4.5 Article

CFTR regulation in human airway epithelial cells requires integrity of the actin cytoskeleton and compartmentalized cAMP and PKA activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 125, Issue 5, Pages 1106-1117

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.089086

Keywords

Cystic fibrosis; cAMP; PKA; NHERF1; airways cells; FRET

Categories

Funding

  1. Foundation Leducq [O6 CVD 02]
  2. British Heart Foundation [PG/07/091/23698]
  3. NSF National Institutes of Health CRCNS [IH R01 AA18060]
  4. Italian Cystic Fibrosis Research Foundation [FFC1/2009, FFC 4/2011]

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The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) mutation Delta F508CFTR still causes regulatory defects when rescued to the apical membrane, suggesting that the intracellular milieu might affect its ability to respond to cAMP regulation. We recently reported that overexpression of the Na+/H+ exchanger regulatory factor NHERF1 in the cystic fibrosis (CF) airway cell line CFBE41o-rescues the functional expression of Delta F508CFTR by promoting F-actin organization and formation of the NHERF1-ezrin-actin complex. Here, using real-time FRET reporters of both PKA activity and cAMP levels, we find that lack of an organized subcortical cytoskeleton in CFBE41o- cells causes both defective accumulation of cAMP in the subcortical compartment and excessive cytosolic accumulation of cAMP. This results in reduced subcortical levels and increased cytosolic levels of PKA activity. NHERF1 overexpression in CFBE41o- cells restores chloride secretion, subcortical cAMP compartmentalization and local PKA activity, indicating that regulation of Delta F508CFTR function requires not only stable expression of the mutant CFTR at the cell surface but also depends on both generation of local cAMP signals of adequate amplitude and activation of PKA in proximity of its target. Moreover, we found that the knockdown of wild-type CFTR in the non-CF 16HBE14o- cells results in both altered cytoskeletal organization and loss of cAMP compartmentalization, whereas stable overexpression of wt CFTR in CF cells restores cytoskeleton organization and re-establishes the compartmentalization of cAMP at the plasma membrane. This suggests that the presence of CFTR on the plasma membrane influences the cytoskeletal organizational state and, consequently, cAMP distribution. Our data show that a sufficiently high concentration of cAMP in the subcortical compartment is required to achieve PKA-mediated regulation of CFTR activity.

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