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Publication : Prostasin regulates epithelial monolayer function: cell-specific Gpld1-mediated secretion and functional role for GPI anchor.

First Author  Verghese GM Year  2006
Journal  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol Volume  291
Issue  6 Pages  C1258-70
PubMed ID  16822939 Mgi Jnum  J:119868
Mgi Id  MGI:3703397 Doi  10.1152/ajpcell.00637.2005
Citation  Verghese GM, et al. (2006) Prostasin regulates epithelial monolayer function: cell-specific Gpld1-mediated secretion and functional role for GPI anchor. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 291(6):C1258-70
abstractText  Prostasin, a trypsinlike serine peptidase, is highly expressed in prostate, kidney, and lung epithelia, where it is bound to the cell surface, secreted, or both. Prostasin activates the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) and suppresses invasion of prostate and breast cancer cells. The studies reported here establish mechanisms of membrane anchoring and secretion in kidney and lung epithelial cells and demonstrate a critical role for prostasin in regulating epithelial monolayer function. We report that endogenous mouse prostasin is glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchored to the cell surface and is constitutively secreted from the apical surface of kidney cortical collecting duct cells. Using site-directed mutagenesis, detergent phase separation, and RNA interference approaches, we show that prostasin secretion depends on GPI anchor cleavage by endogenous GPI-specific phospholipase D1 (Gpld1). Secretion of prostasin by kidney and lung epithelial cells, in contrast to prostate epithelium, does not depend on COOH-terminal processing at conserved Arg(322). Using stably transfected M-1 cells expressing wild-type, catalytically inactive, or chimeric transmembrane (not GPI)-anchored prostasins we establish that prostasin regulates transepithelial resistance, current, and paracellular permeability by GPI anchor- and protease activity-dependent mechanisms. These studies demonstrate a novel role for prostasin in regulating epithelial monolayer resistance and permeability in kidney epithelial cells and, furthermore, show specifically that prostasin is a critical regulator of transepithelial ion transport in M-1 cells. These functions depend on the GPI anchor as well as the peptidase activity of prostasin. These studies suggest that cell-specific Gpld1- or peptidase-dependent pathways for prostasin secretion may control prostasin functions in a tissue-specific manner.
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