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COMMENTARY |
Department of Biological Sciences, Biomedical Research Institute, The University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK1 Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, Leicester Medical School, Maurice Shock Building, Leicester LE1 9HN, UK
(Correspondence should be addressed to R Bland; Email: rosemary.bland{at}warwick.ac.uk)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| SGK1 |
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| SGK1 and ENaC in the development of hypertension |
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The ENaC is a member of the ENaC/degenerin gene family (Kellenberger & Schild 2002). Five ENaC subunits have been cloned namely
-, β-,
-,
- and
ENaC ( Ji et al. 2006). Although it appears that not all subunits are necessary to form a functional channel (Bonny et al. 1999), studies suggest that the
-, β- and
-subunits are required. Proposed stoichiometries include either 2
/1β/1
or alternatively 3
/3β/3
(Kosari et al. 1998, Snyder et al. 1998). Recent studies have highlighted additional potential interactions with the
-subunit ( Ji et al. 2006) and suggest that ENaC is a trimeric channel ( Jasti et al. 2007).
The development of some forms of hypertension is clearly linked to increased ENaC-mediated Na+ reabsorption (reviewed in Pratt 2005). Activating mutations in the β- and
-subunits of ENaC are responsible for Liddle's syndrome, a severe form of low-renin and low-aldosterone hypertension (Liddle et al. 1963, Shimkets et al. 1994, Hansson et al. 1995). Likewise, amiloride and spironolactone (ENaC and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists) are effective in reducing blood pressure (Saha et al. 2005). However, the effect of SGK1 on salt wasting and blood pressure are not as severe as seen in either mineralocorticoid or ENaC mutants (Hummler et al. 1996, Berger et al. 1998), although it is interesting to note that inactivation of
ENaC in the cortical collecting duct alone does not alter or impair sodium balance (Rubera et al. 2003). In the salt-sensitive Dahl rat (a model of salt-sensitive hypertension), SGK1 expression is increased (Farjah et al. 2003). Likewise, genetic variants of the Sgk1 gene correlate with slightly increased blood pressure (Busjahn et al. 2002, von Wowern et al. 2005). However, the picture in mice lacking SGK1 is less clear and studies indicate that SGK1 is not solely responsible for the ENaC-mediated changes in blood pressure (reviewed in Lang et al. 2006). Lack of SGK1 has little effect on salt or fluid retention under normal dietary conditions, but under low-salt diets the SGK1–/– mice are unable to adequately retain Na+ and so fail to maintain their blood pressure (Wulff et al. 2002). Likewise, a high-salt diet in SGK1–/– mice did not increase blood pressure (Huang et al. 2006a,b, while in mice fed deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOAC) on a high-salt diet, blood pressure significantly increased in both wild-type and SGK1-knockout animals (Artunc et al. 2006, Vallon et al. 2006). Interestingly, after 7 weeks of treatment, the SGK1–/– mice failed to show any further increase in blood pressure and did not develop renal scarring suggesting that a lack of SGK1 was protective against a DOAC/high-salt diet (Artunc et al. 2006). SGK3-knockout mice also display a mild phenotype with normal sodium handling and glucose tolerance (McCormick et al. 2004). It appears that SGK1 and SGK3 are not replacing each other, as double knockout mice (SGK1 and SGK3) do not have significantly different phenotypes from the single isoform knockouts (Grahammer et al. 2006).
SGK1 has been shown to increase ENaC-mediated Na+ transport by a number of mechanisms including increased apical membrane localisation of the ENaC, inhibition of ENaC degradation (Debonneville et al. 2001) and stimulation of ENaC transcription (Boyd & Naray-Fejes-Toth 2005). Studies examining the mechanism of SGK1-mediated modification of ENaC function have implicated the neural precursor cell expressed, developmentally downregulated gene 4 isoform (NEDD4-2) as a negative regulator of ENaC cell surface expression (Kamynina & Staub 2002). NEDD4-2 is an ubiquitin ligase that directs proteasome mediated degradation of ENaCs (Malik et al. 2005). Activation of SGK1 via PIK3 leads to sequential phosphorylation of SGK1 at the Ser422 and Thr256 residues via the two downstream 3-phosphoinositide-dependent kinases PDPK2 and PDPK1 respectively (Kobayashi & Cohen 1999, Park et al. 1999). Following activation by aldosterone, SGK1 binds to and phosphorylates NEDD4-2, impairing formation of the ENaC–NEDD4-2 complex and promoting Na+ transport (Debonneville et al. 2001, Flores et al. 2005). Interestingly, phosphorylation of NEDD4-2 induces ubiquitination and degradation of SGK1 suggesting that SGK1 and NEDD4-2 are able to regulate each other (Zhou & Snyder 2005). Thus, it has been suggested that in the absence of SGK1, the physical association between NEDD4-2 and ENaC results in ubiquitination of ENaC subunits inducing channel retrieval from the plasma membrane and subsequent proteasomal degradation (reviewed by Staub & Verrey 2005). However, studies have indicated that SGK1–NEDD4-2 interaction and NEDD4-2 phosphorylation are not the sole regulators of ENaC function, with aldosterone increasing SGK1-mediated NEDD4-2 phosphorylation, albeit to a lesser extent than SGK1 phosphorylation (Flores et al. 2005). NEDD4-2 protein expression is also reduced by aldosterone and a low-salt diet (Loffing-Cueni et al. 2006). Additionally, studies in Xenopus oocytes have shown direct regulation of ENaC open probability by NEDD4-2 (Michlig et al. 2005). Likewise, it appears that SGK1 can stimulate ENaC activity independent of NEDD4-2 interaction (Diakov & Korbmacher 2004).
| SGK1 in cell volume regulation |
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| SGK1 in diabetic nephropathy |
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Hyperosmotic urine will facilitate osmotically induced cell shrinkage in the renal epithelial cells. This in turn will activate SGK1 (Bell et al. 2000) increasing both ENaC-mediated Na+ and water uptake thereby inducing a regulatory cell volume increase. However, SGK1 has been shown to alter expression and insertion of the glucose transporters (GLUT1) and sodium glucose co-transporter type 1 (SGLT1) into the cell membrane (Dieter et al. 2004, Palmada et al. 2006). As a result, glucose is able to enter the hexosamine or the polyol pathway. In the polyol pathway, glucose, in the presence of aldose reductase, is reduced to sorbitol, an organic osmolyte, which increases intracellular osmolarity leading to cell swelling (Schüttert et al. 2002). This would instigate a regulatory cell volume decrease, mediated most likely by increased TRPV4 activity and a concomitant reduction in SGK1 activity. Evidence suggests that urinary sorbitol excretion is increased in diabetic rats, indicating increased conversion of glucose to sorbitol. Administration of the aldose reductase inhibitor, epalrestat, reduced both total body and urinary sorbitol levels (Tsugawa et al. 2004).
Increased urine flow rates may also regulate ENaC-mediated Na+ transport (Satlin et al. 2001, Morimoto et al. 2006) through direct modulation of the ENaC or indirect effects on cell signalling. Numerous studies have reported elevated levels of cytosolic calcium in patients with diabetes (reviewed in Symonian et al. 1998), an effect linked to hyperglycaemia in both proximal and distal tubule cells of the kidney (Symonian et al. 1998, Hills et al. 2006a). Cell swelling in the proximal tubule is also associated with increased [Ca2+]i and this is linked to activation of phospholipase C, the generation of inositol trisphosphate and activation of PKC (O'Neil & Leng 1997). We have demonstrated that cells in the human collecting duct (HCD cells) are sensitive to touch (a surrogate for cell membrane stretch and cell volume expansion) and that this is associated with a TRPV4 mediated rise in [Ca2+]i (Hills et al. 2006b). In HCD cells, this increase in [Ca2+]i rapidly propagates to adjacent cells via the gap junction protein connexin-43 and it is this Ca2+-induced signal that is thought to aid cell volume recovery through activation of K+ and Cl– channels subsequently restoring cell volume. However, constitutive activation of TRPV4 under pathological conditions, in those cells exposed to an increased flow rate, may result in a constant state of cell shrinkage and high [Ca2+]i levels. In an attempt to respond and counteract the effects of TRPV4, SGK1 expression will be induced, a response stimulated further by the increased [Ca2+]i levels generated in response to TRPV4 activation. While there to aid the cell volume recovery process, a rise in [Ca2+]i will induce both SGK1 and
ENaC expression thus further exacerbating the state of aberrant renal Na+ handling.
It is also interesting to consider the role of SGK1 in fibrosis, as deposition of extracellular matrix is a hallmark of diabetic nephropathy (Mason & Wahab 2003). TGFβ1 is thought to be key in this process (reviewed in Reeves & Andreoli 2000) and is increased by glucose in renal cells (Di Paolo et al. 1996, Hoffman et al. 1998, Hills et al. 2006a). Whilst the downstream targets of TGFβ1 mediating the underlying pathophysiology of diabetic nephropathy remain largely elusive, cell hypertrophy and increased intracellular Na+ observed in response to elevated TGFβ1 levels may in part be mediated by increased SGK1 activity. SGK1 is upregulated by TGFβ1 in a number of cell types (Waldegger et al. 1999, Lang et al. 2000, Hills et al. 2006a). In addition, glucose-induced changes in SGK1 mediate fibronectin formation in diabetic mice (Feng et al. 2005). It is interesting to consider the crosstalk between the TGFβ1 and MAPK signalling pathway highlighting utilisation of the same signalling pathway as that initiated in response to osmotic stress. TGFβ1 formation together with osmotically driven increases in SGK1 provides a link between poorly controlled plasma glucose and the development of excess ENaC-mediated Na+ resorption that underlies secondary hypertension and nephron damage seen in people with diabetes.
| Concluding comments |
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| Declaration of interest |
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| Funding |
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| Acknowledgements |
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| References |
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Received in final form 23 July 2008
Accepted 24 July 2008
Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 24 July 2008
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