Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 293: F1766-F1767, 2007.
First published October 17, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00482.2007
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EDITORIAL FOCUS
VASP: a TRPC4-associated phosphoprotein that mediates PKG-induced inhibition of store-operated calcium influx
Roger G. O'Neil
Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas
CONTROLLED REGULATION OF INTRACELLULAR calcium (Ca2+) levels is critical for cell survival and control of a wide range of calcium-dependent cell functions. While there are a plethora of Ca2+ transport proteins that may participate in regulation of Ca2+ signaling, the mechanisms underlying their control and coordination of activities to bring about a defined Ca2+ signal in time and space continue to be an area of "hot" investigation. This is particularly true for receptor-regulated Ca2+-permeable channels that function as store-operated Ca2+ channels where binding of a diverse range of first messengers, including many peptide hormones, growth factors, and neurotransmitters, to their receptors leads to activation of PLC and the generation of IP3 (4, 12, 17, 18). The subsequent binding of IP3 to the IP3 receptor (IP3R) on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) leads to release of Ca2+ from the ER Ca2+ storage sites, which, in turn, activates PM Ca2+-permeable channels and Ca2+ influx. This process of store-dependent Ca2+ influx is often referred to as store-operated Ca2+ influx (or capacitative calcium entry) and the PM Ca2+-permeable channels as "store-operated" Ca2+ channels (SOC). The molecular components of SOC signalplexes and the mechanism and regulation of SOC activity are not fully understood, although recent progress is providing new insights into the basic mechanisms. It has been shown that some members of the TRPC Ca2+-permeable channels, most notably members of the TRPC1/TRPC4/TRPC5 grouping, function as the PM Ca2+-influx pathways in many SOC responses (1, 11, 12). While the IP3R and other associated proteins are now known to be components of the TRPC SOC signalplex, it has most recently been shown that stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) may be a central player in this process (10, 13). STIM1, an ER resident protein, appears to function as an ER Ca2+ sensor which, on store depletion, translocates toward the plasma membrane as an essential signaling component of the SOC complex. It appears to provide the critical link that must exist between the ER and PM in any SOC response (10, 13). Indeed, it has now been shown that on depletion of Ca stores STIM1 associates with TRPC1, TRPC4, and TRPC5, apparently to give rise to their SOC function (19). However, our understanding of the regulation of TRPC channel activity at the PM is still not well understood.
While the molecular complex underlying the SOC response is beginning to be unraveled, our understanding of the regulatory pathways controlling the activity of SOC channels at the PM, and hence Ca2+ influx, is still poorly defined, as heretofore noted (12). The recent article by Sansom's group (15) provides evidence of a new key player in control of TRPC4-based SOC in human renal mesangial cells. In these cells, TRPC4 (16) and probably TRPC1 (2, 14) have been shown to be components of the SOC complex. Dysfunctional control of Ca2+ signaling in many cells, including mesangial cells, is thought to underlie various Ca2+-based malfunctional states that can lead to cellular dedifferentiation and proliferative pathologies (see Ref. 15). Recent studies have shown that cGMP, through activation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG), may negatively regulate Ca2+ signaling and SOC activity (6, 8). These studies point to upstream nitric oxide (NO), cGMP, and PKG as an important second messenger pathway that may down modulate SOC activity. Hence, the NO-cGMP-PKG pathway may be a key pathway in suppressing cellular proliferation and dedifferentiation of various cell types, including mesangial cells. However, the molecular players underlying this NO-cGMP-PKG-mediated downregulation of SOC have remained elusive.
What Sansom and coworkers (15) discovered in the current study was that a separate phosphoprotein, namely, vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), may be a component of the SOC machinery that is responsible for negative regulation of TRPC4 in mesangial cells. The Ena/VASP family of proteins are typically associated with regulation of actin assembly and cell motility, although other functions are beginning to emerge (7, 9). The VASP protein is a substrate for PKG and cAMP-dependent protein kinases (PKA), but where the serine 239 site (Ser239) functions as a specific PKG phosphorylation site (7, 9). Furthermore, VASP is highly expressed in mesangial cells and many other cells (3, 5). Sansom's group (15) found that activation of the NO-cGMP-PKG pathway, but not the cAMP-PKA pathway, resulted in an attenuated TRPC4-SOC response, but the response was restored by specific inhibition of PKG-1
, the dominant PKG isoform expressed in these cells. Most importantly was the demonstration that PKG activation in these cells led to phosphorylation of VASP at Ser239. Western blot, coimmunoprecipitation, and coimmunostaining experiments demonstrated that phosphorylation of VASP at Ser239 (P-Ser239-VASP) caused VASP to associate with TRPC4. VASP did not associate with TRPC4 if it were not phosphorylated at Ser239. The authors speculate that the association of P-Ser239-VASP with TRPC4 must inhibit TRPC4 activation, potentially by dissociation of P-Ser239-VASP-associated TRPC4 from a SOC complex. Regardless of the underlying mechanism, the authors have demonstrated that VASP is a key player in the NO-cGMP-PKG-induced regulation of TRPC4 and SOC in human mesangial cells. The study provides the first evidence as to the potential mechanism of PKG-induced downregulation of SOC activity and that a PKG substrate may associate with TRPC4 to modulate the SOC response. Since PKG is widely expressed in many cell types, it is likely that VASP, or other phosphoproteins with VASP homologies, may play similar roles in regulating the TRPC-based SOC responses. Finally, the findings may also have implications for pharmacological intervention of SOC-based diseases using VASP or other TRPC-associated phosphoproteins as primary drug targets. Hence, the current study has broad implications for the SOC field, providing new insights into the molecular basis of regulation of SOC-based Ca2+ signaling while opening potential doors to new drug targets that may be accessible for pharmacological modulation of dysfunctional Ca2+ states.
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FOOTNOTES
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: R. G. O'Neil, Dept. of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, The University of Texas Health Science Center, 6431 Fannin St., Houston, TX 77030
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Copyright © 2007 by the American Physiological Society.