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Dive into the research topics where Gerardo Gamba is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerardo Gamba.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Molecular pathogenesis of inherited hypertension with hyperkalemia: The Na–Cl cotransporter is inhibited by wild-type but not mutant WNK4

Frederick H. Wilson; Kristopher T. Kahle; Ernesto Sabath; Maria D. Lalioti; Alicia K. Rapson; Robert S. Hoover; Steven C. Hebert; Gerardo Gamba; Richard P. Lifton

Mutations in the serine-threonine kinases WNK1 and WNK4 [with no lysine (K) at a key catalytic residue] cause pseudohypoaldosteronism type II (PHAII), a Mendelian disease featuring hypertension, hyperkalemia, hyperchloremia, and metabolic acidosis. Both kinases are expressed in the distal nephron, although the regulators and targets of WNK signaling cascades are unknown. The Cl− dependence of PHAII phenotypes, their sensitivity to thiazide diuretics, and the observation that they constitute a “mirror image” of the phenotypes resulting from loss of function mutations in the thiazide-sensitive Na–Cl cotransporter (NCCT) suggest that PHAII may result from increased NCCT activity due to altered WNK signaling. To address this possibility, we measured NCCT-mediated Na+ influx and membrane expression in the presence of wild-type and mutant WNK4 by heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Wild-type WNK4 inhibits NCCT-mediated Na-influx by reducing membrane expression of the cotransporter (22Na-influx reduced 50%, P < 1 × 10−9, surface expression reduced 75%, P < 1 × 10−14 in the presence of WNK4). This inhibition depends on WNK4 kinase activity, because missense mutations that abrogate kinase function prevent this effect. PHAII-causing missense mutations, which are remote from the kinase domain, also prevent inhibition of NCCT activity, providing insight into the pathophysiology of the disorder. The specificity of this effect is indicated by the finding that WNK4 and the carboxyl terminus of NCCT coimmunoprecipitate when expressed in HEK 293T cells. Together, these findings demonstrate that WNK4 negatively regulates surface expression of NCCT and implicate loss of this regulation in the molecular pathogenesis of an inherited form of hypertension.


Nature Reviews Neurology | 2008

Roles of the cation-chloride cotransporters in neurological disease.

Kristopher T. Kahle; Kevin J. Staley; Brian V. Nahed; Gerardo Gamba; Steven C. Hebert; Richard P. Lifton; David B. Mount

In the nervous system, the intracellular chloride concentration ([Cl−]i) determines the strength and polarity of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-mediated neurotransmission. [Cl−]i is determined, in part, by the activities of the SLC12 cation–chloride cotransporters (CCCs). These transporters include the Na–K–2Cl cotransporter NKCC1, which mediates chloride influx, and various K–Cl cotransporters—such as KCC2 and KCC3—that extrude chloride. A precise balance between NKCC1 and KCC2 activity is necessary for inhibitory GABAergic signaling in the adult CNS, and for excitatory GABAergic signaling in the developing CNS and the adult PNS. Altered chloride homeostasis, resulting from mutation or dysfunction of NKCC1 and/or KCC2, causes neuronal hypoexcitability or hyperexcitability; such derangements have been implicated in the pathogenesis of seizures and neuropathic pain. [Cl−]i is also regulated to maintain normal cell volume. Dysfunction of NKCC1 or of swelling-activated K–Cl cotransporters has been implicated in the damaging secondary effects of cerebral edema after ischemic and traumatic brain injury, as well as in swelling-related neurodegeneration. CCCs represent attractive therapeutic targets in neurological disorders the pathogenesis of which involves deranged cellular chloride homoestasis.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2004

Molecular physiology of cation-coupled Cl- cotransport: the SLC12 family.

Steven C. Hebert; David B. Mount; Gerardo Gamba

The electroneutral cation-chloride-coupled cotransporter gene family (SLC12) was identified initially at the molecular level in fish and then in mammals. This nine-member gene family encompasses two major branches, one including two bumetanide-sensitive Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporters and the thiazide-sensitive Na+:Cl− cotransporter. Two of the genes in this branch (SLC12A1 and SLC12A3), exhibit kidney-specific expression and function in renal salt reabsorption, whereas the third gene (SLC12A2) is expressed ubiquitously and plays a key role in epithelial salt secretion and cell volume regulation. The functional characterization of both alternatively-spliced mammalian Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporter isoforms and orthologs from distantly related species has generated important structure-function data. The second branch includes four genes (SLC12A4–7) encoding electroneutral K+-Cl− cotransporters. The relative expression level of the neuron-specific SLC12A5 and the Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporter SLC12A2 appears to determine whether neurons respond to GABA with a depolarizing, excitatory response or with a hyperpolarizing, inhibitory response. The four K+-Cl− cotransporter genes are co-expressed to varying degrees in most tissues, with further roles in cell volume regulation, transepithelial salt transport, hearing, and function of the peripheral nervous system. The transported substrates of the remaining two SLC12 family members, SLC12A8 and SLC12A9, are as yet unknown. Inactivating mutations in three members of the SLC12 gene family result in Mendelian disease; Bartter syndrome type I in the case of SLC12A1, Gitelman syndrome for SLC12A3, and peripheral neuropathy in the case of SLC12A6. In addition, knockout mice for many members of this family have generated important new information regarding their respective physiological roles.


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

Angiotensin II signaling increases activity of the renal Na-Cl cotransporter through a WNK4-SPAK-dependent pathway

Pedro San-Cristobal; Diana Pacheco-Alvarez; Ciaran Richardson; Aaron M. Ring; Norma Vázquez; Fatema H. Rafiqi; Divya Chari; Kristopher T. Kahle; Qiang Leng; Norma A. Bobadilla; Steven C. Hebert; Dario R. Alessi; Richard P. Lifton; Gerardo Gamba

Mutations in the kinase WNK4 cause pseudohypoaldosteronism type II (PHAII), a syndrome featuring hypertension and high serum K+ levels (hyperkalemia). WNK4 has distinct functional states that regulate the balance between renal salt reabsorption and K+ secretion by modulating the activities of renal transporters and channels, including the Na-Cl cotransporter NCC and the K+ channel ROMK. WNK4s functions could enable differential responses to intravascular volume depletion (hypovolemia) and hyperkalemia. Because hypovolemia is uniquely associated with high angiotensin II (AngII) levels, AngII signaling might modulate WNK4 activity. We show that AngII signaling in Xenopus oocytes increases NCC activity by abrogating WNK4s inhibition of NCC but does not alter WNK4s inhibition of ROMK. This effect requires AngII, its receptor AT1R, and WNK4, and is prevented by the AT1R inhibitor losartan. NCC activity is also increased by WNK4 harboring mutations found in PHAII, and this activity cannot be further augmented by AngII signaling, consistent with PHAII mutations providing constitutive activation of the signaling pathway between AT1R and NCC. AngIIs effect on NCC is also dependent on the kinase SPAK because dominant-negative SPAK or elimination of the SPAK binding motif in NCC prevent activation of NCC by AngII signaling. These effects extend to mammalian cells. AngII increases phosphorylation of specific sites on SPAK and NCC that are necessary for activation of each in mpkDCT cells. These findings place WNK4 in the signaling pathway between AngII and NCC, and provide a mechanism by which hypovolemia maximizes renal salt reabsoprtion without concomitantly increasing K+ secretion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The Na+:Cl– Cotransporter Is Activated and Phosphorylated at the Amino-terminal Domain upon Intracellular Chloride Depletion

Diana Pacheco-Alvarez; Pedro San Cristobal; Patricia Meade; Erika Moreno; Norma Vázquez; Eva M. Muñoz; Abigail Díaz; María Eugenia Juárez; Ignacio Gimenez; Gerardo Gamba

The renal Na+:Cl– cotransporter rNCC is mutated in human disease, is the therapeutic target of thiazide-type diuretics, and is clearly involved in arterial blood pressure regulation. rNCC belongs to an electroneutral cation-coupled chloride cotransporter family (SLC12A) that has two major branches with inverse physiological functions and regulation: sodium-driven cotransporters (NCC and NKCC1/2) that mediate cellular Cl– influx are activated by phosphorylation, whereas potassium-driven cotransporters (KCCs) that mediate cellular Cl– efflux are activated by dephosphorylation. A cluster of three threonine residues at the amino-terminal domain has been implicated in the regulation of NKCC1/2 by intracellular chloride, cell volume, vasopressin, and WNK/STE-20 kinases. Nothing is known, however, about rNCC regulatory mechanisms. By using rNCC heterologous expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes, here we show that two independent intracellular chloride-depleting strategies increased rNCC activity by 3-fold. The effect of both strategies was synergistic and dose-dependent. Confocal microscopy of enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged rNCC showed no changes in rNCC cell surface expression, whereas immunoblot analysis, using the R5-anti-NKCC1-phosphoantibody, revealed increased phosphorylation of rNCC amino-terminal domain threonine residues Thr53 and Thr58. Elimination of these threonines together with serine residue Ser71 completely prevented rNCC response to intracellular chloride depletion. We conclude that rNCC is activated by a mechanism that involves amino-terminal domain phosphorylation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Functional Comparison of the K+-Cl−Cotransporters KCC1 and KCC4

Adriana Mercado; Luyan Song; Norma Vázquez; David B. Mount; Gerardo Gamba

The K+-Cl−cotransporters (KCCs) are members of the cation-chloride cotransporter gene family and fall into two phylogenetic subgroups: KCC2 paired with KCC4 and KCC1 paired with KCC3. We report a functional comparison inXenopus oocytes of KCC1 and KCC4, widely expressed representatives of these two subgroups. KCC1 and KCC4 exhibit differential sensitivity to transport inhibitors, such that KCC4 is much less sensitive to bumetanide and furosemide. The efficacy of these anion inhibitors is critically dependent on the concentration of extracellular K+, with much higher inhibition in 50 mm K+ versus 2 mmK+. KCC4 is also uniquely sensitive to 10 mmbarium and to 2 mm trichlormethiazide. Kinetic characterization reveals divergent affinities for K+(K m values of ∼25.5 and 17.5 mm for KCC1 and KCC4, respectively), probably due to variation within the second transmembrane segment. Although the two isoforms have equivalent affinities for Cl−, they differ in the anion selectivity of K+ transport (Cl− > SCN− = Br− > PO4 −3 > I−for KCC1 and Cl− > Br− > PO4 −3 = I− > SCN−for KCC4). Both KCCs express minimal K+-Cl−cotransport under isotonic conditions, with significant activation by cell swelling under hypotonic conditions. The cysteine-alkylating agentN-ethylmaleimide activates K+-Cl− cotransport in isotonic conditions but abrogates hypotonic activation, an unexpected dissociation of N-ethylmaleimide sensitivity and volume sensitivity. Although KCC4 is consistently more volume-sensitive, the hypotonic activation of both isoforms is critically dependent on protein phosphatase 1. Overall, the functional comparison of these cloned K+-Cl− cotransporters reveals important functional, pharmacological, and kinetic differences with both physiological and mechanistic implications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Activation of the renal Na+:Cl− cotransporter by angiotensin II is a WNK4-dependent process

María Castañeda-Bueno; Luz Graciela Cervantes-Pérez; Norma Vázquez; Norma Uribe; Sheila Kantesaria; Luciana Morla; Norma A. Bobadilla; Alain Doucet; Dario R. Alessi; Gerardo Gamba

Pseudohypoaldosteronism type II is a salt-sensitive form of hypertension with hyperkalemia in humans caused by mutations in the with-no-lysine kinase 4 (WNK4). Several studies have shown that WNK4 modulates the activity of the renal Na+Cl− cotransporter, NCC. Because the renal consequences of WNK4 carrying pseudoaldosteronism type II mutations resemble the response to intravascular volume depletion (promotion of salt reabsorption without K+ secretion), a condition that is associated with high angiotensin II (AngII) levels, it has been proposed that AngII signaling might affect WNK4 modulation of the NCC. In Xenopus laevis oocytes, WNK4 is required for modulation of NCC activity by AngII. To demonstrate that WNK4 is required in the AngII-mediated regulation of NCC in vivo, we used a total WNK4-knockout mouse strain (WNK4−/−). WNK4 mRNA and protein expression were absent in WNK4−/− mice, which exhibited a mild Gitelman-like syndrome, with normal blood pressure, increased plasma renin activity, and reduced NCC expression and phosphorylation at T-58. Immunohistochemistry revealed normal morphology of the distal convoluted tubule with reduced NCC expression. Low-salt diet or infusion of AngII for 4 d induced phosphorylation of STE20/SPS1-related proline/alanine-rich kinase (SPAK) and of NCC at S-383 and T-58, respectively, in WNK4+/+ but not WNK4−/− mice. Thus, the absence of WNK4 in vivo precludes NCC and SPAK phosphorylation promoted by a low-salt diet or AngII infusion, suggesting that AngII action on the NCC occurs via a WNK4-SPAK–dependent signaling pathway. Additionally, stimulation of aldosterone secretion by AngII, but not by a high-K+ diet, was impaired in WNK4−/− mice.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Regulation of NKCC2 by a chloride-sensing mechanism involving the WNK3 and SPAK kinases

José Ponce-Coria; Pedro San-Cristobal; Kristopher T. Kahle; Norma Vázquez; Diana Pacheco-Alvarez; Paola de los Heros; Patricia Juárez; Eva Muñoz; Gabriela Michel; Norma A. Bobadilla; Ignacio Gimenez; Richard P. Lifton; Steven C. Hebert; Gerardo Gamba

The Na+:K+:2Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2) is the target of loop diuretics and is mutated in Bartters syndrome, a heterogeneous autosomal recessive disease that impairs salt reabsorption in the kidneys thick ascending limb (TAL). Despite the importance of this cation/chloride cotransporter (CCC), the mechanisms that underlie its regulation are largely unknown. Here, we show that intracellular chloride depletion in Xenopus laevis oocytes, achieved by either coexpression of the K-Cl cotransporter KCC2 or low-chloride hypotonic stress, activates NKCC2 by promoting the phosphorylation of three highly conserved threonines (96, 101, and 111) in the amino terminus. Elimination of these residues renders NKCC2 unresponsive to reductions of [Cl−]i. The chloride-sensitive activation of NKCC2 requires the interaction of two serine-threonine kinases, WNK3 (related to WNK1 and WNK4, genes mutated in a Mendelian form of hypertension) and SPAK (a Ste20-type kinase known to interact with and phosphorylate other CCCs). WNK3 is positioned upstream of SPAK and appears to be the chloride-sensitive kinase. Elimination of WNK3s unique SPAK-binding motif prevents its activation of NKCC2, as does the mutation of threonines 96, 101, and 111. A catalytically inactive WNK3 mutant also completely prevents NKCC2 activation by intracellular chloride depletion. Together these data reveal a chloride-sensing mechanism that regulates NKCC2 and provide insight into how increases in the level of intracellular chloride in TAL cells, as seen in certain pathological states, could drastically impair renal salt reabsorption.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Nedd4-2 Modulates Renal Na+-Cl− Cotransporter via the Aldosterone-SGK1-Nedd4-2 Pathway

Juan Pablo Arroyo; Dagmara Lagnaz; Caroline Ronzaud; Norma Vázquez; Benjamin S. Ko; Lauren Moddes; Dorothée Ruffieux-Daidié; Pierrette Hausel; Robert Koesters; Baoli Yang; John B. Stokes; Robert S. Hoover; Gerardo Gamba; Olivier Staub

Regulation of renal Na(+) transport is essential for controlling blood pressure, as well as Na(+) and K(+) homeostasis. Aldosterone stimulates Na(+) reabsorption by the Na(+)-Cl(-) cotransporter (NCC) in the distal convoluted tubule (DCT) and by the epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) in the late DCT, connecting tubule, and collecting duct. Aldosterone increases ENaC expression by inhibiting the channels ubiquitylation and degradation; aldosterone promotes serum-glucocorticoid-regulated kinase SGK1-mediated phosphorylation of the ubiquitin-protein ligase Nedd4-2 on serine 328, which prevents the Nedd4-2/ENaC interaction. It is important to note that aldosterone increases NCC protein expression by an unknown post-translational mechanism. Here, we present evidence that Nedd4-2 coimmunoprecipitated with NCC and stimulated NCC ubiquitylation at the surface of transfected HEK293 cells. In Xenopus laevis oocytes, coexpression of NCC with wild-type Nedd4-2, but not its catalytically inactive mutant, strongly decreased NCC activity and surface expression. SGK1 prevented this inhibition in a kinase-dependent manner. Furthermore, deficiency of Nedd4-2 in the renal tubules of mice and in cultured mDCT(15) cells upregulated NCC. In contrast to ENaC, Nedd4-2-mediated inhibition of NCC did not require the PY-like motif of NCC. Moreover, the mutation of Nedd4-2 at either serine 328 or 222 did not affect SGK1 action, and mutation at both sites enhanced Nedd4-2 activity and abolished SGK1-dependent inhibition. Taken together, these results suggest that aldosterone modulates NCC protein expression via a pathway involving SGK1 and Nedd4-2 and provides an explanation for the well-known aldosterone-induced increase in NCC protein expression.


Molecular Brain Research | 2002

Molecular, functional, and genomic characterization of human KCC2, the neuronal K-Cl cotransporter.

Luyan Song; Adriana Mercado; Norma Vázquez; Qizhi Xie; Reshma R. Desai; Alfred L. George; Gerardo Gamba; David B. Mount

The expression level of the neuronal-specific K-Cl cotransporter KCC2 (SLC12A5) is a major determinant of whether neurons will respond to GABA with a depolarizing, excitatory response or a hyperpolarizing, inhibitory response. In view of the potential role in human neuronal excitability we have characterized the hKCC2 cDNA and gene. The 5.9 kb hKCC2 transcript is specific to brain, and is induced during in vitro differentiation of NT2 teratocarcinoma cells into neuronal NT2-N cells. The 24-exon SLC12A5 gene is on human chromosome 20q13, and contains a polymorphic dinucleotide repeat within intron 1 near a potential binding site for neuron-restrictive silencing factor. Expression of hKCC2 cRNA in Xenopus laevis oocytes results in significant Cl(-)-dependent (86)Rb(+) uptake under isotonic conditions; cell swelling under hypotonic conditions causes a 20-fold activation, which is blocked by the protein phosphatase inhibitor calyculin-A. In contrast, oocytes expressing mouse KCC4 do not mediate isotonic K-Cl cotransport but express much higher absolute transport activity than KCC2 oocytes under hypotonic conditions. Initial and steady state kinetics of hKCC2-injected oocytes were performed in both isotonic and hypotonic conditions, revealing K(m)s for K(+) and Cl(-) of 9.3+/-1.8 mM and 6.8+/-0.9 mM, respectively; both affinities are significantly higher than KCC1 and KCC4. The K(m) for Cl(-) is close to the intracellular Cl(-) activity of mature neurons, as befits a neuronal efflux mechanism.

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Norma A. Bobadilla

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Norma Vázquez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Steven C. Hebert

University of Texas at Austin

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María Castañeda-Bueno

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Consuelo Plata

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Adriana Mercado

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Erika Moreno

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Lorena Rojas-Vega

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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