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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 283: F671-F677, 2002. First published June 11, 2002; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00160.2002
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Vol. 283, Issue 4, F671-F677, October 2002

K depletion increases protein tyrosine kinase-mediated phosphorylation of ROMK

Dao-Hong Lin1,2, Hyacinth Sterling1, Kenneth M. Lerea3, Paul Welling4, Lianhong Jin2, Gerhard Giebisch5, and Wen-Hui Wang1

1 Departments of Pharmacology and 3 Anatomy and Cell Biology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York 10595; 2 Department of Microbiology, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China; 4 Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201; and 5 Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510

We purified His-tagged ROMK1 and carried out in vitro phosphorylation assays with 32P-radiolabeled ATP to determine whether ROMK1 protein is a substrate for PTK. Addition of active c-Src and [32P]ATP to the purified ROMK1 protein resulted in the phosphorylation of the ROMK1 protein. However, c-Src did not phosphorylate R1Y337A in which tyrosine residue 337 was mutated to alanine. Furthermore, phosphopeptide mapping identified two phosphopeptides from the trypsin-digested ROMK1 protein. In contrast, no phosphorylated peptide has been found in the trypsin-digested R1Y337A protein. This suggested that two phosphorylated peptides might contain the same tyrosine residue. Also, addition of c-Src and [32P]ATP phosphorylated the synthesized peptide corresponding to amino acid sequence 333-362 of the COOH terminus of ROMK1. We then examined the effect of dietary K intake on the tyrosine-phosphorylated ROMK level. Although the ROMK channels pulled down by immunoprecipitation with ROMK antibody were the same from rats on a K-deficient diet or on a high-K diet, more ROMK channels were phosphorylated by PTK in rats on a K-deficient diet than those on a high-K diet. We conclude that ROMK1 can be phosphorylated by PTK and that tyrosine residue 337 is the key site for the phosphorylation. Also, the tyrosine phosphorylation of ROMK is modulated by dietary K intake. This strongly suggests that PTK is an important member of the aldosterone-independent signal transduction pathway for regulating renal K secretion.

renal potassium secretion; hypokalemia; dietary potassium intake; protein tyrosine phosphatase; cortical collecting duct


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