[HTML][HTML] Parathyroid hormone inhibits renal phosphate transport by phosphorylation of serine 77 of sodium-hydrogen exchanger regulatory factor–1

EJ Weinman, RS Biswas, Q Peng… - The Journal of …, 2007 - Am Soc Clin Investig
EJ Weinman, RS Biswas, Q Peng, L Shen, CL Turner, E Xiaofei, D Steplock, S Shenolikar
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2007Am Soc Clin Investig
Parathyroid hormone (PTH), via activation of PKC and/or protein kinase A, inhibits renal
proximal tubular phosphate reabsorption by facilitating the internalization of the major
sodium-dependent phosphate transporter, Npt2a. Herein, we explore the hypothesis that the
effect of PTH is mediated by phosphorylation of serine 77 (S77) of the first PDZ domain of
the Npt2a-binding protein sodium-hydrogen exchanger regulatory factor–1 (NHERF-1).
Using recombinant polypeptides representing PDZ I, S77 of NHERF-1 is phosphorylated by …
Parathyroid hormone (PTH), via activation of PKC and/or protein kinase A, inhibits renal proximal tubular phosphate reabsorption by facilitating the internalization of the major sodium-dependent phosphate transporter, Npt2a. Herein, we explore the hypothesis that the effect of PTH is mediated by phosphorylation of serine 77 (S77) of the first PDZ domain of the Npt2a-binding protein sodium-hydrogen exchanger regulatory factor–1 (NHERF-1). Using recombinant polypeptides representing PDZ I, S77 of NHERF-1 is phosphorylated by PKC but not PKA. When expressed in primate kidney epithelial cells (BSC-1 cells), however, activation of either protein kinase phosphorylates S77, suggesting that the phosphorylation of PDZ I by PKC and PKA proceeds by different biochemical pathways. PTH and other activators of PKC and PKA dissociate NHERF-1/Npt2a complexes, as assayed using quantitative coimmunoprecipitation, confocal microscopy, and sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation in mice. Murine NHERF-1–/– renal proximal tubule cells infected with adenovirus-GFP-NHERF-1 containing an S77A mutation showed significantly increased phosphate transport compared with a phosphomimetic S77D mutation and were resistant to the inhibitory effect of PTH compared with cells infected with wild-type NHERF-1. These results indicate that PTH-mediated inhibition of renal phosphate transport involves phosphorylation of S77 of the NHERF-1 PDZ I domain and the dissociation of NHERF-1/Npt2a complexes.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation