| Literature DB >> 30934923 |
Mohammed Abir-Awan1, Philip Kitchen2, Mootaz M Salman3,4, Matthew T Conner5, Alex C Conner6, Roslyn M Bill7.
Abstract
Aquaporins (AQPs) are water channel proteins that are essential to life, being expressed in all kingdoms. In humans, there are 13 AQPs, at least one of which is found in every organ system. The structural biology of the AQP family is well-established and many functions for AQPs have been reported in health and disease. AQP expression is linked to numerous pathologies including tumor metastasis, fluid dysregulation, and traumatic injury. The targeted modulation of AQPs therefore presents an opportunity to develop novel treatments for diverse conditions. Various techniques such as video microscopy, light scattering and fluorescence quenching have been used to test putative AQP inhibitors in both AQP-expressing mammalian cells and heterologous expression systems. The inherent variability within these methods has caused discrepancy and many molecules that are inhibitory in one experimental system (such as tetraethylammonium, acetazolamide, and anti-epileptic drugs) have no activity in others. Some heavy metal ions (that would not be suitable for therapeutic use) and the compound, TGN-020, have been shown to inhibit some AQPs. Clinical trials for neuromyelitis optica treatments using anti-AQP4 IgG are in progress. However, these antibodies have no effect on water transport. More research to standardize high-throughput assays is required to identify AQP modulators for which there is an urgent and unmet clinical need.Entities:
Keywords: AQP expression; AQP inhibitors; AQP modulators; AQP structure; AQPs in disease; TGN-020; aquaporin; functional assays; heavy metals; small molecule inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30934923 PMCID: PMC6480248 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20071589
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Aquaporin structure: (a) primary sequence of Aquaporin 4 (AQP4), the water channel with the highest recorded water permeability (see Table 1), highlighting the NPA (Asn-Pro-Ala) residues in yellow; (b) tertiary structure of the AQP4 homotetramer showing four water pores (marked with a blue dot) and the ‘fifth pore’ produced by formation of the tetramer (marked with a red dot). Adapted from an image originally published in [33].
A summary of AQPs 0–12 showing the information available on their structure, permeability, location within the body and pathophysiology. The osmotic water permeability coefficient (Pf) relates the magnitude of bulk water flow across a membrane in response to hydrostatic or osmotic pressure gradients to the magnitude of the driving pressure gradient. It depends on both the permeability of individual water channels and the density of channels in the membrane. Pgly is the glycerol permeability coefficient. The single channel osmotic water permeability coefficient (pf) is also given where available.
| AQP | Structural Information Available | Water Permeability | Main Locations in Humans | Disease States | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AQP0 | PDB ref: 1YMG | Lens | Mutations in the gene for AQP0 often result in bilateral cataracts | [ | |
| AQP1 | PDB ref: 1FQY | Erythrocytes | Deficiency causes inability to concentrate urine | [ | |
| AQP2 | PDB ref: 4NEF | Collecting duct cells | Deficiency causes diabetes insipidus | [ | |
| AQP3 |
No structural data available | Epidermis | Skin dehydration | [ | |
| AQP4 | PDB ref: 3GD8 | Astrocytes | Cytotoxic edema | [ | |
| AQP5 | PDB ref: 3D9S | Salivary, lacrimal and sweat glands | Sjögren’s syndrome | [ | |
| AQP6 |
No structural data available | Collecting duct | Unknown | [ | |
| AQP7 |
No structural data available | Adipocytes | Adipocyte hypertrophy | [ | |
| AQP8 |
No structural data available UniProtKB—O94778 | Pancreas | Unknown | [ | |
| AQP9 | No structural data available UniProtKB—O43315 | Hepatocytes | Osteoporosis | [ | |
| AQP10 | PDB ref: 6F7H | Intestinal epithelial cells | Unknown | [ | |
| AQP11 |
No structural data available UniProtKB—Q8NBQ7 | Testis | Polycystic kidneys | [ | |
| AQP12 |
No structural data available | Pancreatic rough endoplasmic reticulum vesicles—600 µg total RNA | Pancreatic acinar cells | Unknown | [ |
Various assay methods used in the measurement of AQP function and the validation of AQP inhibitors. Their benefits and limitations are shown.
| Assay Type | Assay Principle | Benefits | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epithelial | Epithelial cells are placed on supports, solutes are added and transepithelial flux is measured by the height of the fluid in capillary tubes | Assists AQP identification and characterization in tissues | Not very robust | [ |
| Osmotic Swelling | Osmotic gradients are used to cause flux of solutes and water in cells endogenously-expressing or transfected with AQP genes; cell volume changes are measured | Well-established technique | Preparation techniques vary causing discrepancies in results between laboratories | [ |
| Microscopy | Most often fluorescent dyes are used that permeate the plasma membrane and are cleaved by esterases. As osmotic shock occurs, the fluorescence is altered, which is measured and used to calculate cell volume changes | Linear relationship produced between fluorophore and cell volume changes | Thickness of cell-line monolayer can produce variability in results | [ |
| Stopped-Flow Spectroscopy | Suspensions of cells or vesicles are mixed with various osmotic solutions and flux of water causes volume changes, which result in altered light scattering. The linear relationship between optical properties and cell volume allows permeability to be calculated; alternatively fluorophores can be used. | Fast kinetics measured | Variability in dead time and mixing ability can cause problems with reproducibility | [ |
| Computational Methods | High resolution atomic structures of AQPs are used and molecular dynamics simulations allow in silico measurement of water permeability | Provides new insights into AQP structure and function | High-quality structures not always available | [ |
Currently-available AQP inhibitors, their structures, the AQPs they inhibit (species are highlighted as h—human, m—mouse, and r—rat) and the conditions under which they were assayed.
| Inhibitor | Conditions | AQPs Inhibited | Structure | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tetraethyl-ammonium | hAQP1 |
| [ | |
| Phloretin | rAQP9 |
| [ | |
| Mercury chloride | hAQP1 |
| [ | |
| AuPhen | Erythrocytes | hAQP3 |
| [ |
| Silver nitrate | Erythrocytes | hAQP3 |
| [ |
| Copper sulfate | Swan 71 cells | hAQP3 |
| [ |
| Nickel chloride | Human bronchial epithelium cells | hAQP3 |
| [ |
| Furosemide | hAQP1 |
| [ | |
| Bumetanide | rAQP4 |
| [ | |
| hAQP4-M23 |
| [ | ||
| IMD-0354 | Mice | mAQP4-M23 |
| [ |
| Acetazolamide | HEK293 cells | rAQP1 |
| [ |
| TGN-020 | C57/BL6 male mice | mAQP4 |
| [ |
| Topiramate | rAQP4-M23 |
| [ | |
| DFP00173 | Human erythrocytes | hAQP3 |
| [ |
| Z433927330 | Human erythrocytes | mAQP7 |
| [ |