Ciliary Polycystin-2 Is a Mechanosensitive Calcium Channel Involved in Nitric Oxide Signaling Cascades

  • Wissam A. AbouAlaiwi
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Maki Takahashi
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Blair R. Mell
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Thomas J. Jones
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Shobha Ratnam
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Robert J. Kolb
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.
  • Surya M. Nauli
    From the Department of Pharmacology (W.A.A., M.T., B.R.M., T.J.J., S.M.N.), College of Pharmacy; and Department of Medicine (S.R., S.M.N.), College of Medicine, University of Toledo, Ohio; and Department of Pediatrics (R.J.K.), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. Present address for T.J.J.: Pharmaceutical Sciences, Northeastern Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, Rootstown, Ohio.

抄録

<jats:p> Cardiovascular complications such as hypertension are a continuous concern in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). The <jats:italic>PKD2</jats:italic> encoding for polycystin-2 is mutated in ≈15% of ADPKD patients. Here, we show that polycystin-2 is localized to the cilia of mouse and human vascular endothelial cells. We demonstrate that the normal expression level and localization of polycystin-2 to cilia is required for the endothelial cilia to sense fluid shear stress through a complex biochemical cascade, involving calcium, calmodulin, Akt/PKB, and protein kinase C. In response to fluid shear stress, mouse endothelial cells with knockdown or knockout of <jats:italic>Pkd2</jats:italic> lose the ability to generate nitric oxide (NO). Consistent with mouse data, endothelial cells generated from ADPKD patients do not show polycystin-2 in the cilia and are unable to sense fluid flow. In the isolated artery, we further show that ciliary polycystin-2 responds specifically to shear stress and not to mechanical stretch, a pressurized biomechanical force that involves purinergic receptor activation. We propose a new role for polycystin-2 in transmitting extracellular shear stress to intracellular NO biosynthesis. Thus, aberrant expression or localization of polycystin-2 to cilia could promote high blood pressure because of inability to synthesize NO in response to an increase in shear stress (blood flow). </jats:p>

収録刊行物

  • Circulation Research

    Circulation Research 104 (7), 860-869, 2009-04-10

    Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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