC, CaV1.2, over CaV1.3. In H295R cells transfected with wild-type or mutant CaV1.3 channels, the latter produced more aldosterone than wild-type, which was ameliorated by 100 μM of compound 8. In primary adrenal and non-transfected H295R cells, compound 8 decreased aldosterone production similar to high concentration of nifedipine (100 μM). Selective CaV1.3 blockade may offer a novel way of treating primary hyperaldosteronism, which avoids the vascular side effects of CaV1.2-blockade, and provides targeted treatment for ZG-like APAs with mutations of CaV1.3.
Aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs), which arise from the adrenal cortex, are one of
the most common curable causes of hypertension123. They account for
approximately half of primary aldosteronism, which is estimated to be present in
5–13% of all hypertensivepatients, and in at least 20% of patients with
resistant hypertension4. However, it is likely that fewer than 10% of
APAs are ever diagnosed; and fewer still are removed in time to cure hypertension and
prevent resistance to effective drug treatment25.We previously reported somatic gain-of-function mutations in two genes that regulate
Na+, K+ and Ca2+ transport in APAs with
a zona glomerulosa (ZG)-like phenotype6. Whole exome sequencing of
small-cell APAs with a ZG-like gene expression profile found five out of ten to harbour
one of four different somatic mutations in the voltage dependent L-type
Ca2+ channel, CaV1.3 (encoded by the gene CACNA1D).
These four substitution mutations, V259D, G403R, I750M, and P1336R, cluster around the
Ca2+ pore between the S5 and S6 domains that line the inner pore
surface. The mutations occur in conserved sites within functional domains such as the
voltage-sensing domain to the pore (V259D and P1336R) and the channel activation gate
(G403R and I750M)6. The G403R and I750M mutations were simultaneously
reported as rare de novo germline mutations presenting at birth, together with several
patients having somatic mutations of the same residues in sporadic APAs7.
Our own replication sequencing revealed three further mutations, and sequencing of APAs
in a large European consortium has now identified a total of 19 somatic mutations in or
near one of the four Ca2+ channel pore-forming domains 68. Patch clamping of HEK293 cells has shown that at least 6 of the 19 mutations affect
the CaV1.3 channel function and allow for increased Ca2+
influx through either shifting voltage-dependent activation towards more negative
voltages, decelerating inactivation, and/or increasing currents through a higher open
channel probability69.The current medical treatment of primary hyperaldosteronism is blockade of the
mineralocorticoid receptor, which can lead to an increase in aldosterone secretion10. Therefore, blockade of calcium entry through selective antagonism of
CaV1.3 might present a valuable therapeutic target. We therefore aimed to
investigate whether CaV1.3 mutations cause the postulated increase in
aldosterone secretion from humanadrenocortical cells, and whether blockade of calcium
entry reverses this. We studied the potential value of this target using
1-(3-chlorophenethyl)-3-cyclopentylpyrimidine-2,4,6-(1H,3H,5H)-trione (compound
8), which was found to be more than 600 times more selective for
CaV1.3 than CaV1.211. Nifedipine, a common
antihypertensive drug, was used in comparison as a non-selective, or slightly
CaV1.2 selective antagonist of L-type calcium channels
(IC50 = 0.016 μM)121314. We also undertook immunohistochemistry of normal human adrenals, and APAs, in order
to determine whether CaV1.3 is a ZG-selective L-type Ca2+
channel and whether blockade may have greater expected effect on aldosterone secretion
from APAs than from normal adrenal.To study the role of CaV1.3 on aldosterone secretion, we first investigated
the substitution mutations near the voltage-sensing domain, P1336R and V259D, on 24-h
aldosterone production in transiently transfected H295R cells to find if the different
changes seen in our electrophysiology data translated to changes in aldosterone
secretion6. We then contrasted the aldosterone secretion of cells
transfected with mutant CaV1.3 channels to those transfected with wild-type
CaV1.3 channel in the presence of compound 8 or nifedipine to
study if blockade of calcium entry affects APAs with a CaV1.3 mutation
differently. Transfection of H295R cells with exogenous CaV1.3 was performed
with β3 and α2δ accessory subunits, the
subunits we used previously to show gain-of function effects of the mutations on
Ca2+ currents6. As transfected channels and subunits
do not necessarily emulate in vivo expression, we also tested the effect of
compound 8 and nifedipine on endogenous CaV1.3 present in H295R cells
and primary adrenal cells acquired from adrenals containing an APA (both tumour and
adjacent normal adrenal tissues).
Results
CaV1.3 mutations and compound 8 alter aldosterone
production
Transfection of H295R cells with CaV1.3 mutants P1336R and V259D
caused a 2.4 ± 0.2 (P = 0.0004)
and 2.1 ± 0.2 (P = 0.002) fold
increase, respectively, in basal aldosterone production compared to wild-type
transfected H295R cells (Fig. 1a) and similarly in
angiotensin II stimulated aldosterone production (Supplementary Fig. 1).
Figure 1
CaV1.3 mutations and compound 8 alter aldosterone
production.
Comparison of stimulated aldosterone production in (a) wild-type (WT),
P1336R, and V259D CaV1.3 transfected H295R cells
(n = 5) and in (b) different concentration of
compound 8 on WT H295R cells (n = 3). Student t-test was
used to calculate significance. **P < 0.01 and
***P < 0.001, compared to baseline (Wild-type or 0 M
compound 8). The n value represents number of separate
experiment/transfection performed. Each experiment/transfection had 6
biological replicates. Aldosterone results shown here were measured by RIA
method and are relative to basal level (Wild-type or 0 M compound 8).
Exposure of H295R cells transfected with wild-type CaV1.3 to low
concentration (1 μM) of compound 8 almost doubled
aldosterone secretion (P = 0.007), whereas high concentration
(100 μM) of compound 8 decreased aldosterone production
to 35 ± 0.1% of basal level
(P = 0.003, Fig. 1b).
Effect of calcium blockade on CaV1.3 genotypes
In cells transiently transfected with wild-type, P1336R, or V259DCaV1.3, there was a similar biphasic effect of compound 8 on
aldosterone secretion from the mutant P1336R cells, as that seen in wild-type
CaV1.3. In mutant V259D cells, compound 8 was inhibitory only at
100 μM (Fig. 2a). Using the same protocol
as for compound 8, the inhibitory effect of nifedipine on aldosterone
secretion from CaV1.3 transfected H295R cells was determined. In
wild-type CaV1.3 transfected cells, after treatment with
1 μM, 10 μM or 100 μM
nifedipine, a 35 ± 12% decrease of aldosterone secretion
was observed only at the highest concentration of nifedipine interrogated
(100 μM)(P = 0.0001, Fig. 2b) a considerable excess of its Ki for
CaV1.2
(IC50 = 0.016 μM)1213. In P1336R and V259D transfected cells, despite the
increased aldosterone secretion compared to that of wild-type cells (as seen at
0 μM), the presence of high concentration of nifedipine
(100 μM) decreased aldosterone production similarly across all
genotypes (Fig. 2b).
Figure 2
Effect of compound 8 on aldosterone production of different CaV1.3
genotype (a) Stimulated aldosterone secretion (n = 3)
in the presence of compound 8 and (b) stimulated aldosterone
secretion in the presence of nifedipine (n = 3) on WT,
P1336R and V259D CaV1.3 transfected H295R cells. There was a
similar biphasic effect of compound 8 on aldosterone secretion from the
mutant P1336R cells (P = 0.02; Student’s
t-test), as that seen in wild-type CaV1.3, but not so
in mutant V259D cells or when transfected cells were treated with
nifedipine. (c) Comparison of basal aldosterone production of
non-transfected H295R cells in the presence of
0–100 μM of compound 8 or nifedipine
(n = 3). Two-way ANOVA was used to calculate overall
significance. Table of P-values shows significance of mutation status
(Mutation), concentration of treatment (Concentration), and type of
treatment (Drug), on aldosterone production. The n value represents
number of separate experiment/transfection performed. Each
experiment/transfection had 6 biological replicates. Aldosterone was
measured by RIA (a,b) or RIA and HTR-FRET (c) method.
Results of both methods are relative to basal level (Wild-type or 0
µM of treatment).
In non-transfected H295R cells (with only endogenous CaV1.3 and
endogenous CaV1.3 accessory subunits present), compound 8 and
nifedipine, 1–100 μM, decreased basal aldosterone
secretion (Fig. 2c).
Compound 8 decreases aldosterone production in primary human adrenal
cells
In primary human adrenal cells cultured from the normal adjacent adrenals of
patients with an APA, 10 and 100 μM of compound 8
inhibited aldosterone production by 35 ± 10 and
43 ± 11%, respectively
(P < 0.05; Fig. 3a). Cortisol
secretion was also decreased to 72 ± 1 and
50 ± 4% of basal level, respectively
(P < 0.05; Supplementary Fig. 2). As for nifedipine, effect on aldosterone
production was varied - not all cell cultures from the different patients showed
a reduction, even at the high concentration of 100 μM (Fig. 3b).
Figure 3
Compound 8 decreases aldosterone production in primary human adrenal
cells.
Aldosterone secretion of (a,b) normal primary adrenal cells or
(c,d) aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs) in the presence of
compound 8 (a,c) or nifedipine (b,d). Dose response curve
between 0-100 μM of compound 8 on (a) normal
primary adrenal cells (n = 4) and (c) APA cells
(n = 3), and nifedipine on (b) normal primary adrenal
cells (n = 3) and (d) APA cells
(n = 3). Two-way ANOVA was used to calculate overall
significance. Table of P-values shows significance of patient
differences (Patient variability) and concentration of treatment
(Concentration) on aldosterone production. The n value represents
number of individual patient samples used for each experiment. Each
concentration was replicated 2–12 times within each individual
patient samples (which depended on quantity of primary cells available).
Aldosterone results shown here are relative to 0 M of treatment. Numbers
181, 182, 184, 187, 196, and 221 represent individual patient ID. Clinical
data for these patients is provided in Supplementary Table 1. Primary cell cultures from patients 181,
182, and 184 were performed in the absence of angiotensin II (seen as solid
bars) whereas primary cell cultures 187, 196, and 221 were stimulated with
10 nM angiotensin II (seen as hatched bars). Aldosterone was
measured by RIA and ELISA method.
In APA cells, with increasing concentrations of 1, 10 and 100 μM,
both compound 8 and nifedipine showed a dose dependent decrease in
aldosterone production, to a minimum average of 54 ± 2
and 43 ± 13% of basal level, respectively
(P < 0.005; Fig. 3c,d).
Localization of CaV1.3 in adrenals containing an APA
In sections of adjacent normal adrenal, that were adjacent to an APA or
pheochromocytoma, CaV1.3 was detected in the ZG and the zona
reticularis (ZR) (Fig. 4a). Only in ZG were juxtanuclear
accumulation seen (as shown in the zoomed image), as ZR staining was mainly
cytoplasmic (Fig. 4a). Exogenous CaV1.3 in
H295R transfected cells had mainly membranous expression (Supplementary Fig. 3).
Figure 4
Localization of CaV1.3 in human adrenals.
(a) Immunohistochemistry (IHC) of CaV1.3 on formalin-fixed
paraffin-embedded (FFPE) adrenal sections localized the channel to the zona
glomerulosa (ZG) and zona reticularis (ZR) of the adrenals. In the ZG,
cytoplasmic and juxtanuclear accumulation of CaV1.3 was observed
whereas in the ZR, staining was mainly cytoplasmic. Picture is
representative of 12 normal adjacent adrenal glands, 3 from patients with a
phaeochromocytoma and 9 from patients with an aldosterone-producing adenoma
(APA). C, capsule; G, zona glomerulosa; F, zona fasciculata; R, zona
reticularis; M, adrenal medulla. (b) CaV1.3 expression in
APA cells. IHC of CaV1.3 on FFPE adrenal sections were performed
on three different types of APAs: (i–iii) ZG-like (low nucleus to
cytoplasm ratio) APAs without a CaV1.3 mutation, (iv–vi)
APAs with a CaV1.3 mutation, and (vii–ix) APAs with a
KCNJ5 mutation. Immunostaining reveals a mixture of cytoplasm and
membranous sublocalization in APA cells.
In APAs, different patterns of CaV1.3 expression were observed.
CaV1.3 was expressed at the cell membrane, cytoplasmic, at the
edge of cell clusters, or sparsely, or not at all (Fig. 4b
and Supplementary Fig. 4).
Discussion
We previously reported that somatic mutation of CaV1.3 is present in a
subset of APAs, distinguished by several features resembling normal ZG6. In a large multi-centre study of 474 APAs, the frequency of CaV1.3
mutation was estimated to be 9.3%8. Although no particular
histological phenotype was found in the multi-centre study8, one
centre within the study did subsequently report that of their 71 APAs,
CaV1.3 mutant APAs (3 of 71) were composed mainly of ZG-like
cells15. Thus the current approximation could be a substantial
underestimation since (a) half of our selected ZG-like APAs that were exome
sequenced had a CaV1.3 mutation6; and (b) our experience
is that such tumours are frequently too small to be detected by conventional adrenal
imaging. We therefore wished to show whether the mutations are likely to increase
aldosterone production, rather than trigger development of the adenoma, and whether
this increase could be reversed by blockade of calcium entry. As few APAs are
diagnosed in time to offer high likelihood of surgical cure from hypertension, and
the increased recognition of aldosterone morbidity, a need arises for novel
therapies that suppress aldosterone production, and lack the adverse effects of
aldosterone receptor blockade and other less specific therapies for
hypertension.Herein we report that the two CaV1.3 mutations studied, selected for
having different electrophysiological effects6, do increase
aldosterone secretion of transfected humanadrenocortical cells (Fig.
1). Furthermore, calcium blockade using compound 8, an
investigational CaV1.3 inhibitor, and nifedipine, a non-selective L-type
calcium channel inhibitor, reversed the increase (Fig. 2). The
inhibition of aldosterone secretion was seen in the presence of the highest
concentration of compound 8 interrogated in this study
(100 μM) in H295R cells transfected with CaV1.3 mutants
(Fig. 2); whereas in non-transfected H295R cells and
primary adrenal cells, inhibition of aldosterone secretion could be seen at lower
concentrations (1 and 10 μM) (Figs 2c and
3d). We also postulate that regardless of whether a given
APA has a somatic mutation of CaV1.3, the channel is often more active
than in normal ZG cells, where immunohistochemistry suggests CaV1.3 is
mainly internalised (Fig. 4).Compound 8 was interrogated in this study as it was found to be the most
selective CaV1.3 antagonist among 60,480 commercial compounds and a few
hundred non-commercial compounds (Silverman lab) tested for efficacy in blocking
CaV1.3 or CaV1.2 in stably transfected HEK293 cells.
Compound 8 was reported to inhibit
CaV1.3 > 600-fold more potently than
CaV1.211. Subsequent studies have questioned this
degree of selectivity, and even whether compound 8 is an agonist or
antagonist1617. Nevertheless, it is well known that the effects
of L-type Ca2+ channel blockade can differ among tissues depending on
factors such as resting membrane potential18. Consequently, the
hyperpolarisation of adrenocortical cells may have enhanced our ability to detect an
antagonist effect of compound 8. Further, we may have fortuitously selected
the CACNB isoform which maximises compound 8 selectivity, namely
CACNB3 (encoding for the β3 subunit). In subsequent
analysis, however, we found CACNB2 to be the predominant isoform in human
adrenal, indeed being one of the genes most up-regulated in ZG compared to zona
fasciculata (ZF)19. Thus, for the pharmacological responses of the
different mutations to be legitimately compared, a better CaV1.3
antagonist than Compound 8 is needed. Future antagonists should be developed
not only based on its selectivity for CaV1.3 but also on its
functionality with the prevalent accessory subunits in the human adrenal.In our cells transfected with exogenous CaV1.3, the stimulatory effect of
apparent low dose calcium blockade on aldosterone secretion was observed only for
Compound 8, but not nifedipine. This increase in aldosterone secretion could
have been due to low dose compound 8 behaving as a channel activator16; but toxicity (and hence leakage of aldosterone) due to high calcium
influx in transfected H295R cells cannot be dismissed, since no stimulation of
aldosterone secretion was seen in untransfected cells (Fig.
2c). The limitation of our expression CaV1.3 model, however, was
that the cell line we used, H295R cells, express a mixture of endogenous
CaV1.2 and CaV1.3 whereas primary human ZG cells express
mainly CaV1.31920. Moreover, the immortalised H295R
cells were not a perfect model for primary aldosteronism as other adrenal
corticosteroids are secreted21. This cell line was used mainly due to
the ease of transfecting exogenous mutant CaV1.3. Hence, to supplement
our transfection experiments, not only was compound 8 also studied in un-transfected
H295R cells, but also in primary adrenal cells (of which we have a limited supply),
to support endogenous CaV1.3 role in aldosterone regulation. To note, as
we did not find a linear relationship between increase in aldosterone production and
amount of transfected constructs, no correction for transfection efficiency whether
by Western blots or qPCR was performed. Transfection rates of exogenous
CaV1.3 were confirmed as similar visually, using its GFP-tag.Previous studies have shown a number of dihydropyridines to reduce aldosterone
secretion from adrenocortical cells22. We chose nifedipine as a
comparator because of experience with its use in patients, in whom it was the first
dihydropyridine to be used232425, and also because of its modest
CaV1.2 selectivity. Nifedipine is expected to exert its
CaV1.2 blockade at concentrations around 4.45 nM14. At the lowest concentration of nifedipine that we had interrogated
(1 μM), a concentration which should have easily blocked
CaV1.2, only some inhibition of aldosterone could be seen in
non-transfected H295R and primary adrenal cells and none at all in H295R cells
transfected with CaV1.3 mutants (Figs 2 and 3). The shallow concentration-response curves are consistent
with blockade of different sites at low and high concentrations (Figs
2 and 3). Dihydropyridines sometimes cause
substantial reductions in plasma aldosterone in patients with primary
aldosteronism26. However this is not the predominant response at
usual clinical doses, and increasing the dose to the presumed
CaV1.3-blocking range is precluded by the vascular side effects,
particularly peripheral edema2527.The potential attraction of selective CaV1.3 blockade is that such a drug
can be used at a dose which achieves substantial suppression of aldosterone
secretion, without the vascular side effects of currently used L-type
Ca2+ blockers2527. Previously, a T-type
Ca2+ channel blocker, mibefradil, was introduced whose reduction
in aldosterone secretion was among the theoretical advantages over L-type
Ca2+ blockade28; however the drug was withdrawn
due to reports of dangerous and even fatal interactions with other drugs and was
later found to cause serious effects on QTc29. In vitro
studies, have shown that single blockade of either L-type or T-type
Ca2+ channels can decrease aldosterone production, even though
the influx of Ca2+ in the ZG is thought to be mediated by both
channels28303132. While there has also been considerable
attempt to develop inhibitors of aldosterone synthase as a therapeutic class33, these have foundered on the challenge of developing a drug, which
inhibits aldosterone synthase, without effect on the 95% homologous enzyme
catalysing cortisol synthesis (encoded by the gene CYP11B1). By contrast, the
homology between CaV1.2 and CaV1.3 is only 75%34. Thus, even though compound 8 itself may not be the ideal drug candidate
to progress for treatment of hyperaldosteronism, there are a number of sites outside
the dihydropyridine-binding site where CaV1.2 and CaV1.3
differ sufficiently to suggest that selective blockade is achievable.Three drugs do have clinical efficacy in patients with primary aldosteronism:
spironolactone, eplerenone and amiloride3536. However, the efficacy
of the latter two is modest, and the use of spironolactone is limited in men by the
anti-androgenic effects of higher doses3738. All three drugs cause
substantial increases in plasma aldosterone secretion, probably secondary to the
rise in plasma K+, and there is some concern whether aldosterone
could have adverse vascular effects through a non-canonical aldosterone
receptor3940. Although no evidence exists in humans, there is
an additional theoretical benefit from blocking aldosterone synthesis rather than
response – that such a drug could cause involution of aldosterone-producing
cells. This is suggested by the observation that genetic deletion of the enzyme
aldosterone synthase leads to apoptosis of the normal ZG cells41.In summary, we previously reported ZG-like APAs to have CaV1.3 mutations.
In this study, we confirmed that CaV1.3 is localized to the human adrenal
ZG. By blocking endogenous CaV1.3 in primary human adrenal and
transfecting mutant CaV1.3 in the humanadrenocortical cell line, H295R,
we have also confirmed that CaV1.3 plays a role in human adrenal
steroidogenesis. Taken together, these discoveries suggest that CaV1.3
can provide a novel mechanism and target for regulating excess aldosterone secretion
and may be a novel way of treating hyperaldosteronism, especially those caused by
ZG-like APAs with a CaV1.3 mutation. Since non-selective or
CaV1.2 selective dihydropyridines are dose-limited clinically by
vascular effects, a selective CaV1.3 antagonist may be valuable for
suppressing aldosterone secretion in some patients with aldosterone-dependent
hypertension.
Methods
Cell culture experimentation
H295R cells, were cultured in growth medium consisting of DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham
supplemented with 10% foetal bovine serum, 100 U of penicillin,
0.1 mg/mL streptomycin, 0.4 mM L-glutamine and
insulin-transferrin-sodium selenite medium (ITS) at 37 °C in 5%
CO2.For transient transfection, wild-type or mutant P1336R or V259DCaV1.3
GFP-tagged constructs were co-transfected together with constructs for
β3 and α2δ auxiliary subunits
of CaV1.3 into H295R cells using Amaxa Nucleofector kit R (Lonza,
Germany) with electroporation program P20. The GFP-CaV1.3 wild-type
and mutant vectors were obtained from our collaborators; Dr. Jöerg
Striessnig’s group at University of Innsbruck Center for Chemistry and
Biomedicine, Austria. These constructs were derived from the
‘long’ isoform of the CaV1.3 α1
pore-forming subunit, with isoform A of the alternatively spliced exon 8.
Transfected cells were seeded into 24-well plates at 100, 000 cells per well in
0.5 mL of growth medium. At 24-h post-transfection, H295R cells were
serum deprived in un-supplemented DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham medium for 24-h. At
48-h post-transfection, the transfection efficiency was visualised and
qualitatively quantified by fluorescence microscopy. Further experiments were
performed on cells with 60–80% transfection efficiency.For primary cell culture, adrenocortical cells were obtained from the adrenals of
patients with Conn’s syndrome that had undergone adrenalectomy at
Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, UK (Supplementary Table 1). Local ethical approval
and informed consent were obtained for each patient and the procedures followed
were in accordance with institutional guidelines. After macroscopic
identification of APA and adjacent normal adrenal by a trained histopathologist,
tissue samples were placed in growth medium within 45 minutes of
surgical excision. The APA and adjacent normal adrenal was then digested
separately in 3.3 mg/ml collagenase at 37 °C for 2-h.
Within a week of procurement, the primary humanadrenocortical cells were then
randomly seeded into 24-well plates at 50, 000 cells per well in 0.5 mL
of growth medium and allowed to settle for a further 48-h before drug treatments
were performed.
Drug treatments with CaV1.3 selective antagonist, compound 8,
and L-type calcium blocker, nifedipine
Compound 8 and nifedipine (Sigma-Aldrich, UK) were reconstituted in DMSO
to stock concentrations of 1, 10, and 100 mM. Stock concentrations were
further diluted (1:1000) in sterile un-supplemented DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham for
treatments.Transfected H295R cells were treated at 48-h post transfection (after 24-h of
serum deprivation) with either vehicle or compound 8 or nifedipine in
un-supplemented DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham medium in the presence of 10 nM
angiotensin II. Supernatant and cells were harvested after 24-h incubation at
37 °C.For non-transfected H295R cells, cells were seeded into 24-well plates at 100 000
cells per well in 0.5 mL of growth medium, serum deprived for 24-h, and
treated with either vehicle, compound 8 or nifedipine in un-supplemented
DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham medium. Supernatant and H295R cells were harvested after
24-h incubation at 37 °C.For primary human adrenal cells, APA and adjacent normal adrenal cells were serum
deprived for 24-h, and treated with either vehicle or compound 8 or
nifedipine in un-supplemented DMEM/Nutrient F-12 Ham medium in the presence or
absence of 10 nM angiotensin II. Supernatant and H295R cells were
harvested after 24-h incubation at 37 °C.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded adrenal
sections (4 μm) using an automated immunostainer with cover tile
technology (Bond-III system, Leica Biosystems). A commercial antibody of
CaV1.3, clone N38/8 (UC Davis/NIH NeuroMab Facility; 1:500
dilution), was used as the primary antibody. Negative control experiments, in
which the primary antibody was omitted, resulted in a complete absence of
staining. Images were captured using a standard bright-field microscope, a
U-TV1-X digital camera and CellD software (Olympus UK).
Confocal Imaging
H295R cells were cultured in complete media on sterilised and poly L-lysine
coated cover-slips at the density of 105 cells/well in
12-well cell-culture plate for 24-h. Cells were serum-starved overnight before
transfection. Serum-free media was replaced with antibiotic-free
serum-containing media at the time of transfection with Lipofectamine 3000
transfection reagent (Life Technologies). Cells were co-transfected with
GFP-tagged CaV1.3 WT, β3 &
α2δ constructs according to
manufacturer’s instructions. 48-h later plasma membranes of cells were
stained with 2ug/ml Wheat Germ Agglutinin, Alexa Fluor® 633
Conjugate (W21404, Life Technologies) in complete media for 10 min at
37 °C. Cells were washed twice with PBS (5 min each),
followed by fixing with 4% paraformaldehyde and permeabilisation with 1%
trition-X100 (PBST), 10 min each at room temperature. Cells were
incubated with blocking buffer (3% BSA in PBS) for 1-h at room temperature and
overnight with the CaV1.3 antibody, clone N38/8 (UC Davis/NIH
NeuroMab Facility; 1:500 dilution) in 3% BSA-PBST. Goat anti-mouse IgG, Alexa
Fluor® 568 Conjugate (A11004, Life Technologies) was used
as secondary antibody at 1:1000 dilution in 3%BSA-PBST for 1-h at room
temperature. Finally cells were washed thrice in PBST and cover-slips were
mounted on slides using VECTASHIELD Antifade Mounting Medium with DAPI (H-1200,
Vector Laboratories). Confocal images were taken using Zeiss LSM510 Meta
confocal microscope and analysed using Zen 2011 software.
Aldosterone concentration measurements
Aldosterone concentration was quantitatively measured using three methods due to
availability of the kits; Coat-A-Count® Aldosterone (Siemens
Medical Solutions, USA), a125I solid-phase radioimmunoassay and
after the discontinuation of this kit, an ELISA method adapted from researchers
in Gomez-Sanchez’s group and finally a commercially available Homogenous
Time Resolved Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (HTR-FRET) assay from
Cisbio Bioassays, France (used according to manufacturer’s
instructions). ELISA was carried out using a selective validated aldosterone
monoclonal antibody gifted to us and produced by Gomez-Sanchez’s lab,
USA42. The aldosterone concentrations from transfected H295R
cells were normalized to total cell protein, which was determined by performing
the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay (Pierce Biotechnology, USA).
Statistical analysis
Experiments were performed with vehicle/plasmid controls where appropriate. Each
experiment was performed with biological replicates and the averages were
calculated. Aldosterone measurements are expressed as a ratio of basal (control)
for each experiment. Results are shown as mean values ± SEM of separate
experiments/transfections unless stated otherwise. Statistical analysis,
two-tailed Student’s t-tests or analysis of variance, was
performed as indicated using the standard statistical software, Prism 6
(GraphPad Software, Inc).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Xie, C. B. et al. Regulation of aldosterone
secretion by CaV1.3. Sci. Rep.
6, 24697; doi: 10.1038/srep24697 (2016).
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