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Vol. 13, Issue 9, 3042-3054, September 2002
Department of Physiology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78229-3900
Submitted May 6, 2002; Accepted June 13, 2002| |
ABSTRACT |
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Aldosterone in some tissues increases expression of the mRNA encoding the small monomeric G protein Ki-RasA. Renal A6 epithelial cells were used to determine whether induction of Ki-ras leads to concomitant increases in the total as well as active levels of Ki-RasA and whether this then leads to subsequent activation of its effector mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase) cascade. The molecular basis and cellular consequences of this action were specifically investigated. We identified the intron 1-exon 1 region (rasI/E1) of the mouse Ki-ras gene as sufficient to reconstitute aldosterone responsiveness to a heterologous promotor. Aldosterone increased reporter gene activity containing rasI/E1 threefold. Aldosterone increased the absolute and GTP-bound levels of Ki-RasA by a similar extent, suggesting that activation resulted from mass action and not effects on GTP binding/hydrolysis rates. Aldosterone significantly increased Ki-RasA and MAPK activity as early as 15 min with activation peaking by 2 h and waning after 4 h. Inhibitors of transcription, translation, and a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist attenuated MAPK signaling. Similarly, rasI/E1-driven luciferase expression was sensitive to glucocorticoid receptor blockade. Overexpression of dominant-negative RasN17, addition of antisense Ki-rasA and inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase also attenuated steroid-dependent increases in MAPK signaling. Thus, activation of MAPK by aldosterone is dependent, in part, on a genomic mechanism involving induction of Ki-ras transcription and subsequent activation of its downstream effectors. This genomic mechanism has a distinct time course from activation by traditional mitogens, such as serum, which affect the GTP-binding state and not absolute levels of Ras. The result of such a genomic mechanism is that peak activation of the MAPK cascade by adrenal corticosteroids is delayed but prolonged.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Small, monomeric Ras GTP-binding proteins initiate pleiotropic
signaling cascades to affect many aspects of cellular physiology. Ras
signaling through the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)
cascade mediated by mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) 1/2, for
instance, is well documented to play a pivotal role in cellular growth
and differentiation. Protein hormones, which target GTP exchange
factors and GTPase-activating proteins via plasma membrane
receptors, activate the MAPK cascade by increasing the GTP-bound state
of Ras proteins and not the absolute levels of these proteins. Thus,
the "classic" paradigm of Ras
MAPK signaling involves
posttranslational control of Ras. Emerging evidence suggests that
numerous steroids, including aldosterone, also affect Ras signaling
(Spindler et al., 1997
; Mastroberardino et al.,
1998
; Stockand et al., 1999c
). The molecular basis and end
effect of this steroid action remain, for the most part, not well
described. Because steroids control cell activity through receptors
that function as trans-acting factors to modulate gene
expression, it is possible that steroids act on the Ras signaling
cascade via a "genomic" mechanism that is dependent on
transcription and subsequent translation to increase Ras protein levels
and thus, distinct from the classic mechanism. The current
study, which investigated this possibility, identifies a novel paradigm
by which corticosteroid activate the Ras
MAPK signaling cascade.
The adrenal cortical steroid hormone aldosterone is the major endocrine
factor regulating Na+ and
K+ homeostasis. Aldosterone, consequently, plays
a central role in maintaining electrolyte and water balance (Verrey,
1995
, 1999
; Stockand, 2002
). Aldosterone also plays a direct role in
pathological remodeling of the heart, possibly by promoting fibrosis
and cellular proliferation both of which are generally known to be
impacted by Ras signaling via ERK cascades (Ramires et al.,
1998
; Pitt et al., 1999
; Karlon et al., 2000
).
Although the systemic effects and target tissues of aldosterone are
well known, little is actually known about its cellular mechanisms of action.
Many integral membrane proteins involved in epithelial cell transport,
such as the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC), apical
membrane potassium channel,
Na+/Cl
cotransporter,
H+/K+-ATPase, and
Na+/K+-ATPase are end
effectors of aldosterone signaling (Verrey, 1995
; Garty and Palmer,
1997
; Binder et al., 1999
; Palmer, 1999
; Rogerson and
Fuller, 2000
). Although aldosterone affects cell activity by modulating
gene expression, the expression levels of these proteins involved in
transport, however, are not themselves initially controlled by the
steroid. This has led to the proposal that aldosterone must control
expression of factors that initiate or impinge upon signal transduction.
Adrenal corticosteroids, including aldosterone, increase the levels of
the small, monomeric GTP-binding protein Kirsten Ras (Ki-Ras; Shekhar
and Miller, 1994
; Spindler et al., 1997
; Spindler and
Verrey, 1999
; Stockand et al., 1999c
). Aldosterone
preferentially increases expression in epithelia of the A splice
variant of Ki-Ras via control of transcription with induction of
Ki-ras mRNA being a primary response to steroid that is
independent of de novo protein synthesis and begins within 30 min after
steroid addition. Induction of Ki-RasA is necessary and sufficient for
aldosterone action, in part, on Na+ transport
(Stockand et al., 1999c
). In addition, Ki-RasA activates ENaC when both proteins are overexpressed in a heterologous system (Mastroberardino et al., 1998
) and increases the open
probability of this channel in native epithelia (Stockand et
al., 1999c
; Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
). Consequently,
Ki-RasA is a likely candidate in some instances to transduce
information form the nucleus to final effectors in response to aldosterone.
Induction of Ras expression by steroids may impact more than just ENaC
and epithelial transport for glucocorticoids and estrogen increase Ras
expression in mammary epithelia with enhanced expression possibly being
associated with tumor formation and metastasis (Strawhecker et
al., 1989
; Neades et al., 1991
; Shekhar and Miller, 1994
; Pethe and Shekhar, 1999
). Indeed, it has long been recognized that in cells that lack mutant Ras, elevated levels of normal Ras can
lead to cell growth and/or transformation, presumably through
inappropriate stimulation of Ras effector cascades (Schwab et
al., 1983
; George et al., 1986
; Hoffman et
al., 1987
). This suggests that through mass action, induction of
Ras leads to activation of this protein and subsequent signaling.
The general consequences and in particular those associated with cell signaling of steroid-dependent induction of Ki-ras are not well understood. It also is not clear whether increases in Ki-RasA levels in response to aldosterone result from actions mediated by nuclear receptors and whether steroid-sensitive increases in Ki-RasA result in concomitant increases in functional GTP-bound Ki-RasA.
Similar to the other Ras proteins (Ha-Ras, N-Ras, and Ki-RasB), active
Ki-RasA initiates many different intracellular signaling cascades,
including the MAPK cascade. This cascade is known to affect several
aldosterone-target proteins, such as ENaC,
Na+/K+-ATPase,
Na+/H+ exchanger,
Na+/Cl
, and
Na+/bicarbonate cotransport; and
Na+/Ca2+ exchange proteins
(Cho et al., 1998
; Zentner et al., 1998
; Lin et al., 1999
; Wang et al., 1999
; Pesce et
al., 2000
; Turner et al., 2000
; Guerrero et
al., 2001
; Robey et al., 2001
). Thus, the MAPK cascade
may play a pivotal role in signaling aldosterone action secondarily to
stimulation of Ki-RasA or may ultimately be involved in a negative
feedback pathway initiated by this steroid.
The current work tested the hypothesis that aldosterone-stimulated
Ki-RasA activates the MAPK cascade in renal epithelia. In addition, we
asked whether Ki-RasA and the MAPK cascade are activated in response to
aldosterone via nuclear steroid receptors, and whether increases in
Ki-RasA expression in response to steroid result in increases in
functional Ki-RasA:GTP levels. Through the course of this work, we also
investigated possible molecular mechanisms by which aldosterone induces
Ki-Ras expression and compared aldosterone effects on Ki-Ras
MAPK
signaling with that of a traditional mitogen, such as serum.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Cell Culture
All experiments were performed with renal A6 epithelial cells
(passages 75-81; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA).
Cells were cultured on polycarbonate supports (Transwell-Clear Inserts,
pore size 0.4 µM, growth area 4.7 cm2; Costar,
Cambridge, MA) and allowed to form polar monolayers by using standard
methods described previously (Stockand et al., 1999a
,b
, c
,
2000
). In brief, cells were maintained at 26°C in 4%
CO2 with complete amphibian medium (3/10 Coon's
F-12, 7/10 Leibovitz's L-15) supplemented with fetal bovine serum
(10%). Basic medium was devoid of serum and aldosterone.
High-resistance (>2 K
), polarized A6 cell monolayers were used for
all experiments. To observe the full action of aldosterone, confluent
cells were treated with basic media for 48 to 72 h before experimentation.
Molecular Biology
Plasmid Preparation and Isolation of Ki-ras Intron 1-Exon 1.
The pMMrasDN plasmid was a kind gift form Dr. G. Firestone (University
of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA). In brief, this
construct allows glucocorticoid-inducible expression of
dominant-negative Ha-RasN17. Similar to that described previously by
the Firestone laboratory for Con8 rat mammary epithelial cells (Woo
et al., 1999
), this construct in conjunction with G418
selection was used to create clonal A6 cell lines stably expressing
inducible dominant-negative RasN17.
165-153 as labeled from the adenosine of the translation start codon ATG in exon 1; see GenBank accession numbers K01927, 52798, S39586, and M13294; George et al.,
1986Luciferase Reporter Gene Assay. A quantitative assay with a Renilla luciferase internal control was used to measure the firefly luminescent signal in A6 cells overexpressing reporter genes. In brief, A6 cells plated at 80% confluence on 100- × 20-mm2 culture dishes were transfected with 100 ng of pRL-CMV in addition to 3 µg of the firefly luciferase reporter plasmid (either pGL2-TK or pGL2-TK-rasI/E1) by using the LipofectAMINE Plus (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) system per the manufacturer's instructions with the exception that cells were exposed to transfection reagents for ~8 h. Twenty-four hours after transfection and 24 h before performing assay, cells were replated in a 96-well culture plate. Luciferase activity then was measured with the Dual-Luciferase Reporter assay system (Promega) per the manufacturer's instructions directly following the experimental treatment period (i.e., exposure to 1.5 µM aldosterone for 4 h.) and 1-h extract preparation period required with passive lysis buffer (see Dual-Luciferase Reporter instructions). An MLX microtiter plate luminometer (Dynatech Labs, Chantilly, VA) was used to record luminescent signal. For these experiments, all firefly luciferase activity data are normalized to the internal Renilla luciferase control.
Biochemistry
Western Blot Analysis.
Whole A6 cell lysate was extracted
after three washes with Tris-buffered saline by using standard
procedures (Stockand et al., 1999c
). Cells were scraped and
then maintained for 1-2 h at 4°C in gentle lysis buffer (GLB) (76 mM
NaCl, 50 mM HCl-Tris, 2 mM EGTA plus 1% Nonidet P-40, and 10%
glycerol, pH 7.4) and protease inhibitors (phenylmethylsulfonyl
fluoride, leupeptin, tosylphenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone, and
1-chloro-3-tosylamido-7-amino-2-heptanone). For Western blot analysis
of phosphorylated proteins, GLB was supplemented with 0.1 mM
NaPPi, 0.5 mM NaF, 0.1 mM
Na2MoO4, 0.1 mM
ZnCl2, and 0.04 mM
Na3VO4 prepared fresh from
1000× stocks. After clearing cellular debris, standardizing total
protein concentration, and addition of Laemmli sample buffer (0.005%
bromphenol blue, 10% glycerol, 3% SDS, 1 mM EDTA, 77 mM HCl-Tris, and
20 mM dithiothreitol), lysates were heated to 85°C for 10 min.
Proteins were then separated by standard SDS-PAGE and subsequently
electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose (0.2 µM). Western
blot analysis was performed using standard techniques and appropriate
antibodies (Stockand et al., 1999a
,b
,c
, 2000
; see below;
primary and secondary antibodies were used at 1/1000 and 1/20000,
respectively). Tween 20 (0.1%) and 5% dried milk (Carnation) were
used as blocking reagents. Band intensity was quantified with
densitometric scanning using Sigmagel (Jandel Scientific, Costa Madre,
CA). When possible, the flood configuration with the highest practical
threshold was used to measure band density.
Ras:GTP Assay. Raf-1 RBD agarose was from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake placid, NY). This immobilized fusion protein corresponds to the human Raf-1 Ras binding domain (RBD) (residues 1-149). Raf-1 RBD binds Ras complexed with GTP. Pull-down experiments were performed in 400 µl (0.4 mg of total protein) of whole A6 cell lysate isolated with GLB. Lysates were incubated with 30 µl of Raf-1 RBD agarose overnight (at 4°C and with constant agitation); pellets were washed five times with 2 volumes of fresh GLB each time for a total wash time of 2 h; and after resuspending in sample buffer and heating, Raf-1 RBD agarose precipitated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and Ki-RasA:GTP identified by immunoblotting.
MAPK Assay.
MAPK activity in lysates prepared from cells
treated with and without aldosterone was assayed by quantifying
phosphorylation of exogenous myelin basic protein (MBP). MAPK activity
was measured in whole A6 cell lysate (2 mg/ml) extracted in the
presence of phosphatase inhibitors as described above. MAPK activity
was measured for 30 min at 30°C in the following assay dilution
buffer (ADB; Upstate Biotechnology): 20 mM MOPS pH 7.2, 25 mM
-glycerophosphate, 5 mM EGTA, 0.4 mM MnCl2,
0.4 mM CaCl2, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, and 1 mM
dithiothreitol. The final reaction contained 10 µl of substrate
cocktail (from stock of 2 mg/ml dephosphorylated MBP in ADB), 10 µl
of inhibitor cocktail (from stock of 20 µM PKC inhibitor peptide, 2 µM PKA inhibitor peptide, and 20 µM compound R24571 in ABD), 10 µl of A6 cell extract, and 10 µl of Mg2+/ATP
cocktail (from a stock of 75 mM MgCl2, 500 µM
ATP in ADB). Reactions were initiated with
Mg2+/ATP and terminated with Laemmli sample
buffer (described above). Phosphorylation of MBP (in 10 µl of final
reaction) was assessed after SDS-PAGE by immunoblot
analysis with a specific anti-phospho-MBP antibody.
Electrophysiology
Transepithelial Na+ current was calculated
as described previously (Stockand et al., 1999a
,b
,c
, 2000
),
from Ohm's law as the ratio of transepithelial voltage to
transepithelial resistance under open circuit conditions by using a
Millicel Electrical Resistance System with dual Ag/AgCl pellet
electrodes (Millipore, Bedford, MA) to measure voltage and resistance.
Materials
All reagents unless indicated otherwise were from either BIOMOL Research Laboratories (Plymouth Meeting, PA), Calbiochem (San Diego, CA), Invitrogen, or Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Phosphorothiate oligonucleotides were synthesized by the Emory University Microchemical Facility and stored frozen as 10 mM (in water) stocks. Aldosterone, dexamethasone, and mifepristone (RU486) were stored frozen as 1.5, 0.1, and 1.0 mM (in dimethyl sulfoxide [DMSO]) stocks. Cycloheximide (in MeOH) and emetine (in H2O) were stored frozen as 1.0-mg/ml stocks. Actinomycin D was stored at 4°C as a 1.0-ng/ml (in MeOH) stock. PD-98059 and U-0126 were prepared fresh (in DMSO) before each experiment at stock concentrations of 10 and 5 mM, respectively. All reagents used for Western blot analysis unless noted otherwise were from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA) and Pierce Chemical (Rockford, IL). For each lysate, protein concentration was determined with the bicinchoninic acid protein assay. Kodak BioMax Light-1 film and Chemiluminescence Reagents Plus (PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA) were used to develop Western blots.
Antibodies
The rabbit polyclonal anti-MAPK 1/2 (Erk 1/2-CT) antibody was from Upstate Biotechnology. The mouse monoclonal anti-c-Raf-1 antibody was from Transduction Laboratories (Lexington, KY). The rabbit polyclonal anti-MKP-1 (V-15; MAPK phosphatase), anti-Fra-2 (L-15), and anti-K-Ras2A antibodies were from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). This latter antibody recognizes only the Ki-RasA isoform of Ras proteins. The mouse monoclonal anti-v-Ha-Ras antibody was from Oncogene Science (Cambridge, MA). This antibody recognizes all isoforms of Ras protein, including Ha-Ras, Ki-RasA, Ki-RasB, and N-Ras. All phospho-specific antibodies were from Cell Signaling Technologies (Beverly, MA). All secondary horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antibodies were from Kirkegaard and Perry Laboratories (Gaithersburg, MD).
Statistics
All values reported as mean ± SEM. Statistical
significance (p
0.05) was determined using the t
test for differences in mean values, and a one-way analysis of variance
in conjunction with the Student-Newman-Keuls test for multiple comparisons.
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RESULTS |
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Aldosterone Increases Absolute and Active GTP-bound Levels of Ki-RasA
Aldosterone via transcriptional control increases
Ki-rasA mRNA (Spindler et al., 1997
) and Ki-RasA
protein (Stockand et al., 1999c
) levels in renal A6
epithelial cells. Experiments in Figure 1
tested the hypothesis that aldosterone in these cells also increases the amount of active Ki-RasA. Activated Ras bound by GTP interacts with
the RBD of Raf (de Rooij and Bos, 1997
; Foschi et al.,
1997
). The representative Western blots of Figure 1A show that the
addition of aldosterone for 3 h to A6 cell monolayers markedly
increased Ki-RasA (middle) and Ki-RasA:GTP levels (bottom), but had
little effect on total Ras levels (top). It is known that Ki-RasA is expressed at levels much lower than other Ras isoforms (Hoffman et al., 1987
; Pells et al., 1997
). Thus, the lack
of a marked change in total Ras was not unexpected. For these
experiments, Ras:GTP was isolated using GST-RBD agarose from whole cell
lysates from cells treated with vehicle (CON; 0.1% DMSO) and
aldosterone (ALDO; 1.5 µM) for 3 h. After isolating total
cellular Ras:GTP, Ki-RasA:GTP was identified with anti-K-Ras2A
antibody, which reacts only with Ki-RasA (Pells et al.,
1997
). Total Ras protein was identified with the anti-v-Ha-Ras
antibody, which is reactive with Ki-RasA and B, Ha-Ras, and N-Ras
isoforms. The summary graph in Figure 1B shows the relative change in
response to aldosterone for the levels of Ras (1.6 ± 0.2, n = 11), Ki-RasA (3.1 ± 0.4, n = 8), and Ki-RasA:GTP (2.8 ± 0.4, n = 8). Aldosterone, compared with vehicle, significantly
increased Ki-RasA, and Ki-RasA:GTP levels (p < 0.005 for both).
Although aldosterone also significantly increased total Ras levels
(p = 0.03) at a similar time point, as reported previously by our
laboratory (Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
), the relative increase
in total Ras was significantly less than that of Ki-RasA (p = 0.002) and Ki-RasA:GTP (p = 0.009). Importantly, the relative
changes in Ki-RasA vs. Ki-RasA:GTP levels were not different (p = 0.60).
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Aldosterone Increases MAPK Activity
One potential signaling pathway activated by Ki-RasA is the MAPK
cascade. Aldosterone stimulation of MAPK activity in A6 cells was
measured in an in vitro reaction by following phosphorylation of
exogenous MBP. The typical Western blots in Figure
2, A and B, showing the time course of
aldosterone stimulation of MAPK activity, were probed with
anti-phospho-MBP antibody. For these blots, each lane contained 3.5 µg of MBP processed for 30 min at 30°C by A6 whole cell lysate
(equal concentrations of total cellular protein; supplemented with MBP,
Mg2+/ATP, and protein kinase C, protein kinase A,
and calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, and phosphatase
inhibitors) from cells treated with aldosterone for the indicated times
(in minutes for Figure 2A and hours for Figure 2B). The bar graph in
Figure 2C summarizes such experiments. Aldosterone significantly
increased MAPK activity 6.6 ± 1.2-, 10.5 ± 1.8-, 11.5 ± 2.5-, 12.0 ± 4.2-, 7.1 ± 2.8-, and 3.1 ± 0.9-fold
at the 15 and 30 min, and 1-, 2-, 4-, and 6-h time points (n
4). At 1 and 5 min, MAPK activity was 1.4 ± 0.2- and 3.3 ± 0.8-fold higher (n = 2), respectively. MAPK activity in response
to aldosterone increased steadily peaking between 0.5 and 2 h and
waning after 4 h.
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Time Course of Aldosterone Activation of MAPK Is Distinct from That of Classic Mitogens
Results in Figure 2 suggested that compared with classic mitogens,
aldosterone activates MAPK signaling in a distinct manner, taking
longer (up to 1-2 h) to reach maximal activity and having a persistent
signal (up to 4 h). Such a time course would be consistent with
aldosterone-dependent activation of the MAPK requiring a latent period
necessary for transcription and translation of Ki-RasA. Experiments in
Figure 3 were performed to determine
whether the time course of aldosterone-dependent activation
(phosphorylation) of MAPK in A6 cells was indeed distinct from
activation by the traditional mitogen, serum. For these experiments,
determining phospho-MAPK levels assessed activation of MAPK. The
Western blots in Figure 3A were probed with anti-phospho-MAPK antibody.
These blots contained equal amounts of whole cell lysate from A6 cells treated with serum (10% FBS; top) and aldosterone (1.5 µM) in the
absence (middle) and presence (bottom) of the corticosteroid receptor
antagonist RU486 (mifepristone; 0.1 µM) for the indicated times in
minutes. Western blots in Figure 3A were stripped and subsequently
reprobed with anti-MAPK antibody (Figure 3B, same order). Serum and
aldosterone clearly have temporally distinct effects on activation of
MAPK with the effects of serum peaking in the first 15-30 min and
waning thereafter, whereas those of aldosterone rising from 30 min
onwards. The actions of aldosterone on MAPK were completely reversed by
RU486, suggesting that this steroid stimulates MAPK signaling via its
genomic actions. As shown in Figure 3C, similar results were observed
when MAPK activity was assessed in an in vitro reaction by following
phosphorylation of exogenous MBP. This blot was probed with
anti-phospho-MBP antibody and each lane contained 3.5 µg of MBP
processed by A6 whole cell lysate (equal concentrations of total
cellular protein) from cells treated with serum (10% FBS) for the
indicated times (in minutes).
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Persistent Stimulation of MAPK by Aldosterone Is Mediated by Nuclear Steroid Receptors
Experiments in Figure 4 were
performed to further characterize the relation of
aldosterone-stimulated MAPK at the 2-h time point with the genomic
effects of this steroid. Both the effects of aldosterone on activation
(phosphorylation) of MAPK in the presence of inhibitors of
transcription and translation (Figure 4A), and the effects of
aldosterone on MAPK activity in the presence of inhibitors of nuclear
corticosteroid receptors, translation and mitogen-activated protein
kinase kinase (MEK) (Figures 4, B and C) were determined.
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The typical Western blot of Figure 4A was probed with anti-phospho-MAPK antibody (top), stripped, and then reprobed with anti-MAPK antibody (bottom). This blot contained equal amounts of A6 whole cell lysate from cells treated with ALDO (1.5 µM), CON (vehicle), actinomycin D (1.0 µg/ml), cycloheximide (1.0 µg/ml), and aldosterone plus actinomycin D or cycloheximide for 2 h. Although actinomycin D and cycloheximide had no overt effect on activation of MAPK when added alone, when added simultaneously with aldosterone, they abolished steroid-dependent activation of MAPK, demonstrating that transcription and translation are necessary for aldosterone to activate MAPK signaling.
The typical Western blot of Figure 4B shows phosphorylation of exogenous MBP added to A6 cell lysate from cells treated with aldosterone for 2 h in the absence and presence of the corticosteroid receptor inhibitor RU486 (mifepristone; 0.1 µM) and inhibitors of translation (cycloheximide and emetine 1.0 µg/ml) and MEK (PD-98059 and U-0126 at 10 and 0.5 µM, respectively). For these experiments, inhibitors were added simultaneously with aldosterone. This Western blot was probed with anti-phospho-MBP antibody and contained equal amounts of exogenous MBP processed by the respective A6 cell lysate (equal concentration of total protein). As shown in the summary graph of Figure 4C, RU486 significantly decreased relative aldosterone-stimulated MAPK activity to 0.2 ± 0.04 (n = 5). Similarly, relative aldosterone-induced MAPK activity was decreased to 0.2 ± 0.1 (n = 5) and 0.3 ± 0.2 (n = 4) by emetine and cycloheximide, respectively. Moreover, PD-98059 and U-0126 decreased relative aldosterone-sensitive MAPK activity to 0.2 ± 0.1 (n = 5) and 0.2 ± 0.1 (n = 5), respectively. At this time point (2 h), the negative control for U-0126, U-0124, did not affect MAPK signaling and Ki-RasA levels were 53, 61, 62, 96, and 108% of (aldosterone-treated) control in the RU486, emetine, cycloheximide, PD-98059, and U-0126 groups, respectively (our unpublished data).
Ki-ras Gene Contains a Functional Steroid Response Element That Confers Aldosterone Responsiveness to a Heterologous Promotor
The results described above and those reported previously by us
(Stockand et al., 1999c
) and others (Spindler et
al., 1997
; Spindler and Verrey, 1999
) suggest that aldosterone via
steroid receptors directly affects Ki-ras expression and
that this then impinges upon MAPK signaling. However, the molecular
basis of this regulation has not been studied. Glucocorticoids and
aldosterone ultimately target similar cis-acting elements
through either the glucocorticoid or mineralocorticoid receptor
(reviewed in Stockand, 2002
). The human and rat Ki-ras genes
contain partially characterized cis-acting elements within
the intron 1-exon 1 region that are trans-activated by the
glucocorticoid-steroid receptor complex (Shekhar and Miller, 1994
).
Conserved elements have similarly been identified in the
Ha-ras gene as responsive to glucocorticoids (Strawhecker
et al., 1989
; Neades et al., 1991
; Shekhar and
Miller, 1994
; Pethe and Shekhar, 1999
). Using this paradigm, we
prepared a reporter plasmid containing the mouse c-Ki-ras2
intron 1-exon 1 region (
165-153 from adenosine of the translation
start codon within exon 1; pGL2-TK-rasI/E1), which contains several
putative steroid response elements, and as shown in Figure
5, tested whether this region conferred
functional aldosterone responsiveness to a heterologous promotor in A6
epithelial cells. Luciferase activity in cells transfected with
pGL2-TK-rasI/E1 in the presence of vehicle and aldosterone (1.5 µM,
4 h) was 1.5 ± 0.3 and 4.6 ± 0.9 (n = 6),
respectively. Thus, aldosterone significantly increased (threefold) luciferase expression driven by the pGL2-TK-rasI/E1 chimeric reporter plasmid. Simultaneous addition of RU486 (0.1 µM, n = 3) with
aldosterone markedly decreased luciferase activity 50% to 2.3 ± 0.9 in cells transfected with pGL2-TK-rasI/E1. Dexamethasone (DEX) (0.1 µM, 4 h) had a similar effect as aldosterone increasing
luciferase activity vs. vehicle 2.5-fold to 3.7 ± 0.9 (n = 3; p = 0.06; our unpublished data). Luciferase activity in
the presence of either steroid in cells transfected with
pGL2-TK-rasI/E1 was significantly greater (p > 0.05) than that in
cells transfected with pGL2-TK and treated similarly (ALDO = 1.0 ± 0.2, n = 6; DEX = 0.7 ± 0.2, n = 3).
In contrast, luciferase activity in the presence of vehicle was not
different (p = 0.3) between pGL2-TK (0.8 ± 0.3, n = 4) and pGL2-TK-rasI/E1-transfected cells. Reporter gene activity in cells
transfected with the minimal promoter thymidine kinase luciferase
plasmid (pGL2-TK) or pRL-CMV control plasmid alone was unaffected by
steroid treatment (our unpublished data).
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Activation of MAPK Cascade by Aldosterone Is Dependent on Ki-RasA Expression
Although all of the above-reported results support the idea that
aldosterone activates Ki-RasA via transcriptional control mediated by
nuclear steroid receptors, it is unclear whether the aldosterone-sensitive MAPK signaling reported in Figures 2-4 is in
fact dependent on induction of Ki-RasA. Experiments in Figure 6 directly test the link between
aldosterone-dependent induction of Ki-RasA and steroid-dependent
activation of MAPK signaling. The typical Western blots in Figure 6A
are of lysates extracted from cells treated with aldosterone (1.5 µm;
control) and aldosterone after pretreatment (24 h, 10 µM) with sense
and antisense Ki-rasA oligonucleotides. Use of these
oligonucleotides in A6 cells has been described previously (Stockand
et al., 1999c
). The top blot in Figure 6A was probed with
anti-K-Ras2A antibody and demonstrates the efficacy of the antisense
oligonucleotide to decrease Ki-RasA levels. Ki-RasA levels in the
antisense group were ~40% of those in the control and sense groups
(n = 6). In response to Ras signaling, Raf and MAPK become
phosphorylated. The top middle blot in Figure 6A was probed with
anti-phospho-Raf antibody and demonstrates that the Ki-ras
antisense oligonucleotide attenuates aldosterone-sensitive phosphorylation of Raf. Phospho-Raf levels in the antisense group were
<20% of those in the control and sense groups (n = 3).
Similarly, as shown by the bottom middle blot, antisense inhibited
aldosterone-dependent activation of MAPK with phospho-MAPK levels in
the antisense group being <25% of those in the control and sense
groups (n = 3). In contrast, as shown by the bottom blot,
antisense had no effect on total MAPK levels with all three groups
having similar levels of MAPK.
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The representative Western blot in Figure 6B shows the effects of
aldosterone on two distinct clonal A6 cell lines (DNRas1 and DNRas2)
stably expressing corticosteroid-inducible dominant-negative RasN17.
For such experiments (n = 2), confluent cells were treated with
vehicle (CON) or aldosterone (ALDO) for 2 h. This blot, which contains equal amounts of total protein for each lysate, was probed with anti-Ras antibody and demonstrates that aldosterone increases total Ras levels in these clonal lines. Because aldosterone has little
effect on total Ras expression in untransfected A6 cells (Figure 1A),
these results demonstrate that these clonal lines stably express
corticosteroid-inducible DNRasN17. The effects of aldosterone on
activation of MAPK in these two clonal lines were determined next
(Figure 6C). This typical Western blot (n = 2), which contained
lysates with equal amounts of total protein from control cells and
cells stably expressing inducible DNRasN17 treated with vehicle (
)
and aldosterone (+) for 2 h, was probed with anti-phospho-MAPK
antibody (top). This blot was subsequently stripped and reprobed with
anti-MAPK antibody (bottom). In A6 cells stably expressing inducible
DNRasN17, aldosterone had less of an effect on activation of MAPK
compared with untransfected cells. Interestingly, stable cells had
elevated levels of phospho-MAPK in the absence of aldosterone with
steroid actually decreasing these levels. This may reflect a feedback
response to chronically depressed MAPK signaling due to DNRasN17 leak.
Nonetheless, these results show that for aldosterone to stimulate MAPK
signaling, Raf kinase must be available to Ki-RasA, which it is not in
the presence of DNRasN17. These results also are consistent with those in Figure 6A and together suggest that Ki-RasA transduces the aldosterone signal onto the MAPK cascade.
Peak Activation of MAP Kinase Cascade by Aldosterone-stimulated Ki-RasA Is Delayed and Prolonged
The experiments in Figure 7
temporally map the actions of aldosterone on MAPK signaling at several
discrete levels within the transduction cascade. The representative
Western blot of Figure 7A shows that whereas aldosterone increases the
amount of active (phosphorylated) MAPK, it does not affect the total
cellular pool of MAPK. For these blots, each lane contained 50 µg of
total cellular protein, and the aldosterone (1.5 µM) treatment time
is indicated in hours. For this set of experiments, cells representing
time 0 were washed with vehicle 2 h before extraction. No
difference was observed between time zero and wash for these and all
other experiments. The top blot in this experiment was stripped after being probed with anti-phospho-MAPK (ERK 1/2) antibody and subsequently reprobed with anti-MAPK 1/2 antibody (bottom blot).
|
The blots in Figure 7B show that similar to MAPK, aldosterone increases the levels of phospho-Raf compared with total cellular Raf. These blots contain lysate from cells treated with aldosterone for the indicate times (in hours). Top and bottom blots were probed with anti-phospho-(Ser259)-Raf and anti-Raf antibody, respectively. Each lane contained ~50 µg of total protein.
The actions of aldosterone on downstream effectors of the MAPK cascade are shown in Figure 7C. These Western blots are of the same lysates (similar to that for Raf and phospho-Raf in 7B from the indicated time points after aldosterone treatment. Each lane contained 50 µg of total protein. Top, middle, and bottom blots were probed with anti-phospho-RSK-1 (p90 ribosomal S6 kinase; also referred to as MAPKAP kinase-1), Fra-2, and MKP-1 antibody, respectively. Clearly, all three of these MAPK effector proteins are either activated/phosphorylated, as for RSK-1, or induced, for Fra-2 and MKP-1, in response to aldosterone.
The summary plots of Figure 7D show relative changes in Ki-RasA
(inverted triangles), phospho-MAPK (diamonds), and MAPK (squares) levels in response to aldosterone at 0-, 0.5-, 1-, 2-, 4-, and 6-h time
points. Also shown in this graph are the effects of aldosterone on
Na+ transport (current, circles) across A6 cell
monolayers at each time point. Figure 7E shows diary plots of relative
changes in phospho-Raf (circles) and total Raf (gray triangles) in
response to aldosterone. Also shown in this graph are the temporal
actions of aldosterone on expression of the MAPK effectors Fra-2
(inverted triangles) and MKP-1 (diamonds). Included, in addition, are
the effects of aldosterone on phosphorylation of the MAPK effector RSK-1 (squares). An expanded time course for aldosterone actions of
affecters and effectors of MAPK is included in Table
1.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The present results support a novel mechanism whereby aldosterone
induces Ki-RasA expression at the level of transcription and then
through stoichiometric increases in the levels of active, GTP-complexed
Ki-RasA stimulates the MAPK cascade. Figure
8 compares this genomic mechanism with
the classic mechanism initiated by traditional mitogens. Traditional
mitogens, such as serum, in contrast, stimulate MAPK signaling via a
mechanism involving posttranslational control of active, GTP-complexed
Ras levels without effects on absolute Ras levels. Compared with the
classic mechanism, the distinct but possibly complimentary genomic
mechanism activated by aldosterone leads to delayed but prolonged MAPK
signaling. It is speculated that the delayed but prolonged MAPK
signaling in response steroids will differentially affect cellular
activity compared with traditional mitogens.
|
Aldosterone to Ki-RasA
Aldosterone increases both Ki-RasA mRNA and protein levels in
amphibian renal epithelial cells (Spindler et al., 1997
;
Spindler and Verrey, 1999
; Stockand et al., 1999c
). The
current results in Figure 1 are consistent with this finding. The
analogous findings in mammals, however, have been more controversial
(reviewed in Loffing et al., 2001
; Stockand, 2002
) with
corticosteroids increasing Ki-ras and Ki-RasA expression in
mammalian colonic and mammary epithelial cells (Strawhecker et
al., 1989
; Neades et al., 1991
; Shekhar and Miller,
1994
; Pethe and Shekhar, 1999
; Fuller, personal communication) and
cardiac fibroblasts (Stockand and Meszaros, 2002
), but not kidney
epithelia (Ramage et al., 2000
; Verrey, personal
communication). The underlying molecular and cellular basis for these
apparent discrepancies are currently unclear, but may be related to
similarly undetermined mechanisms resulting in tissue-selective
aldosterone induction of other proteins, such as ENaC and serum and
glucocorticoid-inducible kinase (reviewed in Stockand, 2002
).
Nevertheless, in A6 cells and in the heterologous Xenopus
laevis oocyte expression system, Ki-RasA activates ENaC, which is
one final effector of aldosterone signaling in epithelial cells
(Mastroberardino et al., 1998
; Stockand et al.,
1999c
; Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
).
The molecular basis whereby aldosterone induces Ki-RasA has not been described. Similarly, it also is unclear whether merely increasing absolute Ki-RasA levels in response to aldosterone is sufficient to activate Ki-RasA leading to dependent stimulation of its effector MAPK cascades. Results in Figure 1 demonstrate that aldosterone increases active, GTP-bound Ki-RasA levels proportionately with absolute Ki-RasA levels. This is consistent with a mechanism where through mass action, aldosterone-induced Ki-RasA leads to concomitant increases in the active pool of Ki-RasA. Results in Figures 2, 4, 5, and 6 are consistent with this aldosterone-increased active pool of Ki-RasA then subsequently stimulating effector MAPK signaling.
The results in Figure 5 identify a putative cis-acting
element/region (
165-153 for mouse c-Ki-ras2) within the
Ki-ras gene that possibly bestows aldosterone-responsiveness
at the level of transcription to the Ras
MAPK signaling cascade.
Sequence analysis of this region of mouse c-Ki-ras2 reveals
the presence of several potential sites responsive to corticosteroids
with one hexanucleotide (TGTTCT;
50 to
45) half-site identical to those modulating corticosteroid-responsiveness in other genes (Strawhecker et al., 1989
). This hexanucleotide half-site is
the most highly conserved portion of the palindromic GRE
(5'-GGTACAnnnTGTTCT-3') and has been shown to bind GR and
trans-activate in response to activated receptor
(Strawhecker et al., 1989
). It is provocative that this
half-site contained in the noncoding region is absolutely conserved in
sequence identity and relative position in the mouse, rat, and human
Ki-ras genes (see accession numbers S39586, X74502, and
AH005283, respectively). Sequence data for the corresponding region in
the X. laevis Ki-ras gene has not been published
(see accession number Y12715); therefore, it currently is unclear
whether Ki-ras in this species also contains a similar element.
The Ha-ras gene also contains conserved regions similar to
those in the
165-153 region of mouse Ki-ras. In addition,
Ha-ras is induced by corticosteroids in some tissues, but
pointedly not induced in renal and colonic epithelia (Spindler et
al., 1997
; Stockand, 2002
; Fuller, personal communication). It
currently is unclear how common aldosterone effects on Ha-Ras
expression are and what are the underlying molecular bases, if any,
allowing for discretionary induction of Ki-RasA vs. Ha-Ras in response to aldosterone and other corticosteroids in a tissue- and
species-specific manner. The effects of Ha-Ras on aldosterone
effectors, moreover, have not been investigated. Although we observe a
small but significant increase in total Ras levels in response to
aldosterone (Figure 1; Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
), it is not
clear what fraction of this increase results from induction of Ki-RasA
vs. Ha-Ras. However, the effects of aldosterone on MAPK signaling in A6
cells reported in the current study (Figure 6) are abolished by
inhibiting Ki-RasA expression with an antisense oligonucleotide,
suggesting that this species of Ras and not Ha-Ras is the primary
mediator of aldosterone actions in these cells. These findings are
consistent with previous findings showing that Ki-RasA is necessary and
sufficient to reconstitute, in part, aldosterone actions on ENaC
(Mastroberardino et al., 1998
; Stockand et al.,
1999c
; Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
).
Ki-RasA to MAPK
The current study is the first to directly link the effects of aldosterone on Ki-RasA expression with activation of the MAPK cascade. Figure 2 shows, using an in vitro assay, that aldosterone increases MAPK activity in A6 cells. Activity peaked between 1 and 2 h and began to wane by 4 h. Similar results were observed when activation of MAPK signaling was assessed using an in vivo assay of MAPK phosphorylation (Figures 3 and 7). In contrast to the time course of aldosterone effects on MAPK signaling, the classic mitogen, serum, stimulated this cascade much quicker, reaching peak activation within the first 30 min and waning thereafter (Figure 3).
An alternative to aldosterone affecting the MAPK cascade through
genomic actions dependent on induction of Ki-RasA expression is that
this steroid activates MAPK signaling independent of its nuclear
effects. Indeed, Gekle et al. (2001)
report that aldosterone modulates Na+/H+ exchange
in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells through MAPK signaling, and that due
to the rapidity of this action it is likely independent of steroid
effects on gene expression. Similarly, Manegold et al.
(1999)
report that aldosterone, independent of modulating gene
expression, increases phospho-MAPK levels within 3 to 5 min with levels
waning soon thereafter. We believe that the current results are more
consistent with aldosterone activating the MAPK cascade in A6 cells via
a genomic mechanism for several reasons. This is particularly true when
the maximal effects of steroid are considered. First, as mentioned
above, absolute and active Ki-RasA levels increased by the same amount
in response to aldosterone (Figure 1), and aldosterone's effects on
MAPK signaling at peak activation are entirely dependent on Ki-RasA
expression and activation of its downstream effectors, such as Raf
(Figure 6) and MEK (Figure 4). Second, activation (phosphorylation) of
MAPK in response to aldosterone was not apparent until 30 min after
treatment (Figure 3). Third, at all time points assayed the stimulatory
effects of aldosterone on phosphorylation of MAPK were attenuated by
treatment with the nuclear corticosteroid receptor antagonist RU486
(Figure 3). Similarly, the maximum stimulatory effects of aldosterone (at 2 h) on phosphorylation of MAPK and MAPK activity (Figures 3
and 4) were sensitive to blockade of nuclear corticosteroid receptor,
transcription, and translation. These results strongly support the
contention that for aldosterone to affect MAPK signaling in A6 cells,
its genomic actions are absolutely required. However, it was not our
intention to investigate nongenomic regulation of MAPK signaling by
aldosterone and thus, our experimental design cannot definitively
exclude this possibility for the earlier time points (<30 min; see
below). It is possible that in the current study there was a nongenomic
response superimposed on a slower developing genomic response.
Further support for a genomic mechanism driving the activation of MAPK
in response to aldosterone observed in the current study is provided by
comparison of the aldosterone-dependent time course of MAPK activity
and phosphorylation vs. that of serum (Figures 2 and 3). Presumably, as
shown previously for aldosterone (Manegold et al., 1999
;
Gekle et al., 2001
), the nongenomic effects of this steroid
would have a rapid time course more similar to traditional mitogens.
This is not the case in the current study. We find that aldosterone
activates the MAPK cascade via a similar genomic mechanism dependent on
induction of Ki-RasA in rat cardiac fibroblasts (Stockand and Meszaros,
2002
). It is not clear why some cells respond to aldosterone via
nongenomic activation of the MAPK cascade and others with a genomic
mechanism. It is likely that these complimentary mechanisms are
manifested in a cell-specific manner. Importantly, the systemic and
cellular effects of aldosterone on classic target tissues, such as the
distal nephron and colon, are mediated primarily through the genomic
actions of this steroid (reviewed in Booth et al., 2002
).
Further comparison of the maximal effect of aldosterone on MAPK activity (Figure 2) and activation of MAPK (Figures 3 and 7 and Table 1) shows that MAPK activity and phosphorylation increase ~12 and ~2-fold, respectively. This difference may reflect signal amplification where a unit increase in MAPK phosphorylation yields a higher increase in activity. Comparison also of the effects of aldosterone on MAPK activity and phosphorylation at the 5-min time point shows that although MAPK activity already has increased by 5 min, there is no apparent increase in phosphorylation of MAPK. At first glance, the rapid effects of aldosterone on MAPK activity seem to be consistent with an early nongenomic response superimposed on a genomic response. We do not believe this to be the case, as argued above. Moreover, it is not commonly accepted that A6 cells have a nongenomic response to aldosterone. It is likely that, although performed in the presence of several different kinase inhibitors, the in vitro assay used to quantify aldosterone actions on MAPK activity was somewhat biased by the presence of uninhibited kinases or other cellular factors that either directly impinge upon phosphorylation of MBP or MAPK activity when taken out of cellular context. However, it also is possible that the assay of MAPK activity was more sensitive than that assessing activation of MAPK. The results showing that MAPK activity is increased 12-fold, whereas MAPK phosphorylation increased only 2-fold by 2 h would also be consistent with this possibility. If this is the case then nongenomic actions of aldosterone on MAPK signaling in A6 cells during the first 30 min or so cannot be wholly excluded by the current results. However, if a nongenomic response was superimposed on a slower developing genomic response we would have expected aldosterone-stimulated MAPK activity to peak at two distinct time points, which was clearly not the case. Nevertheless, the current results definitively demonstrate that peak activation of MAPK signaling at the 2-h time point in response to aldosterone is absolutely dependent on a genomic event and induction of Ki-RasA.
Time Course and Effects of Aldosterone-stimulated MAPK Signaling
The current results show for the first time the temporal effects
of aldosterone on the active levels of several different affecters and
effectors of MAPK (Figure 7 and Table 1). Similar to MAPK,
phosphorylation of Raf in response to aldosterone was delayed and
prolonged. Phosphorylation of Raf was dominant between 2 and 6 h
and thus Raf was phosphorylated (on Ser259) at a time point later than
phosphorylation of MAPK. This finding is consistent with Raf being
phosphorylated in response to aldosterone in a negative feedback
manner. In fact, the Western blots in Figure 7 actually assessed
negative regulation of Raf that had previously been active. The
serine/threonine kinase Akt/PKB an effector of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) is responsible for
phosphorylation of active Raf at Ser259, which then leads to
inactivation (Rommel et al., 1999
; Zimmermann and Moelling,
1999
). PI3-K is also a first effector of Ki-Ras (Yan et al.,
1998
) and activated by aldosterone (Blazer-Yost et al.,
1999
). Thus, this feedback regulation of Raf may reflect parallel
activation by aldosterone-induced Ki-RasA of both the MAPK and PI3-K
signaling cascades. Consistent with these findings are those showing
that the MEK inhibitors PD-98059 and U-0126 attenuate
aldosterone-sensitive phosphorylation of MAPK but not Raf; and that the
PI3-K inhibitor LY 294002 decreases aldosterone-sensitive Raf
phosphorylation but not phosphorylation of MAPK (our unpublished observations).
In addition to MAPK, MEK, and Raf, aldosterone increased the levels of
phospho-RSK1 beginning at 30 min, reaching a peak by 4 h. RSK-1 is
well known to be a target regulated at the posttranslational level in
response to MAPK signaling. Interestingly, aldosterone induced
expression of Fra-2 and MKP-1, which are known to be regulated at the
level of transcription in response to MAPK signaling. Fra-2 is a
transcription factor related to Fos. Thus, this action may enable
aldosterone to secondarily impinge upon subsequent rounds of
transcription. An alternative mechanism is that aldosterone directly
affects transcription/translation of these proteins independent of MAPK
signaling. Indeed, recent results from Spindler et al. (1999)
support such a mechanism of aldosterone action on Fra-2. To
date, a direct effect of aldosterone on MKP-1 transcription/translation has not been demonstrated. Interestingly, induction of MKP-1, which is
a phosphatase that dephosphorylates MAPK in a negative feedback manner
to dampen MAPK signaling, in conjunction with feedback phosphorylation
of Raf on Ser259 by Akt may result in the deactivation of MAPK
signaling after 4 h observed in the current study.
All of the current results are consistent with the idea that activation of the MAPK cascade in response to aldosterone is mediated by induction of Ki-RasA and activation of signaling constituents, such as Raf and MEK, that lie between this Small, monomeric G protein and MAPK. Consequently, after increases in total Ki-RasA and active Ki-RasA:GTP levels, aldosterone-dependent MAPK signaling follows a normal progression with the major exception being that signaling is prolonged. The explanation for prolonged MAPK signaling in response to aldosterone clearly then must come from the mechanism of initiation: transcriptional control of Ki-RasA. Such a mechanism is distinct from that used by classic mitogens, and leads to a delayed but prolonged signaling event. The delay results from the latent period required for increased transcription/translation of Ki-RasA. Prolongation results from stoichiometric increases in total and active Ki-RasA with absolute but not relative levels of Ki-RasA:GTP increasing. MAPK activity in response to aldosterone would then primarily be dependent on Ki-RasA protein turnover and feedback regulation. It is predicted that prolonged steroid-dependent MAPK signaling produces unique changes in cellular activity compared with a classic response.
Although it is known that activation of Ki-RasA by aldosterone is
necessary and sufficient for induced Na+
transport and ENaC activity in A6 cells and for ENaC activation when
this G protein is overexpressed along with the channel in X. laevis oocytes (Mastroberardino et al., 1998
; Stockand
et al., 1999c
; Al-Baldawi et al., 2000
), the
actions of MAPK signaling on transport and ENaC seem to be inhibitory
(Zentner et al., 1998
; Lin et al., 1999
). Thus,
it can be speculated that the prolonged activation of the MAPK cascade
described in the current study is either a component of a feedback
system or impacts Na+-transporting epithelia
independently of directly affecting Na+
transport. The possible physiological and pathophysiological roles for
genomic activation of MAPK signaling by corticosteroids at the tissue
and systemic levels remain to be elucidated.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
Pravina Patel is recognized for excellent technical assistance, and Drs. Roger T. Worrell and Mark Shapiro for critical evaluation of this work. This study was supported by National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, R01-DK59594), American Heart Association (National, SDG 01-30008N), American Society of Nephrology (Carl W. Gottschalk Research Scholar Grant), American Society of Physiology (Lazaro Mandel Award), and competitive intramural (HHMI, Initial Review Group, and CREF) support from UTHSCSA (to J.D.S.).
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FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: stockand{at}uthscsa.edu.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.E02-05-0260. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E02-05-0260.
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