DISTINGUISHING ROLES OF THE MEMBRANE-CYTOSKELETON AND CADHERIN MEDIATED CELL-CELL ADHESION IN GENERATING DIFFERENT NA+,K+-ATPASE DISTRIBUTIONS IN POLARIZED EPITHELIA

被引:151
|
作者
MARRS, JA
NAPOLITANO, EW
MURPHYERDOSH, C
MAYS, RW
REICHARDT, LF
NELSON, WJ
机构
[1] STANFORD UNIV,MED CTR,SCH MED,BECKMAN CTR MOLEC & GENET MED,DEPT MOLEC & CELLULAR PHYSIOL,STANFORD,CA 94305
[2] UNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO,HOWARD HUGHES MED INST,DEPT PHYSIOL,SAN FRANCISCO,CA 94143
关键词
D O I
10.1083/jcb.123.1.149
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
In simple epithelia, the distribution of ion transporting proteins between the apical or basal-lateral domains of the plasma membrane is important for determining directions of vectorial ion transport across the epithelium. In the choroid plexus, Na+,K+-ATPase is localized to the apical plasma membrane domain where it regulates sodium secretion and production of cerebrospinal fluid; in contrast, Na+,K+-ATPase is localized to the basal-lateral membrane of cells in the kidney nephron where it regulates ion and solute reabsorption. The mechanisms involved in restricting Na+,K+-ATPase distribution to different membrane domains in these simple epithelia are poorly understood. Previous studies have indicated a role for E-cadherin mediated cell-cell adhesion and membrane-cytoskeleton (ankyrin and fodrin) assembly in regulating Na+,K+-ATPase distribution in absorptive kidney epithelial cells. Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy reveals that in chicken and rat choroid plexus epithelium, fodrin, and ankyrin colocalize with Na+,K+-ATPase at the apical plasma membrane, but fodrin, ankyrin, and adducin also localize at the lateral plasma membrane where Na+,K+-ATPase is absent. Biochemical analysis shows that fodrin, ankyrin, and Na+,K+-ATPase are relatively resistant to extraction from cells in buffers containing Triton X-100. The fractions of Na+,K+-ATPase, fodrin, and ankyrin that are extracted from cells cosediment in sucrose gradients at approximately 10.5 S. Further separation of the 10.5 S peak of proteins by electrophoresis in nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels revealed that fodrin, ankyrin, and Na+,K+-ATPase comigrate, indicating that these proteins are in a high molecular weight complex similar to that found previously in kidney epithelial cells. In contrast, the anion exchanger (AE2), a marker protein of the basal-lateral plasma membrane in the choroid plexus, did not cosediment in sucrose gradients or comigrate in nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels with the complex of Na+,K+-ATPase, ankyrin, and fodrin. Ca++-dependent cell adhesion molecules (cadherins) were detected at lateral membranes of the choroid plexus epithelium and colocalized with a distinct fraction of ankyrin, fodrin, and adducin. Cadherins did not colocalize with Na+,K+-ATPase and were absent from the apical membrane. The fraction of cadherins that was extracted with buffers containing Triton X-100 cosedimented with ankyrin and fodrin in sucrose gradients and comigrated in nondenaturing gels with ankyrin and fodrin in a high molecular weight complex. Since a previous study showed that E-cadherin is an instructive inducer of Na+,K+-ATPase distribution, we examined protein distributions in fibroblasts transfected with B-cadherin, a prominent cadherin expressed in the choroid plexus epithelium. The results show that Na+,K+-ATPase and fodrin become concentrated at cell-cell contracts in cells expressing E-cadherin, but not in cells expressing B-cadherin, indicating differences in the potential of these cadherins to induce Na+,K+-ATPase accumulation at cell-cell contacts. These results provide new insights into the roles of the membrane-cytoskeleton and cadherins in generating different distributions of the same protein in simple epithelial cells.
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页码:149 / 164
页数:16
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