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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer M. Carbrey is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer M. Carbrey.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Arsenite transport by mammalian aquaglyceroporins AQP7 and AQP9

Zijuan Liu; Jian Shen; Jennifer M. Carbrey; Rita Mukhopadhyay; Peter Agre; Barry P. Rosen

Much is known about the transport of arsenite and antimonite into microbes, but the identities of mammalian transport proteins are unknown. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae FPS1 gene encodes a membrane protein homologous to the bacterial aquaglyceroporin GlpF and to mammalian aquaglyceroporins AQP7 and AQP9. Fps1p mediates glycerol uptake and glycerol efflux in response to hypoosmotic shock. Fps1p has been shown to facilitate uptake of the metalloids arsenite and antimonite, and the Escherichia coli homolog, GlpF, facilitates the uptake and sensitivity to metalloid salts. In this study, the ability of mammalian aquaglyceroporins AQP7 and AQP9 to substitute for the yeast Fps1p was examined. The fps1Δ strain of S. cerevisiae exhibits increased tolerance to arsenite and antimonite compared to a wild-type strain. Introduction of a plasmid containing AQP9 reverses the metalloid tolerance of the deletion strain. AQP7 was not expressed in yeast. The fps1Δ cells exhibit reduced transport of 73As(III) or 125Sb(III), but uptake is enhanced by expression of AQP9. Xenopus laevis oocytes microinjected with either AQP7 or AQP9 cRNA exhibited increased transport of 73As(III). These results suggest that AQP9 and AQP7 may be a major routes of arsenite uptake into mammalian cells, an observation potentially of large importance for understanding the action of arsenite as a human toxin and carcinogen, as well as its efficacy as a chemotherapeutic agent for acute promyelocytic leukemia.


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

Aquaglyceroporin AQP9: solute permeation and metabolic control of expression in liver

Jennifer M. Carbrey; Daniel A. Gorelick-Feldman; David Kozono; Jeppe Praetorius; Soøren Nielsen; Peter Agre

Aquaglyceroporins form the subset of the aquaporin water channel family that is permeable to glycerol and certain small, uncharged solutes. AQP9 has unusually broad solute permeability and is expressed in hepatocyte plasma membranes. Proteoliposomes reconstituted with expressed, purified rat AQP9 protein were compared with simple liposomes for solute permeability. At pH 7.5, AQP9 proteoliposomes exhibited Hg2+-inhibitible glycerol and urea permeabilities that were increased 63-fold and 90-fold over background. β-Hydroxybutyrate permeability was not increased above background, and osmotic water permeability was only minimally elevated. During starvation, the liver takes up glycerol for gluconeogenesis. Expression of AQP9 in liver was induced up to 20-fold in rats fasted for 24–96 h, and the AQP9 level gradually declined after refeeding. No changes in liver AQP9 levels were observed in rats fed ketogenic diets or high-protein diets, but AQP9 levels were elevated in livers of rats made diabetic by streptozotocin injection. When blood glucose levels of the diabetic rats were restored to normal by insulin treatments, the AQP9 levels returned to baseline. Confocal immunofluorescence revealed AQP9 immunostaining on the sinusoidal surfaces of hepatocyte plates throughout the livers of control rats. Denser immunostaining was observed in the same distribution in livers of fasted and streptozotocin-treated rats. We conclude that AQP9 serves as membrane channel in hepatocytes for glycerol and urea at physiological pH, but not for β-hydroxybutyrate. In addition, levels of AQP9 expression fluctuate depending on the nutritional status of the subject and the circulating insulin levels.


Handbook of experimental pharmacology | 2009

Discovery of the Aquaporins and Development of the Field

Jennifer M. Carbrey; Peter Agre

The study of water transport began long before the molecular identification of water channels with studies of water-permeable tissues. The discovery of the first aquaporin, AQP1, occurred during experiments focused on the identity of the Rh blood group antigens. Since then the field has expanded dramatically to study aquaporins in all types of organisms. In mammals, some of the aquaporins transport only water. However, there are some family members that collectively transport a diverse set of solutes. The aquaporins can be regulated by factors that affect channel permeability or subcellular localization. An extensive set of studies examines the physiological role of many of the mammalian aquaporins. However, much is still to be discovered about the physiological role of this membrane protein family.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Aquaporins in Saccharomyces GENETIC AND FUNCTIONAL DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN LABORATORY AND WILD-TYPE STRAINS

Mélanie Bonhivers; Jennifer M. Carbrey; Stephen J. Gould; Peter Agre

Aquaporin water channel proteins mediate the transport of water across cell membranes in numerous species. TheSaccharomyces genome data base contains an open reading frame (here designated AQY1) that encodes a protein with strong homology to aquaporins. AQY1 from laboratory and wild-type strains of Saccharomyces were expressed inXenopus oocytes to determine the coefficients of osmotic water permeability (Pf). Oocytes injected with wild-typeAQY1 cRNAs exhibit high Pf values, whereas oocytes injected with AQY1 cRNAs from laboratory strains exhibit low Pf values and have reduced levels of Aqy1p due to two amino acid substitutions. When the AQY1 gene was deleted from a wild-type yeast and cells were cultured in vitro with cycled hypo-osmolar or hyper-osmolar stresses, theAQY1 null yeast showed significantly improved viability when compared with the parental wild-type strain. We conclude thatSaccharomyces cerevisiae contains at least one aquaporin gene, but it is not functional in laboratory strains due to apparent negative selection pressures resulting from in vitromethods.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Aquaporin 9 is the major pathway for glycerol uptake by mouse erythrocytes, with implications for malarial virulence

Yangjian Liu; Dominique Promeneur; Aleksandra Rojek; Nirbhay Kumar; Jørgen Frøkiær; Søren Nielsen; Landon S. King; Peter Agre; Jennifer M. Carbrey

Human and rodent erythrocytes are known to be highly permeable to glycerol. Aquaglyceroporin aquaporin (AQP)3 is the major glycerol channel in human and rat erythrocytes. However, AQP3 expression has not been observed in mouse erythrocytes. Here we report the presence of an aquaglyceroporin, AQP9, in mouse erythrocytes. AQP9 levels rise as reticulocytes mature into erythrocytes and as neonatal pups develop into adult mice. Mice bearing targeted disruption of both alleles encoding AQP9 have erythrocytes that appear morphologically normal. Compared with WT cells, erythrocytes from AQP9-null mice are defective in rapid glycerol transport across the cell membrane when measured by osmotic lysis, [14C]glycerol uptake, or stopped-flow light scattering. In contrast, the water and urea permeabilities are intact. Although the physiological role of glycerol in the normal function of erythrocytes is not clear, plasma glycerol is an important substrate for lipid biosynthesis of intraerythrocytic malarial parasites. AQP9-null mice at the age of 4 months infected with Plasmodium berghei survive longer during the initial phase of infection compared with WT mice. We conclude that AQP9 is the major glycerol channel in mouse erythrocytes and suggest that this transport pathway may contribute to the virulence of intraerythrocytic stages of malarial infection.


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

Reduced arsenic clearance and increased toxicity in aquaglyceroporin-9-null mice

Jennifer M. Carbrey; Linhua Song; Yao Zhou; Masafumi Yoshinaga; Aleksandra Rojek; Yiding Wang; Yangjian Liu; Heidi L. Lujan; Stephen E. DiCarlo; Søren Nielsen; Barry P. Rosen; Peter Agre; Rita Mukhopadhyay

Expressed in liver, aquaglyceroporin-9 (AQP9) is permeated by glycerol, arsenite, and other small, neutral solutes. To evaluate a possible protective role, AQP9-null mice were evaluated for in vivo arsenic toxicity. After injection with NaAsO2, AQP9-null mice suffer reduced survival rates (LD50, 12 mg/kg) compared with WT mice (LD50, 15 mg/kg). The highest tissue level of arsenic is in heart, with AQP9-null mice accumulating 10–20 times more arsenic than WT mice. Within hours after NaAsO2 injection, AQP9-null mice sustain profound bradycardia, despite normal serum electrolytes. Increased arsenic levels are also present in liver, lung, spleen, and testis of AQP9-null mice. Arsenic levels in the feces and urine of AQP9-null mice are only ≈10% of the WT levels, and reduced clearance of multiple arsenic species by the AQP9-null mice suggests that AQP9 is involved in the export of multiple forms of arsenic. Immunohistochemical staining of liver sections revealed that AQP9 is most abundant in basolateral membrane of hepatocytes adjacent to the sinusoids. AQP9 is not detected in heart or kidney by PCR or immunohistochemistry. We propose that AQP9 provides a route for excretion of arsenic by the liver, thereby providing partial protection of the whole animal from arsenic toxicity.


Yeast | 2001

Aquaporin in Candida: Characterization of a functional water channel protein

Jennifer M. Carbrey; Brendan P. Cormack; Peter Agre

The Candida albicans genome database contains one ORF with homology to aquaporins, AQY1. Xenopus oocytes injected with cRNA encoding C. albicans Aqy1p displayed a coefficient of water permeability (Pf) that was equivalent to the Pf for oocytes injected with the cRNA of S. cerevisiae Aqy1p. In addition, as seen in Saccharomyces for Aqy1p and Aqy2p, deletion of AQY1 in C. albicans resulted in cells that were less sensitive than wild‐type to osmotic shock. In Saccharomyces, aquaporin null cells also have a cell surface that is more hydrophobic. However, unlike Saccharomyces, there was no effect on the cell surface hydrophobicity, flocculation or cell aggregation in aqy1 null C. albicans cells. Perhaps as a result, there was no difference between the virulence of C. albicans wild‐type and aqy1 null strains in a murine model for systemic candidiasis. Copyright


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Aquaporin Expression and Freeze Tolerance in Candida albicans

An Tanghe; Jennifer M. Carbrey; Peter Agre; Johan M. Thevelein; Patrick Van Dijck

ABSTRACT Aquaporins are members of the major intrinsic protein superfamily of integral membrane proteins which enable the transport of water, glycerol, and other solutes across membranes in various organisms. In microorganisms, the physiological role of aquaporins is not yet defined. We found a clear correlation between expression of the Candida albicans aquaporin-encoding gene AQY1 and freeze tolerance. A connection with the function for the aquaporin in the natural environment of C. albicans is, however, not obvious.


Biology of the Cell | 2009

Osteoclast differentiation and function in aquaglyceroporin AQP9-null mice

Yangjian Liu; Linhua Song; Yiding Wang; Aleksandra Rojek; Søren Nielsen; Peter Agre; Jennifer M. Carbrey

Background information. Osteoclasts are cells specialized for bone resorption and play important roles in bone growth and calcium homoeostasis. Differentiation of osteoclasts involves fusion of bone marrow macrophage mononuclear precursors in response to extracellular signals. A dramatic increase in osteoclast cell volume occurs during osteoclast biogenesis and is believed to be mediated by AQP9 (aquaporin 9), a membrane protein that can rapidly transport water and other small neutral solutes across cell membranes.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Aquaporin 6 binds calmodulin in a calcium-dependent manner.

Nicole E. Rabaud; Linhua Song; Yiding Wang; Peter Agre; Masato Yasui; Jennifer M. Carbrey

Aquaporin 6 (AQP6) is an anion channel that is expressed primarily in acid secreting alpha-intercalated cells of the kidney collecting duct. In addition, AQP6 anion channel permeability is gated by low pH. Inspection of the N-terminus of AQP6 revealed a putative calmodulin binding site. AQP6-expressing CHO-K1 cell lysates were mixed with calmodulin beads and AQP6 was pulled down in the presence of calcium. Mutagenesis of the N-terminal calmodulin binding site in full length mouse AQP6 resulted in a loss of calmodulin binding activity. Mouse and human AQP6 calmodulin binding site peptides bound dansyl-calmodulin with a dissociation constant of approximately 1microM. The binding of AQP6 to calmodulin may be an important key to determining the physiological role of AQP6 in the kidney.

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Peter Agre

Johns Hopkins University

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Barry P. Rosen

Florida International University

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