19 research outputs found

    Liver cell hydration and integrin signaling

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    Liver cell hydration (cell volume) is dynamic and can change within minutes under theinfluence of hormones, nutrients, and oxidative stress. Such volume changes were identified asa novel and important modulator of cell function. It provides an early example for theinteraction between a physical parameter (cell volume) on the one hand and metabolism,transport, and gene expression on the other. Such events involve mechanotransduction(osmosensing) which triggers signaling cascades towards liver function (osmosignaling). Thisarticle reviews our own work on this topic with emphasis on the role of β1 integrins as(osmo-)mechanosensors in the liver, but also on their role in bile acid signaling

    Isoform-specific Inhibition of N-methyl-D-aspartate Receptors by Bile Salts

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    The N-methyl-D-aspartate subfamily of ionotropic glutamate receptors (NMDARs) is well known for its important roles in the central nervous system (CNS), e.g. learning and memory formation. Besides the CNS, NMDARs are also expressed in numerous peripheral tissues including the pancreas, kidney, stomach, and blood cells, where an understanding of their physiological and pathophysiological roles is only evolving. Whereas subunit composition increases functional diversity of NMDARs, a great number of endogenous cues tune receptor signaling. Here, we characterized the effects of the steroid bile salts cholate and chenodeoxycholate (CDC) on recombinantly expressed NMDARs of defined molecular composition. CDC inhibited NMDARs in an isoform-dependent manner, preferring GluN2D and GluN3B over GluN2A and GluN2B receptors. Determined IC50 values were in the range of bile salt serum concentrations in severe cholestatic disease states, pointing at a putative pathophysiological significance of the identified receptor modulation. Both pharmacological and molecular simulation analyses indicate that CDC acts allosterically on GluN2D, whereas it competes with agonist binding on GluN3B receptors. Such differential modes of inhibition may allow isoform-specific targeted interference with the NMDAR/bile salt interaction. In summary, our study provides further molecular insight into the modulation of NMDARs by endogenous steroids and points at a putative pathophysiological role of the receptors in cholestatic disease

    Fluorophore-labeled cyclic nucleotides as potent agonists of cyclic nucleotide-regulated ion channels

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    High‐affinity fluorescent derivatives of cyclic adenosine and guanosine monophosphate are powerful tools to investigate their natural targets. Cyclic nucleotide‐regulated ion channels belong to these targets and are vital for many signal transduction processes, such as vision and olfaction. The relation of ligand binding to activation gating is still challenging and there is a request for fluorescent probes that enable a breaking down to the single molecule level. This inspired us to prepare fluorophore‐labeled cyclic nucleotides, which are composed of a bright dye and a nucleotide derivative with a thiophenol motif at position 8 that has already been shown to enable superior binding affinity. The preparation of these bioconjugates was accomplished via a novel cross‐linking strategy that involves the substitution of the nucleobase with a modified thiophenolate in good yield. Both fluorescent nucleotides are potent activators of different cyclic nucleotide‐regulated ion channels with respect to the natural ligand and previously reported substances. Molecular docking of the probes excluding the fluorophore reveals that the high potency can be attributed to additional hydrophobic and cation‐π interactions between the ligand and the protein. Moreover, the introduced substances bear the potential to investigate related target proteins, such as cAMP‐ and cGMP‐dependent protein kinases, exchange proteins directly activated by cAMP or phosphodiesterases

    Fluorophore‐Labeled Cyclic Nucleotides as Potent Agonists of Cyclic Nucleotide‐Regulated Ion Channels

    No full text
    High‐affinity fluorescent derivatives of cyclic adenosine and guanosine monophosphate are powerful tools to investigate their natural targets. Cyclic nucleotide‐regulated ion channels belong to these targets and are vital for many signal transduction processes, such as vision and olfaction. The relation of ligand binding to activation gating is still challenging and there is a request for fluorescent probes that enable a breaking down to the single molecule level. This inspired us to prepare fluorophore‐labeled cyclic nucleotides, which are composed of a bright dye and a nucleotide derivative with a thiophenol motif at position 8 that has already been shown to enable superior binding affinity. The preparation of these bioconjugates was accomplished via a novel cross‐linking strategy that involves the substitution of the nucleobase with a modified thiophenolate in good yield. Both fluorescent nucleotides are potent activators of different cyclic nucleotide‐regulated ion channels with respect to the natural ligand and previously reported substances. Molecular docking of the probes excluding the fluorophore reveals that the high potency can be attributed to additional hydrophobic and cation‐π interactions between the ligand and the protein. Moreover, the introduced substances bear the potential to investigate related target proteins, such as cAMP‐ and cGMP‐dependent protein kinases, exchange proteins directly activated by cAMP or phosphodiesterases

    N 6 -modified cAMP derivatives that activate protein kinase A also act as full agonists of murine HCN2 channels

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    cAMP acts as a second messenger in many cellular processes. Three protein types mainly mediate cAMP-induced effects: PKA, exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac), and cyclic nucleotide–modulated channels (cyclic nucleotide–gated or hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide–modulated (HCN) channels). Discrimination among these cAMP signaling pathways requires specific targeting of only one protein. Previously, cAMP modifications at position N6 of the adenine ring (PKA) and position 2′-OH of the ribose (Epac) have been used to produce target-selective compounds. However, cyclic nucleotide–modulated ion channels were usually outside of the scope of these previous studies. These channels are widely distributed, so possible channel cross-activation by PKA- or Epac-selective agonists warrants serious consideration. Here we demonstrate the agonistic effects of three PKA-selective cAMP derivatives, N6-phenyladenosine-3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (N6-Phe-cAMP), N6-benzyladenosine-3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (N6-Bn-cAMP), and N6-benzoyl-adenosine-3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (N6-Bnz-cAMP), on murine HCN2 pacemaker channels. Electrophysiological characterization in Xenopus oocytes revealed that these derivatives differ in apparent affinities depending on the modification type but that their efficacy and effects on HCN2 activation kinetics are similar to those of cAMP. Docking experiments suggested a pivotal role of Arg-635 at the entrance of the binding pocket in HCN2, either causing stabilizing cation–π interactions with the aromatic ring in N6-Phe-cAMP or N6-Bn-cAMP or a steric clash with the aromatic ring in N6-Bnz-cAMP. A reduced apparent affinity of N6-Phe-cAMP toward the variants R635A and R635E strengthened that notion. We conclude that some PKA activators also effectively activate HCN2 channels. Hence, when studying PKA-mediated cAMP signaling with cAMP derivatives in a native environment, activation of HCN channels should be considered

    Hydrophobic alkyl chains substituted to the 8-position of cyclic nucleotides enhance activation of CNG and HCN channels by an intricate enthalpy - entropy compensation

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    Cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) and hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels are tetrameric non-specific cation channels in the plasma membrane that are activated by either cAMP or cGMP binding to specific binding domains incorporated in each subunit. Typical apparent affinities of these channels for these cyclic nucleotides range from several hundred nanomolar to tens of micromolar. Here we synthesized and characterized novel cAMP and cGMP derivatives by substituting either hydrophobic alkyl chains or similar-sized more hydrophilic heteroalkyl chains to the 8-position of the purine ring with the aim to obtain full agonists of higher potency. The compounds were tested in homotetrameric CNGA2, heterotetrameric CNGA2:CNGA4:CNGB1b and homotetrameric HCN2 channels. We show that nearly all compounds are full agonists and that longer alkyl chains systematically increase the apparent affinity, at the best more than 30 times. The effects are stronger in CNG than HCN2 channels which, however, are constitutively more sensitive to cAMP. Kinetic analyses reveal that the off-rate is significantly slowed by the hydrophobic alkyl chains. Molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations suggest that an intricate enthalpy - entropy compensation underlies the higher apparent affinity of the derivatives with the longer alkyl chains, which is shown to result from a reduced loss of configurational entropy upon binding

    Evidence for functional selectivity in TUDC- and norUDCA-induced signal transduction via ι5β1 integrin towards choleresis

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    Functional selectivity is the ligand-specific activation of certain signal transduction pathways at a receptor and has been described for G protein-coupled receptors. However, it has not yet been described for ligands interacting with integrins without ιI domain. Here, we show by molecular dynamics simulations that four side chain-modified derivatives of tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDC), an agonist of ι5β1 integrin, differentially shift the conformational equilibrium of ι5β1 integrin towards the active state, in line with the extent of β1 integrin activation from immunostaining. Unlike TUDC, 24-nor-ursodeoxycholic acid (norUDCA)-induced β1 integrin activation triggered only transient activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and, consequently, only transient insertion of the bile acid transporter Bsep into the canalicular membrane, and did not involve activation of epidermal growth factor receptor. These results provide evidence that TUDC and norUDCA exert a functional selectivity at ι5β1 integrin and may provide a rationale for differential therapeutic use of UDCA and norUDCA

    Evidence for a credit-card-swipe mechanism in the human PC floppase ABCB4

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    ABCB4 is described as an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter that primarily transports lipids of the phosphatidylcholine (PC) family but is also capable of translocating a subset of typical multidrug-resistance-associated drugs. The high degree of amino acid identity of 76% for ABCB4 and ABCB1, which is a prototype multidrug-resistance-mediating protein, results in ABCB4's second subset of substrates, which overlap with ABCB1's substrates. This often leads to incomplete annotations of ABCB4, in which it was described as exclusively PC-lipid specific. When the hydrophilic amino acids from ABCB4 are changed to the analogous but hydrophobic ones from ABCB1, the stimulation of ATPase activity by 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, as a prime example of PC lipids, is strongly diminished, whereas the modulation capability of ABCB1 substrates remains unchanged. This indicates two distinct and autonomous substrate binding sites in ABCB4
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