Role of KLHL3 and dietary K+ in regulating KS-WNK1 expression
Ostrosky-Frid, M; Chavez-Canales, M; Zhang, J; et al.Andrukova, O; Argaiz, ER; Lerdo de Tejada, F; Murillo-de-Ozores, AR; Sanchez-Navarro, A; Rojas-Vega, L; Bobadilla, NA; Vazquez, N; Castaneda-Bueno, M; Alessi, DR; Gamba, G
Date: 8 March 2021
Journal
American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The physiological role of the shorter isoform of WNK1 that is exclusively expressed in the kidney (KS-WNK1), with particular abundance in the distal convoluted tubule, remains elusive. KS-WNK1 despite lacking the kinase domain, is nevertheless capable of stimulating the NaCl cotransporter (NCC), apparently through activation of WNK4. ...
The physiological role of the shorter isoform of WNK1 that is exclusively expressed in the kidney (KS-WNK1), with particular abundance in the distal convoluted tubule, remains elusive. KS-WNK1 despite lacking the kinase domain, is nevertheless capable of stimulating the NaCl cotransporter (NCC), apparently through activation of WNK4. It has recently been shown that a less severe form of the Familial Hyperkalemic Hypertension featuring only hyperkalemia is caused by missense mutations in the WNK1 acidic domain that preferentially affect CUL3-KLHL3 E3-induced degradation of KS-WNK1, rather than that of the full-length WNK1 (L-WNK1). Here we show that L-WNK1 is indeed less impacted by the CUL3-KLHL3 E3 ligase complex compared to KS-WNK1. We demonstrate that the unique 30 amino acid amino N-terminal fragment of KS-WNK1 is essential for its activating effect on NCC and recognition by KLHL3. We identify specific amino acid residues in this region critical for the functional effect of KS-WNK1 and KLHL3 sensitivity. To further explore this, we generated KLHL3-R528H knock-in mice that mimic human mutations causing Familial Hyperkalemic Hypertension. These mice revealed that the KLHL3 mutation specifically increased expression of KS-WNK1 in the kidney. We also observed that in wild type mice, expression of KS-WNK1 is only detectable after exposure to low potassium diet. These findings provide new insights into the regulation and function of KS-WNK1 by the CUL3-KLHL3 complex in DCT and indicate that this pathway is regulated by dietary K+ levels.
Institute of Health Research
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0