Mutations of the CFTR, a phosphorylation-regulated Cl− channel, cause cystic fibrosis. Activation of CFTR by PKA stimulation appears to be mediated by a complex interaction between several consensus phosphorylation sites in the regulatory domain (R domain). None of these sites has a critical role in this process. Here, we show that although endogenous phosphorylation by PKC is required for the effect of PKA on CFTR, stimulation of PKC by itself has only a minor effect on human CFTR. In contrast, CFTR from the amphibians Necturus maculosus and Xenopus laevis (XCFTR) can be activated to similar degrees by stimulation of either PKA or PKC. Furthermore, the activation of XCFTR by PKC is independent of the net charge of the R domain, and mutagenesis experiments indicate that a single site (Thr665) is required for the activation of XCFTR. Human CFTR lacks the PKC phosphorylation consensus site that includes Thr665, but insertion of an equivalent site results in a large activation upon PKC stimulation. These observations establish the presence of a novel mechanism of activation of CFTR by phosphorylation of the R domain, i.e., activation by PKC requires a single consensus phosphorylation site and is unrelated to the net charge of the R domain.
Pkc-Mediated Stimulation of Amphibian Cftr Depends on a Single Phosphorylation Consensus Site. Insertion of This Site Confers Pkc Sensitivity to Human Cftr
Abbreviations used in this paper: hCFTR, human CFTR; HXH-CFTR, CFTR chimera containing the transmembrane domains and nucleotide-binding domains of hCFTR and the regulatory domain of Xenopus CFTR; R domain, regulatory domain; XCFTR, Xenopus CFTR.
In one experiment, there was no response to PMA. If this experiment is included in the calculation, the PMA-stimulated conductance is still significantly increased, i.e., 47 ± 4% of the 8-Br-cAMP-stimulated current. A negative result was also observed in 1 of 16 experiments in Xenopus oocytes expressing XCFTR. A possible explanation for the occasional absence of response to PMA is that the cells had low endogenous cAMP levels (see next page).
Brian Button, Luis Reuss, Guillermo A. Altenberg; Pkc-Mediated Stimulation of Amphibian Cftr Depends on a Single Phosphorylation Consensus Site. Insertion of This Site Confers Pkc Sensitivity to Human Cftr. J Gen Physiol 1 May 2001; 117 (5): 457–468. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.117.5.457
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