Udo Hasler
University of Geneva
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Featured researches published by Udo Hasler.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Udo Hasler; Xinyu Wang; Gilles Crambert; Pascal Béguin; Frédéric Jaisser; Jean-Daniel Horisberger; Käthi Geering
The β-subunit of Na,K-ATPase (βNK) interacts with the catalytic α-subunit (αNK) in the ectodomain, the transmembrane, and the cytoplasmic domain. The functional significance of these different interactions was studied by expressing αNK inXenopus oocytes along with N-terminally modified βNK or with chimeric βNK/βH,K-ATPase (βHK). Complete truncation of the βNK N terminus allows for cell surface-expressed, functional Na,K-pumps that exhibit, however, reduced apparent K+ and Na+ affinities as assessed by electrophysiological measurements. A mutational analysis suggests that these functional effects are not related to a direct interaction of the β N terminus with the αNK but rather that N-terminal truncation induces a conformational change in another functionally relevant β domain. Comparison of the functional properties of αNK·βNK, αNK·βHK, or αNK·βNK/βHK complexes shows that the effect of the βNK on K+ binding is mainly mediated by its ectodomain. Finally, βHK/NK containing the transmembrane domain of βHK produces stable but endoplasmic reticulum-retained αNK·β complexes, while αNK/βHK complexes can leave the ER but exhibit reduced ouabain binding capacity and transport function. Thus, interactions of both the transmembrane and the ectodomain of βNK with αNK are necessary to form correctly folded Na,K-ATPase complexes that can be targeted to the plasma membrane and/or become functionally competent. Furthermore, the β N terminus plays a role in the β-subunit’s folding necessary for correct interactions with the α-subunit.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006
Udo Hasler; Un Sil Jeon; Jeong-Ah Kim; David Mordasini; H. Moo Kwon; Eric Féraille; Pierre-Yves Martin
Tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP) plays a key role in protecting renal cells from hypertonic stress by stimulating transcription of specific genes. Under hypertonic conditions, TonEBP activity is enhanced via increased nuclear translocation, transactivation, and abundance. It was reported previously that hypertonicity exerted a dual, time-dependent effect on vasopressin-inducible aquaporin-2 (AQP2) expression in immortalized mouse collecting duct principal cells (mpkCCDcl4). Whereas AQP2 abundance decreased after 3 h of hyperosmotic challenge, it increased after 24 h of hypertonic challenge. This study investigated the role that TonEBP may play in these events by subjecting mpkCCDcl4 cells to 3 or 24 h of hypertonic challenge. Hypertonic challenge increased TonEBP mRNA and protein content and enhanced TonEBP activity as illustrated by both increased TonEBP-dependent luciferase activity and mRNA expression of several genes that are targeted by TonEBP. Irrespective of the absence or presence of vasopressin, decreased TonEBP activity in cells that were transfected with either TonEBP small interfering RNA or an inhibitory form of TonEBP strongly reduced AQP2 mRNA and protein content under iso-osmotic conditions and blunted the increase of AQP2 abundance that was induced after 24 h of hypertonic challenge. Conversely, decreased TonEBP activity did not significantly alter reduced expression of AQP2 mRNA that was induced by 3 h of hypertonic challenge. Mutation of a TonE enhancer element located 489 bp upstream of the AQP2 transcriptional start site abolished the hypertonicity-induced increase of luciferase activity in cells that expressed AQP2 promoter-luciferase plasmid constructs, indicating that TonEBP influences AQP2 transcriptional activity at least partially by acting directly on the AQP2 promoter. These findings demonstrate that in collecting duct principal cells, TonEBP plays a central role in regulating AQP2 expression by enhancing AQP2 gene transcription.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008
Mauro Bustamante; Udo Hasler; Valérie Leroy; Sophie de Seigneux; Mitko Dimitrov; David Mordasini; Martine Rousselot; Pierre-Yves Martin; Eric Féraille
Recent evidence suggests that arginine vasopressin (AVP)-dependent aquaporin-2 expression is modulated by the extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) in principal cells of the collecting duct, but the signaling pathways mediating this effect are unknown. Using a mouse cortical collecting duct cell line (mpkCCD(cl4)), we found that increasing the concentration of apical extracellular calcium or treating with the CaSR agonists neomycin or Gd(3+) attenuated AVP-dependent accumulation of aquaporin-2 mRNA and protein; CaSR gene-silencing prevented this effect. Calcium reduced the AVP-induced accumulation of cAMP, but this did not occur by increased degradation of cAMP by phosphodiesterases or by direct inhibition of adenylate cyclase. Notably, the effect of extracellular calcium on AVP-dependent aquaporin-2 expression was prevented by inhibition of calmodulin. In summary, our results show that high concentrations of extracellular calcium attenuate AVP-induced aquaporin-2 expression by activating the CaSR and reducing coupling efficiency between V(2) receptor and adenylate cyclase via a calmodulin-dependent mechanism in cultured cortical collecting duct cells.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008
Hua A. Jenny Lu; Toshiyuki Matsuzaki; Richard Bouley; Udo Hasler; Quan-Hong Qin; Dennis Brown
Phosphorylation of serine 256 (S256) plays a critical role in vasopressin (VP)-mediated membrane accumulation of aquaporin-2 (AQP2). Recently, phosphorylation of serine 261 was also reported, raising the possibility that it has a role in AQP2 trafficking. We addressed this issue using transfected LLC-PK(1) cells that express point mutations of AQP2 S261 and S256, mimicking the phosphorylated (S to D) or dephosphorylated (S to A) states of these residues. Both AQP2 (S261A) and AQP2 (S261D) were located in the perinuclear cytoplasm without stimulation but, like wild-type AQP2, they both accumulated on the plasma membrane after 20-min exposure to VP or forskolin. Following membrane accumulation, S261A, S261D, and wild-type AQP2 reinternalization was complete over a similar time frame, between 30 and 60 min after VP washout. Using various combinations of point mutations, we showed that the phosphorylation state of S256 is dominant with respect to AQP2 behavior; AQP2 membrane accumulation and internalization were not detectably affected by the phosphorylation state of S261. Finally, blocking AQP2 endocytosis by methyl-beta-cyclodextrin caused membrane accumulation of AQP2 in cells expressing either a single S-A mutation or double mutations of S256 and S261, although as previously reported, the S256D mutation was always present at the cell surface. This suggests that constitutive recycling of AQP2 was not modified by the phosphorylation state of S261. Together, our data indicate that the phosphorylation state of AQP2 at S261 does not detectably affect regulated or constitutive trafficking of AQP2. The potential role of S261 phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in vasopressin action remains to be determined.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005
Udo Hasler; Manlio Vinciguerra; Alain Vandewalle; Pierre-Yves Martin; Eric Féraille
The driving force for renal water reabsorption is provided by the osmolarity gradient between the interstitium and the tubular lumen, which is subject to rapid physiologic variations as a consequence of water intake fluctuations. The effect of increased extracellular tonicity/osmolarity on vasopressin-inducible aquaporin-2 (AQP2) expression in immortalized mouse collecting duct principal cells (mpkCCD(cl4)) is investigated in this report. Increasing the osmolarity of the medium either by the addition of NaCl, sucrose, or urea first decreased AQP2 expression after 3 h. AQP2 expression then increased in cells exposed to NaCl- or sucrose-supplemented hypertonic medium after longer periods of time (24 h), while urea-supplemented hyperosmotic medium had no effect. Altered AQP2 expression induced by both short-term (3 h) and long-term (24 h) exposure of cells to hypertonicity arose from changes in AQP2 gene transcription because hypertonicity did not modify AQP2 mRNA stability nor AQP2 protein turnover. On the long-term, vasopressin (AVP) and hypertonicity increased AQP2 expression in a synergistic manner. Hypertonicity altered neither the dose-responsiveness of AVP-induced AQP2 expression nor cAMP-protein kinase (PKA) activity, while PKA inhibition did not reduce the extent of the hypertonicity-induced increase of AQP2 expression. These results indicate that in collecting duct principal cells: (1) a short-term increase of extracellular osmolarity decreases AQP2 expression through inhibition of AQP2 gene transcription; (2) a long-term increase of extracellular tonicity, but not osmolarity, enhances AQP2 expression via stimulation of AQP2 gene transcription; and (3) long-term hypertonicity and PKA increases AQP2 expression through synergistic but independent mechanisms.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Isabelle Roth; Valérie Leroy; H. Moo Kwon; Pierre-Yves Martin; Eric Féraille; Udo Hasler
Tonicity responsive binding protein (TonEBP) is a transcription factor that plays a key role in osmoprotection. Here, we demonstrate enhanced activity of prosurvival NF-κB—at the onset of hypertonic challenge that depends on p38 kinase—and Akt-dependent formation of p65-TonEBP complexes that bind to elements of NF-κB-responsive genes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Pascal Béguin; Udo Hasler; Ahmed Beggah; Jean-Daniel Horisberger; Käthi Geering
The control of membrane insertion of polytopic proteins is still poorly understood. We carried out in vivotranslation/insertion experiments in Xenopus oocytes with combined wild type or mutant membrane segments of the α-subunit of the heterodimeric Na,K-ATPase linked to a glycosylation reporter sequence. We confirm that the four N-terminal hydrophobic segments of the α-subunit behave as alternating signal anchor/stop transfer motifs necessary for two lipid-inserted membrane pairs. For the six C-terminal membrane segments, however, proper packing depends on specific sequence information and association with the β-subunit. M5 is a very inefficient signal anchor sequence due to the presence of prolines and polar amino acids. Its correct membrane insertion is probably mediated by posttranslational hairpin formation with M6, which is favored by a proline pair in the connecting loop. M7 has partial signal anchor function, which may be mediated by the presence of glycine and glutamine residues. The formation of a transmembrane M7/M8 pair requires the association of the β-subunit, which induces a conformational change in the connecting extracytoplasmic loop that favors M7/M8 packing. The formation of the M9/M10 pair appears to be predominantly mediated by the efficient stop transfer function of M10. Mutations that provide signal anchor function to M5, M7, and M9 abolish or impede the transport activity of the enzyme. These data illustrate the importance of specific amino acids near or within hydrophobic regions as well as of subunit oligomerization for correct topographical alignment that is necessary for proper folding and/or activity of oligomeric membrane proteins.
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension | 2008
Dennis Brown; Udo Hasler; Paula Nunes; Richard Bouley; Hua A. Jenny Lu
Purpose of reviewThis review highlights the role of phosphorylation in the trafficking and targeting of aquaporin 2. Current knowledge will be put into the context of modulating the cell surface expression of aquaporin 2 by vasopressin in renal epithelial cells, which is critical for regulation of urinary concentration and control of fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. Recent findingsIn addition to previously identified phosphorylation sites on aquaporin 2, new data have revealed three other serine residues in the C-terminus whose phosphorylation is altered by vasopressin. Several steps in aquaporin 2 recycling, including exocytosis and endocytosis, are coordinated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation to regulate cell surface accumulation. Aquaporin 2 phosphorylation on serine 256 regulates aquaporin 2 association with proteins that are involved in trafficking, including hsc/hsp70 and myelin and lymphocyte-associated protein. SummaryAquaporin 2 trafficking is regulated by phosphorylation of serine 256 and other amino acid residues in its cytoplasmic domain. These events increase or decrease interaction of aquaporin 2 with key regulatory proteins to determine the cellular distribution and fate of aquaporin 2, both after vasopressin addition and under baseline conditions. Better understanding of these mechanisms may provide new therapeutic avenues for patients with X-linked nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, as well as providing basic cell biological information relevant to membrane trafficking processes in general.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2009
Leroy; De Seigneux S; Agassiz; Udo Hasler; Rafestin-Oblin Me; Manlio Vinciguerra; Pierre-Yves Martin; Eric Féraille
Besides its classical effects on salt homeostasis in renal epithelial cells, aldosterone promotes inflammation and fibrosis and modulates cell proliferation. The proinflammatory transcription factor NF-kappaB has been implicated in cell proliferation, apoptosis, and regulation of transepithelial sodium transport. The effect of aldosterone on the NF-kappaB pathway in principal cells of the cortical collecting duct, a major physiologic target of aldosterone, is unknown. Here, in both cultured cells and freshly isolated rat cortical collecting duct, aldosterone activated the canonical NF-kappaB signaling pathway, leading to increased expression of several NF-kappaB-targeted genes (IkappaBalpha, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, IL-1beta, and IL-6). Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of the serum and glucocorticoid-inducible kinase SGK1, a gene induced early in the response to aldosterone, but not pharmacologic inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase and p38 kinase, attenuated aldosterone-induced NF-kappaB activation. Pharmacologic antagonism or knockdown of the mineralocorticoid receptor prevented aldosterone-induced NF-kappaB activity. In addition, activation of the glucocorticoid receptor inhibited the transactivation of NF-kappaB by aldosterone. In agreement with these in vitro findings, spironolactone prevented NF-kappaB-induced transcriptional activation observed in cortical collecting ducts of salt-restricted rats. In summary, aldosterone activates the canonical NF-kappaB pathway in principal cells of the cortical collecting duct by activating the mineralocorticoid receptor and by inducing SGK1.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2009
Udo Hasler; Valérie Leroy; Pierre-Yves Martin; Eric Féraille
The renal cortico-papillary osmotic gradient is generated by sodium reabsorption in the thick ascending limb. The antidiuretic hormone arginine vasopressin (AVP) increases collecting duct water permeability by enhancing aquaporin-2 (AQP2) water channel insertion in the apical membrane of principal cells, allowing water to passively flow along the osmotic gradient from the tubule lumen to the interstitium. In addition to short-term AQP2 redistribution between intracellular compartments and the cell surface, AQP2 whole cell abundance is tightly regulated. AVP is a major transcriptional activator of the AQP2 gene, and stimulation of insulin- and calcium-sensing receptors respectively potentiate and reduce its action. Extracellular tonicity is another key factor that determines the levels of AQP2 abundance. Its effect is dependent on activation of the tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein that reinforces AVP-induced AQP2 transcriptional activation. Conversely, activation of the NF-kappaB transcriptional factor by proinflammatory factors reduces AQP2 gene transcription. Aldosterone additionally regulates AQP2 whole cell abundance by simultaneously reducing AQP2 gene transcription and stimulating AQP2 mRNA translation. These examples illustrate how cross talk between various stimuli regulates AQP2 abundance in collecting duct principal cells and consequently contributes to maintenance of body water homeostasis.