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Featured researches published by Dmitri Firsov.


The EMBO Journal | 1998

The heterotetrameric architecture of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC)

Dmitri Firsov; Ivan Gautschi; Anne-Marie Mérillat; Bernard C. Rossier; Laurent Schild

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is a key element for the maintenance of sodium balance and the regulation of blood pressure. Three homologous ENaC subunits (α, β and γ) assemble to form a highly Na+‐selective channel. However, the subunit stoichiometry of ENaC has not yet been solved. Quantitative analysis of cell surface expression of ENaC α, β and γ subunits shows that they assemble according to a fixed stoichiometry, with α ENaC as the most abundant subunit. Functional assays based on differential sensitivities to channel blockers elicited by mutations tagging each α, β and γ subunit are consistent with a four subunit stoichiometry composed of two α, one β and one γ. Expression of concatameric cDNA constructs made of different combinations of ENaC subunits confirmed the four subunit channel stoichiometry and showed that the arrangement of the subunits around the channel pore consists of two α subunits separated by β and γ subunits.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Transcriptome of a mouse kidney cortical collecting duct cell line: effects of aldosterone and vasopressin.

Maya Robert-Nicoud; Marjorie Flahaut; Jean-Marc Elalouf; Marie Nicod; Miguel Salinas; Marcelle Bens; Alain Doucet; Patrick Wincker; François Artiguenave; Jean-Daniel Horisberger; Alain Vandewalle; Bernard C. Rossier; Dmitri Firsov

Aldosterone and vasopressin are responsible for the final adjustment of sodium and water reabsorption in the kidney. In principal cells of the kidney cortical collecting duct (CCD), the integral response to aldosterone and the long-term functional effects of vasopressin depend on transcription. In this study, we analyzed the transcriptome of a highly differentiated mouse clonal CCD principal cell line (mpkCCDcl4) and the changes in the transcriptome induced by aldosterone and vasopressin. Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) was performed on untreated cells and on cells treated with either aldosterone or vasopressin for 4 h. The transcriptomes in these three experimental conditions were determined by sequencing 169,721 transcript tags from the corresponding SAGE libraries. Limiting the analysis to tags that occurred twice or more in the data set, 14,654 different transcripts were identified, 3,642 of which do not match known mouse sequences. Statistical comparison (at P < 0.05 level) of the three SAGE libraries revealed 34 AITs (aldosterone-induced transcripts), 29 ARTs (aldosterone-repressed transcripts), 48 VITs (vasopressin-induced transcripts) and 11 VRTs (vasopressin-repressed transcripts). A selection of the differentially-expressed, hormone-specific transcripts (5 VITs, 2 AITs and 1 ART) has been validated in the mpkCCDcl4 cell line either by Northern blot hybridization or reverse transcription–PCR. The hepatocyte nuclear transcription factor HNF-3-α (VIT39), the receptor activity modifying protein RAMP3 (VIT48), and the glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper protein (GILZ) (AIT28) are candidate proteins playing a role in physiological responses of this cell line to vasopressin and aldosterone.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

A mutation causing pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 identifies a conserved glycine that is involved in the gating of the epithelial sodium channel

Stefan Gründer; Dmitri Firsov; Sue S. Chang; Nicole Fowler Jaeger; Ivan Gautschi; Laurent Schild; Richard P. Lifton; Bernard C. Rossier

Pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 (PHA‐1) is an inherited disease characterized by severe neonatal salt‐wasting and caused by mutations in subunits of the amiloride‐sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). A missense mutation (G37S) of the human ENaC β subunit that causes loss of ENaC function and PHA‐1 replaces a glycine that is conserved in the N‐terminus of all members of the ENaC gene family. We now report an investigation of the mechanism of channel inactivation by this mutation. Homologous mutations, introduced into α, β or γ subunits, all significantly reduce macroscopic sodium channel currents recorded in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Quantitative determination of the number of channel molecules present at the cell surface showed no significant differences in surface expression of mutant compared with wild‐type channels. Single channel conductances and ion selectivities of the mutant channels were identical to that of wild‐type. These results suggest that the decrease in macroscopic Na currents is due to a decrease in channel open probability (Po), suggesting that mutations of a conserved glycine in the N‐terminus of ENaC subunits change ENaC channel gating, which would explain the disease pathophysiology. Single channel recordings of channels containing the mutant α subunit (αG95S) directly demonstrate a striking reduction in Po. We propose that this mutation favors a gating mode characterized by short‐open and long‐closed times. We suggest that determination of the gating mode of ENaC is a key regulator of channel activity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Molecular clock is involved in predictive circadian adjustment of renal function

Annie Mercier Zuber; Gabriel Centeno; Sylvain Pradervand; Svetlana Nikolaeva; Lionel Maquelin; Léonard Cardinaux; Olivier Bonny; Dmitri Firsov

Renal excretion of water and major electrolytes exhibits a significant circadian rhythm. This functional periodicity is believed to result, at least in part, from circadian changes in secretion/reabsorption capacities of the distal nephron and collecting ducts. Here, we studied the molecular mechanisms underlying circadian rhythms in the distal nephron segments, i.e., distal convoluted tubule (DCT) and connecting tubule (CNT) and the cortical collecting duct (CCD). Temporal expression analysis performed on microdissected mouse DCT/CNT or CCD revealed a marked circadian rhythmicity in the expression of a large number of genes crucially involved in various homeostatic functions of the kidney. This analysis also revealed that both DCT/CNT and CCD possess an intrinsic circadian timing system characterized by robust oscillations in the expression of circadian core clock genes (clock, bma11, npas2, per, cry, nr1d1) and clock-controlled Par bZip transcriptional factors dbp, hlf, and tef. The clock knockout mice or mice devoid of dbp/hlf/tef (triple knockout) exhibit significant changes in renal expression of several key regulators of water or sodium balance (vasopressin V2 receptor, aquaporin-2, aquaporin-4, αENaC). Functionally, the loss of clock leads to a complex phenotype characterized by partial diabetes insipidus, dysregulation of sodium excretion rhythms, and a significant decrease in blood pressure. Collectively, this study uncovers a major role of molecular clock in renal function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Glut9 is a major regulator of urate homeostasis and its genetic inactivation induces hyperuricosuria and urate nephropathy.

Frédéric Preitner; Olivier Bonny; Alexandra Laverrière; Samuel Rotman; Dmitri Firsov; Anabela Da Costa; Salima Metref; Bernard Thorens

Elevated plasma urate levels are associated with metabolic, cardiovascular, and renal diseases. Urate may also form crystals, which can be deposited in joints causing gout and in kidney tubules inducing nephrolithiasis. In mice, plasma urate levels are controlled by hepatic breakdown, as well as, by incompletely understood renal processes of reabsorption and secretion. Here, we investigated the role of the recently identified urate transporter, Glut9, in the physiological control of urate homeostasis using mice with systemic or liver-specific inactivation of the Glut9 gene. We show that Glut9 is expressed in the basolateral membrane of hepatocytes and in both apical and basolateral membranes of the distal nephron. Mice with systemic knockout of Glut9 display moderate hyperuricemia, massive hyperuricosuria, and an early-onset nephropathy, characterized by obstructive lithiasis, tubulointerstitial inflammation, and progressive inflammatory fibrosis of the cortex, as well as, mild renal insufficiency. In contrast, liver-specific inactivation of the Glut9 gene in adult mice leads to severe hyperuricemia and hyperuricosuria, in the absence of urate nephropathy or any structural abnormality of the kidney. Together, our data show that Glut9 plays a major role in urate homeostasis by its dual role in urate handling in the kidney and uptake in the liver.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Mutational Analysis of Cysteine-rich Domains of the Epithelium Sodium Channel (ENaC) IDENTIFICATION OF CYSTEINES ESSENTIAL FOR CHANNEL EXPRESSION AT THE CELL SURFACE

Dmitri Firsov; Maya Robert-Nicoud; Stefan Gruender; Laurent Schild; Bernard C. Rossier

One of the characteristic features of the structure of the epithelial sodium channel family (ENaC) is the presence of two highly conserved cysteine-rich domains (CRD1 and CRD2) in the large extracellular loops of the proteins. We have studied the role of CRDs in the functional expression of rat αβγ ENaC subunits by systematically mutating cysteine residues (singly or in combinations) into either serine or alanine. In the Xenopusoocyte expression system, mutations of two cysteines in CRD1 of α, β, or γ ENaC subunits led to a temperature-dependent inactivation of the channel. In CRD1, one of the cysteines of the rat αENaC subunit (Cys158) is homologous to Cys133 of the corresponding human subunit causing, when mutated to tyrosine (C133Y), pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1, a severe salt-loosing syndrome in neonates. In CRD2, mutation of two cysteines in α and β but not in the γ subunit also produced a temperature-dependent inactivation of the channel. The main features of the mutant cysteine channels are: (i) a decrease in cell surface expression of channel molecules that parallels the decrease in channel activity and (ii) a normal assembly or rate of degradation as assessed by nondenaturing co-immunoprecipitation of [35S]methionine-labeled channel protein. These data indicate that the two cysteines in CRD1 and CRD2 are not a prerequisite for subunit assembly and/or intrinsic channel activity. We propose that they play an essential role in the efficient transport of assembled channels to the plasma membrane.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Mineralocorticoid Effects in the Kidney: Correlation between αENaC, GILZ, and Sgk-1 mRNA Expression and Urinary Excretion of Na+ and K+

Olivier Muller; Rimma G. Parnova; Gabriel Centeno; Bernard C. Rossier; Dmitri Firsov; Jean-Daniel Horisberger

Aldosterone exerts its effects through interactions with two types of binding sites, the mineralocorticoid (MR) and the glucocorticoid (GR) receptors. Although both receptors are known to be involved in the anti-natriuretic response to aldosterone, the mechanisms of signal transduction leading to modulation of electrolyte transport are not yet fully understood. This study measured the Na(+) and K(+) urinary excretion and the mRNA levels of three known aldosterone-induced transcripts, the serum and glucocorticoid-induced kinase (Sgk-1), the alpha subunit of the epithelial Na(+) channel (alphaENaC), and the glucocorticoid-induced-leucine-zipper protein (GILZ) in the whole kidney and in isolated cortical collecting tubules of adrenalectomized rats treated with low doses of aldosterone and/or dexamethasone. The resulting plasma concentrations of both steroids were close to 1 nmol/L. Aldosterone, given with or without dexamethasone, induced anti-natriuresis and kaliuresis, whereas dexamethasone alone did not. GILZ and alphaENaC transcripts were higher after treatment with either or both hormones, whereas the mRNA abundance of Sgk-1 was increased in the cortical collecting tubule by aldosterone but not by dexamethasone. We conclude the increased expression of Sgk-1 in the cortical collecting tubules is a primary event in the early antinatriuretic and kaliuretic responses to physiologic concentrations of aldosterone. Induction of alphaENaC and/or GILZ mRNAs may play a permissive role in the enhancement of the early and/or late responses; these effects may be necessary for a full response but do not by themselves promote early changes in urinary Na(+) and K(+) excretion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

A Novel Neutrophil Elastase Inhibitor Prevents Elastase Activation and Surface Cleavage of the Epithelial Sodium Channel Expressed in Xenopus laevis Oocytes

Michael Harris; Dmitri Firsov; Grégoire Vuagniaux; M. Jackson Stutts; Bernard C. Rossier

The amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) constitutes a limiting step in sodium reabsorption across distal airway epithelium and controlling mucociliary clearance. ENaC is activated by serine proteases secreted in the extracellular milieu. In cystic fibrosis lungs, high concentrations of secreted neutrophil elastase (NE) are observed. hNE could activate ENaC and contribute to further decreased mucociliary clearance. The aims of this study were (i) to test the ability of an engineered human neutrophil elastase inhibitor (EPI-hNE4) to specifically inhibit the elastase activation of ENaC-mediated amiloride-sensitive currents (INa) and (ii) to examine the effect of elastase on cell surface expression of ENaC and its cleavage pattern (exogenous proteolysis). Oocytes were exposed to hNE (10–100 μg/ml) and/or trypsin (10 μg/ml) for 2–5 min in the presence or absence of EPI-hNE4 (0.7 μm). hNE activated INa 3.6-fold (p < 0.001) relative to non-treated hENaC-injected oocytes. EPI-hNE4 fully inhibited hNE-activated INa but had no effect on trypsin- or prostasin-activated INa. The co-activation of INa by hNE and trypsin was not additive. Biotinylation experiments revealed that cell surface γ ENaC (but not α or β ENaC) exposed to hNE for 2 min was cleaved (as a 67-kDa fragment) and correlated with increased INa. The elastase-induced exogenous proteolysis pattern is distinct from the endogenous proteolysis pattern induced upon preferential assembly, suggesting a causal relationship between γ ENaC cleavage and ENaC activation, taking place at the plasma membrane.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2009

Mouse GLUT9: evidences for a urate uniporter

Stéphanie Bibert; Solange Kharoubi Hess; Dmitri Firsov; Bernard Thorens; Käthi Geering; Jean-Daniel Horisberger; Olivier Bonny

GLUT9 (SLC2A9) is a newly described urate transporter whose function, characteristics, and localization have just started to be elucidated. Some transport properties of human GLUT9 have been studied in the Xenopus laevis oocyte expression system, but the type of transport (uniport, coupled transport system, stoichiometry ... .) is still largely unknown. We used the same experimental system to characterize in more detail the transport properties of mouse GLUT9, its sensitivity to several uricosuric drugs, and the specificities of two splice variants, mGLUT9a and mGLUT9b. [(14)C]urate uptake measurements show that both splice variants are high-capacity urate transporters and have a K(m) of approximately 650 microM. The well-known uricosuric agents benzbromarone (500 microM) and losartan (1 mM) inhibit GLUT9-mediated urate uptake by 90 and 50%, respectively. Surprisingly, phloretin, a glucose-transporter blocker, inhibits [(14)C]urate uptake by approximately 50% at 1 mM. Electrophysiological measurements suggest that urate transport by mouse GLUT9 is electrogenic and voltage dependent, but independent of the Na(+) and Cl(-) transmembrane gradients. Taken together, our results suggest that GLUT9 works as a urate (anion) uniporter. Finally, we show by RT-PCR performed on RNA from mouse kidney microdissected tubules that GLUT9a is expressed at low levels in proximal tubules, while GLUT9b is specifically expressed in distal convoluted and connecting tubules. Expression of mouse GLUT9 in the kidney differs from that of human GLUT9, which could account for species differences in urate handling.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

Small proline‐rich protein 1A is a gp130 pathway‐ and stress‐inducible cardioprotective protein

Sylvain Pradervand; Hideo Yasukawa; Olivier Muller; Harald Kjekshus; Tomoyuki Nakamura; Tara R. St. Amand; Toshitaka Yajima; Kiyoyuki Matsumura; Hervé Duplain; Mitsuo Iwatate; Sarah Woodard; Thierry Pedrazzini; John Ross; Dmitri Firsov; Bernard C. Rossier; Masahiko Hoshijima; Kenneth R. Chien

The interleukin‐6 cytokines, acting via gp130 receptor pathways, play a pivotal role in the reduction of cardiac injury induced by mechanical stress or ischemia and in promoting subsequent adaptive remodeling of the heart. We have now identified the small proline‐rich repeat proteins (SPRR) 1A and 2A as downstream targets of gp130 signaling that are strongly induced in cardiomyocytes responding to biomechanical/ischemic stress. Upregulation of SPRR1A and 2A was markedly reduced in the gp130 cardiomyocyte‐restricted knockout mice. In cardiomyocytes, MEK1/2 inhibitors prevented SPRR1A upregulation by gp130 cytokines. Furthermore, binding of NF‐IL6 (C/EBPβ) and c‐Jun to the SPRR1A promoter was observed after CT‐1 stimulation. Histological analysis revealed that SPRR1A induction after mechanical stress of pressure overload was restricted to myocytes surrounding piecemeal necrotic lesions. A similar expression pattern was found in postinfarcted rat hearts. Both in vitro and in vivo ectopic overexpression of SPRR1A protected cardiomyocytes against ischemic injury. Thus, this study identifies SPRR1A as a novel stress‐inducible downstream mediator of gp130 cytokines in cardiomyocytes and documents its cardioprotective effect against ischemic stress.

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