Na,K-ATPase ?-subunit cis homo-oligomerization is necessary for epithelial lumen formation in mammalian cells.
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ABSTRACT: Na,K-ATPase is a hetero-oligomer of an ?- and a ?-subunit. The ?-subunit (Na,K-?) possesses the catalytic function, whereas the ?-subunit (Na,K-?) has cell-cell adhesion function and is localized to the apical junctional complex in polarized epithelial cells. Earlier, we identified two distinct conserved motifs on the Na,K-?(1) transmembrane domain that mediate protein-protein interactions: a glycine zipper motif involved in the cis homo-oligomerization of Na,K-?(1) and a heptad repeat motif that is involved in the hetero-oligomeric interaction with Na,K-?(1). We now provide evidence that knockdown of Na,K-?(1) prevents lumen formation and induces activation of extracellular regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase in MDCK cells grown in three-dimensional collagen cultures. These cells sustained cell proliferation in an ERK1/2-dependent manner and did not show contact inhibition at high cell densities, as revealed by parental MDCK cells. This phenotype could be rescued by wild-type Na,K-?(1) or heptad repeat motif mutant of Na,K-?(1), but not by the glycine zipper motif mutant that abrogates Na,K-?(1) cis homo-oligomerization. These studies suggest that Na,K-?(1) cis homo-oligomerization rather than hetero-oligomerization with Na,K-?(1) is involved in epithelial lumen formation. The relevance of these findings to pre-neoplastic lumen filling in epithelial cancer is discussed.
SUBMITTER: Barwe SP
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3575706 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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