4.4 Article

A1 adenosine receptor-stimulated exocytosis in bladder umbrella cells requires phosphorylation of ADAM17 Ser-811 and EGF receptor transactivation

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 25, Issue 23, Pages 3798-3812

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E14-03-0818

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R37-DK54425, R01-DK077777, P30-DK079307, R01-DK075048]
  2. Cellular Physiology and Kidney Imaging Cores of the Pittsburgh Center for Kidney Research [P30-DK079307]

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Despite the importance of ADAM17-dependent cleavage in normal biology and disease, the physiological cues that trigger its activity, the effector pathways that promote its function, and the mechanisms that control its activity, particularly the role of phosphorylation, remain unresolved. Using native bladder epithelium, in some cases transduced with adenoviruses encoding small interfering RNA, we observe that stimulation of apically localized A(1) adenosine receptors (A(1)ARs) triggers a G(i)-G beta gamma-phospholipase C-protein kinase C (PKC) cascade that promotes ADAM17-dependent HB-EGF cleavage, EGFR transactivation, and apical exocytosis. We further show that the cytoplasmic tail of rat ADAM17 contains a conserved serine residue at position 811, which resides in a canonical PKC phosphorylation site, and is phosphorylated in response to A(1)AR activation. Preventing this phosphorylation event by expression of a nonphosphorylatable ADAM17(S811A) mutant or expression of a tail-minus construct inhibits A(1)AR-stimulated, ADAM17-dependent HB-EGF cleavage. Furthermore, expression of ADAM17S811A in bladder tissues impairs A1AR-induced apical exocytosis. We conclude that adenosine-stimulated exocytosis requires PKC-and ADAM17-dependent EGFR transactivation and that the function of ADAM17 in this pathway depends on the phosphorylation state of Ser-811 in its cytoplasmic domain.

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