Vladislav Bugaj
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Vladislav Bugaj.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Oleh Pochynyuk; Vladislav Bugaj; Timo Rieg; Paul A. Insel; Elena Mironova; Volker Vallon; James D. Stockand
Growing evidence implicates a key role for extracellular nucleotides in cellular regulation, including of ion channels and renal function, but the mechanisms for such actions are inadequately defined. We investigated purinergic regulation of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) in mammalian collecting duct. We find that ATP decreases ENaC activity in both mouse and rat collecting duct principal cells. ATP and other nucleotides, including UTP, decrease ENaC activity via apical P2Y2 receptors. ENaC in collecting ducts isolated from mice lacking this receptor have blunted responses to ATP. P2Y2 couples to ENaC via PLC; direct activation of PLC mimics ATP action. Tonic regulation of ENaC in the collecting duct occurs via locally released ATP; scavenging endogenous ATP and inhibiting P2 receptors, in the absence of other stimuli, rapidly increases ENaC activity. Moreover, ENaC has greater resting activity in collecting ducts from P2Y2-/- mice. Loss of collecting duct P2Y2 receptors in the knock-out mouse is the primary defect leading to increased ENaC activity based on the ability of direct PLC stimulation to decrease ENaC activity in collecting ducts from P2Y2-/- mice in a manner similar to ATP in collecting ducts from wild-type mice. These findings demonstrate that locally released ATP acts in an autocrine/paracrine manner to tonically regulate ENaC in mammalian collecting duct. Loss of this intrinsic regulation leads to ENaC hyperactivity and contributes to hypertension that occurs in P2Y2 receptor-/- mice. P2Y2 receptor activation by nucleotides thus provides physiologically important regulation of ENaC and electrolyte handling in mammalian kidney.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008
Vladislav Bugaj; Oleh Pochynyuk; Elena Mironova; Alain Vandewalle; Jorge L. Medina; James D. Stockand
We used patch-clamp electrophysiology to investigate regulation of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) by endothelin-1 (ET-1) in isolated, split-open rat collecting ducts. ET-1 significantly decreases ENaC open probability by about threefold within 5 min. ET-1 decreases ENaC activity through basolateral membrane ETB but not ETA receptors. In rat collecting duct, we find no role for phospholipase C or protein kinase C in the rapid response of ENaC to ET-1. ET-1, although, does activate src family tyrosine kinases and their downstream MAPK1/2 effector cascade in renal principal cells. Both src kinases and MAPK1/2 signaling are necessary for ET-1-dependent decreases in ENaC open probability in the split-open collecting duct. We conclude that ET-1 in a physiologically relevant manner rapidly suppresses ENaC activity in native, mammalian principal cells. These findings may provide a potential mechanism for the natriuresis observed in vivo in response to ET-1, as well as a potential cause for the salt-sensitive hypertension found in animals with impaired endothelin signaling.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2007
Alexander Staruschenko; Oleh Pochynyuk; Alain Vandewalle; Vladislav Bugaj; James D. Stockand
Activity of the epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) is limiting for Na(+) reabsorption in the aldosterone-sensitive distal nephron. Hormones, including aldosterone and insulin, increase ENaC activity, in part by stimulating phosphatidylinositide 3-OH kinase (PI3-K) signaling. Recent studies in heterologous expression systems reveal a close spatiotemporal coupling between PI3-K signaling and ENaC activity with the phospholipid product of this kinase, PI(3,4,5)P(3), in some cases, directly binding the channel and increasing open probability (P(o)). This study tested whether this tight coupling plays a physiologic role in modulating ENaC activity in native tissue and polarized epithelial cells. IGF-I was found to increase Na(+) reabsorption across mpkCCD(c14) principal cell monolayers in a PI3-K-sensitive manner. Inhibition of PI3-K signaling, moreover, rapidly decreased Na(+) reabsorption and ENaC activity in mpkCCD(c14) cells that were treated with corticosteroids and IGF-I. These decreases paralleled changes in apical membrane PI(3,4,5)P(3) levels, demonstrating tight spatiotemporal coupling between ENaC activity and PI3-K/PI(3,4,5)P(3) signaling within this membrane. For further probing of the mechanism underpinning this coupling, cortical collecting ducts (CCD) were isolated from rat and split open to expose the apical membrane for patch-clamp analysis. Inhibition of PI3-K signaling with wortmannin and LY294002 but not its inactive analogue rapidly and markedly decreased the P(o) of ENaC. Moreover, IGF-I acutely increased P(o) of ENaC in CCD principal cells in a PI3-K-sensitive manner. Together, these observations stress the importance of tight spatiotemporal coupling between PI3-K signaling and ENaC within the apical membrane of principal cells to the physiologic control of this ion channel.
The FASEB Journal | 2010
Oleh Pochynyuk; Timo Rieg; Vladislav Bugaj; Jana Schroth; Alla Fridman; Gerry R. Boss; Paul A. Insel; James D. Stockand; Volker Vallon
Apical release of ATP and UTP can activate P2Y2 receptors in the aldosterone‐sensitive distal nephron (ASDN) and inhibit the open probability (Po) of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). Little is known, however, about the regulation and physiological relevance of this system. Patch‐clamp studies in freshly isolated ASDN provide evidence that increased dietary Na+ intake in wild‐type mice lowers ENaC Po, consistent with a contribution to Na+ homeostasis, and is associated with increased urinary concentrations of UTP and the ATP hydrolytic product, ADP. Genetic deletion of P2Y2 receptors in mice (P2Y2 −/−; litter‐mates to wild‐type mice) or inhibition of apical P2Y‐receptor activation in wild‐type mice prevents dietary Na+‐induced lowering of ENaC Po. Although they lack suppression of ENaC Po by dietary NaCl, P2Y2−/− mice do not exhibit NaCl‐sensitive blood pressure, perhaps as a consequence of compensatory down‐regulation of aldosterone levels. Consistent with this hypothesis, clamping mineralocorticoid activity at high levels unmasks greater ENaC activity and NaCl sensitivity of blood pressure in P2Y2−/− mice. The studies indicate a key role of the apical ATP/UTP‐P2Y2‐receptor system in the inhibition of ENaC Po in the ASDN in response to an increase in Na+ intake, thereby contributing to NaCl homeostasis and blood pressure regulation.—Pochynyuk, O., Rieg, T., Bugaj, V., Schroth, J., Fridman, A., Boss, G. R., Insel, P. A., Stockand, J. D., Vallon, V. Dietary Na+ inhibits the open probability of the epithelial sodium channel in the kidney by enhancing apical P2Y2‐receptor tone. FASEB J. 24, 2056–2065 (2010). www.fasebj.org
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2009
Vladislav Bugaj; Oleh Pochynyuk; James D. Stockand
We used patch-clamp electrophysiology on isolated, split-open murine collecting ducts (CD) to test the hypothesis that regulation of epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) activity is a physiologically important effect of vasopressin. Surprisingly, this has not been tested directly before. We ask whether vasopressin affects ENaC activity distinguishing between acute and chronic effects, as well as, parsing the cellular signaling pathway and molecular mechanism of regulation. In addition, we quantified possible synergistic regulation of ENaC by vasopressin and aldosterone associating this with a requirement for distal nephron Na+ reabsorption during water conservation vs. maintenance of Na+ balance. We find that vasopressin significantly increases ENaC activity within 2-3 min by increasing open probability (P(o)). This activation was dependent on adenylyl cyclase (AC) and PKA. Water restriction (18-24 h) and pretreatment of isolated CD with vasopressin (approximately 30 min) resulted in a similar increase in P(o). In addition, this also increased the number (N) of active ENaC in the apical membrane. Similar to P(o), increases in N were sensitive to inhibitors of AC. Stressing animals with water and salt restriction separately and jointly revealed an important effect of vasopressin: conservation of water and Na+ each independently increased ENaC activity and jointly had a synergistic effect on channel activity. These results demonstrate a quantitatively important action of vasopressin on ENaC suggesting that distal nephron Na+ reabsorption mediated by this channel contributes to maintenance of water reabsorption. In addition, our results support that the combined actions of vasopressin and aldosterone are required to achieve maximally activated ENaC.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2009
Volker Vallon; Edith Hummler; Timo Rieg; Oleh Pochynyuk; Vladislav Bugaj; Jana Schroth; Georges Dechenes; Bernard C. Rossier; Robyn Cunard; James D. Stockand
Thiazolidinediones are agonists of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) that can induce fluid retention and weight gain through unclear mechanisms. To test a proposed role for the epithelial sodium channel ENaC in thiazolidinedione-induced fluid retention, we used mice with conditionally inactivated alphaENaC in the collecting duct (Scnn1a(loxloxCre) mice). In control mice, rosiglitazone did not alter plasma aldosterone levels or protein expression of ENaC subunits in the kidney, but did increase body weight, plasma volume, and the fluid content of abdominal fat pads, and decreased hematocrit. Scnn1a(loxloxCre) mice provided functional evidence for blunted Na+ uptake in the collecting duct, but still exhibited rosiglitazone-induced fluid retention. Moreover, treatment with rosiglitazone or pioglitazone did not significantly alter the open probability or number of ENaC channels per patch in isolated, split-open cortical collecting ducts of wild-type mice. Finally, patch-clamp studies in primary mouse inner medullary collecting duct cells did not detect ENaC activity but did detect a nonselective cation channel upregulated by pioglitazone. These data argue against a primary and critical role of ENaC in thiazolidinedione-induced fluid retention.
The Journal of General Physiology | 2007
Oleh Pochynyuk; Qiusheng Tong; Jorge L. Medina; Alain Vandewalle; Alexander Staruschenko; Vladislav Bugaj; James D. Stockand
Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2) and phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PI(3,4,5)P3) are physiologically important second messengers. These molecules bind effector proteins to modulate activity. Several types of ion channels, including the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC), are phosphoinositide effectors capable of directly interacting with these signaling molecules. Little, however, is known of the regions within ENaC and other ion channels important to phosphoinositide binding and modulation. Moreover, the molecular mechanism of this regulation, in many instances, remains obscure. Here, we investigate modulation of ENaC by PI(3,4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 to begin identifying the molecular determinants of this regulation. We identify intracellular regions near the inner membrane interface just following the second transmembrane domains in β- and γ- but not α-ENaC as necessary for PI(3,4,5)P2 but not PI(4,5)P2 modulation. Charge neutralization of conserved basic amino acids within these regions demonstrated that these polar residues are critical to phosphoinositide regulation. Single channel analysis, moreover, reveals that the regions just following the second transmembrane domains in β- and γ-ENaC are critical to PI(3,4,5)P3 augmentation of ENaC open probability, thus, defining mechanism. Unexpectedly, intracellular domains within the extreme N terminus of β- and γ-ENaC were identified as being critical to down-regulation of ENaC activity and Po in response to depletion of membrane PI(4,5)P2. These regions of the channel played no identifiable role in a PI(3,4,5)P3 response. Again, conserved positive-charged residues within these domains were particularly important, being necessary for exogenous PI(4,5)P2 to increase open probability. We conclude that β and γ subunits bestow phosphoinositide sensitivity to ENaC with distinct regions of the channel being critical to regulation by PI(3,4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2. This argues that these phosphoinositides occupy distinct ligand-binding sites within ENaC to modulate open probability.
Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension | 2008
Oleh Pochynyuk; Vladislav Bugaj; James D. Stockand
Purpose of reviewEpithelial sodium channel (ENaC) activity is limiting for sodium reabsorption in the distal nephron. Humans regulate blood pressure by fine-tuning sodium balance through control of ENaC. ENaC dysfunction causes some hypertensive and renal salt wasting diseases. Thus, it is critical to understand the cellular mechanisms controlling ENaC activity. Recent findingsENaC is sensitive to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), the target of phospholipase C-mediated metabolism, and phosphatidylinositiol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3), the product of phosphatidylinositide 3-OH kinase (PI3-K). PIP2 is permissive for ENaC gating possibly interacting directly with the channel. Activation of distal nephron P2Y receptors tempers ENaC activity by promoting PIP2 metabolism. This is important because gene deletion of P2Y2 receptors causes hypertension associated with hyperactive ENaC. Aldosterone, the final hormone in a negative-feedback cascade activated by decreases in blood pressure, increases ENaC activity. PIP3 sits at a critical bifurcation in the aldosterone-signaling cascade, increasing ENaC open probability and number. PIP3-effectors mediate increases in ENaC number by suppressing channel retrieval. PIP3 binds ENaC, at a site distinct from that important to PIP2 regulation, to modulate directly open probability. SummaryPhosphoinositides play key roles in physiologic control of ENaC and perhaps dysregulation plays a role in disease associated with abnormal renal sodium handling.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2012
Vladislav Bugaj; Elena Mironova; Donald E. Kohan; James D. Stockand
Collecting duct (CD)-derived endothelin-1 (ET-1) acting via endothelin B (ETB) receptors promotes Na(+) excretion. Compromise of ET-1 signaling or ETB receptors in the CD cause sodium retention and increase blood pressure. Activity of the epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) is limiting for Na(+) reabsorption in the CD. To test for ETB receptor regulation of ENaC, we combined patch-clamp electrophysiology with CD-specific knockout (KO) of endothelin receptors. We also tested how ET-1 signaling via specific endothelin receptors influences ENaC activity under differing dietary Na(+) regimens. ET-1 significantly decreased ENaC open probability in CD isolated from wild-type (WT) and CD ETA KO mice but not CD ETB KO and CD ETA/B KO mice. ENaC activity in WT and CD ETA but not CD ETB and CD ETA/B KO mice was inversely related to dietary Na(+) intake. ENaC activity in CD ETB and CD ETA/B KO mice tended to be elevated under all dietary Na(+) regimens compared with WT and CD ETA KO mice, reaching significance with high (2%) Na(+) feeding. These results show that the bulk of ET-1 inhibition of ENaC activity is mediated by the ETB receptor. In addition, they could explain the Na(+) retention and elevated blood pressure observed in CD ET-1 KO, CD ETB KO, and CD ETA/B KO mice consistent with ENaC regulation by ET-1 via ETB receptors contributing to the antihypertensive and natriuretic effects of the local endothelin system in the mammalian CD.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Oleh Pochynyuk; Alexander Staruschenko; Vladislav Bugaj; Lila P. LaGrange; James D. Stockand
The epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) plays a central role in control of epithelial surface hydration and vascular volume. Similar to other ion channels, ENaC activity is set, in part, by its membrane levels. The small G protein RhoA increases ENaC activity by increasing the membrane levels of this channel. We hypothesize that RhoA increases ENaC activity by promoting channel trafficking to the plasma membrane. Few experimental methods are available to directly visualize trafficking of ion channels to the plasma membrane. Here we combine electrophysiology with two complementary imaging methods, total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, to study the mechanistic basis of RhoA actions on ENaC. Patch clamp results demonstrate that RhoA increases ENaC activity in an additive manner with dominant-negative dynamin. This is consistent with a mechanism of increased ENaC trafficking to the membrane. Direct visualization of ENaC movement near the plasma membrane with total internal reflection fluorescence-fluorescence recovery after photobleaching revealed that RhoA accelerates ENaC trafficking toward the membrane. RhoA-facilitated movement of the channel was sensitive to disrupting the endomembrane system. Moreover, facilitating retrieval decreased ENaC activity but not trafficking toward the membrane. ENaC at the plasma membrane clustered and was laterally immobile suggesting that the cytoskeleton tethers or corrals membrane resident channels or membrane-directed vesicles containing ENaC. Disrupting microtubules but not microfilaments led to reorganization of ENaC clusters and slowed trafficking toward the membrane. The cytoskeleton is an established target for RhoA signaling. We conclude that RhoA, likely through effects on the cytoskeleton, promotes ENaC trafficking to the plasma membrane to increase channel membrane levels and activity.
Collaboration
Dive into the Vladislav Bugaj's collaboration.
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
View shared research outputsUniversity of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
View shared research outputs