Endogenous Protease Activation of ENaC
Open Access
- 26 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 126 (4) , 339-352
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.200509285
Abstract
Endogenous serine proteases have been reported to control the reabsorption of Na+ by kidney- and lung-derived epithelial cells via stimulation of electrogenic Na+ transport mediated by the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC). In this study we investigated the effects of aprotinin on ENaC single channel properties using transepithelial fluctuation analysis in the amphibian kidney epithelium, A6. Aprotinin caused a time- and concentration-dependent inhibition (84 ± 10.5%) in the amiloride-sensitive sodium transport (INa) with a time constant of 18 min and half maximal inhibition constant of 1 μM. Analysis of amiloride analogue blocker–induced fluctuations in INa showed linear rate–concentration plots with identical blocker on and off rates in control and aprotinin-inhibited conditions. Verification of open-block kinetics allowed for the use of a pulse protocol method (Helman, S.I., X. Liu, K. Baldwin, B.L. Blazer-Yost, and W.J. Els. 1998. Am. J. Physiol. 274:C947–C957) to study the same cells under different conditions as well as the reversibility of the aprotinin effect on single channel properties. Aprotinin caused reversible changes in all three single channel properties but only the change in the number of open channels was consistent with the inhibition of INa. A 50% decrease in INa was accompanied by 50% increases in the single channel current and open probability but an 80% decrease in the number of open channels. Washout of aprotinin led to a time-dependent restoration of INa as well as the single channel properties to the control, pre-aprotinin, values. We conclude that protease regulation of INa is mediated by changes in the number of open channels in the apical membrane. The increase in the single channel current caused by protease inhibition can be explained by a hyperpolarization of the apical membrane potential as active Na+ channels are retrieved. The paradoxical increase in channel open probability caused by protease inhibition will require further investigation but does suggest a potential compensatory regulatory mechanism to maintain INa at some minimal threshold value.Keywords
This publication has 66 references indexed in Scilit:
- Na Self Inhibition of Human Epithelial Na ChannelThe Journal of general physiology, 2002
- Mechanisms of the inhibition of epithelial Na+ channels by CFTR and purinergic stimulationKidney International, 2001
- Non-coordinate Regulation of Endogenous Epithelial Sodium Channel (ENaC) Subunit Expression at the Apical Membrane of A6 Cells in Response to Various Transporting ConditionsPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Diversity and regulation of amiloride-sensitive Na+ channelsKidney International, 1996
- Epithelial Na Channels: Function and DiversityAnnual Review of Physiology, 1992
- Activation of epithelial Na channels by hormonal and autoregulatory mechanisms of action.The Journal of general physiology, 1991
- Blocker-related changes of channel density. Analysis of a three-state model for apical Na channels of frog skin.The Journal of general physiology, 1990
- Competitive blocking of epithelial sodium channels by organic cations: The relationship between macroscopic and microscopic inhibition constantsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1983
- The role of sodium-channel density in the natriferic response of the toad urinary bladder to an antidiuretic hormoneThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1982
- Concentration dependence of currents through single sodium-selective pores in frog skinNature, 1979