Skip to navigation Skip to content
  • Woodruff
  • Business
  • Health Sciences
  • Law
  • MARBL
  • Oxford College
  • Theology
  • Schools
    • Undergraduate

      • Emory College
      • Oxford College
      • Business School
      • School of Nursing

      Community

      • Emory College
      • Oxford College
      • Business School
      • School of Nursing
    • Graduate

      • Business School
      • Graduate School
      • School of Law
      • School of Medicine
      • School of Nursing
      • School of Public Health
      • School of Theology
  • Libraries
    • Libraries

      • Robert W. Woodruff
      • Business
      • Chemistry
      • Health Sciences
      • Law
      • MARBL
      • Music & Media
      • Oxford College
      • Theology
    • Library Tools

      • Course Reserves
      • Databases
      • Digital Scholarship (ECDS)
      • discoverE
      • eJournals
      • Electronic Dissertations
      • EmoryFindingAids
      • EUCLID
      • ILLiad
      • OpenEmory
      • Research Guides
  • Resources
    • Resources

      • Administrative Offices
      • Emory Healthcare
      • Academic Calendars
      • Bookstore
      • Campus Maps
      • Shuttles and Parking
      • Athletics: Emory Eagles
      • Arts at Emory
      • Michael C. Carlos Museum
      • Emory News Center
      • Emory Report
    • Resources

      • Emergency Contacts
      • Information Technology (IT)
      • Outlook Web Access
      • Office 365
      • Blackboard
      • OPUS
      • PeopleSoft Financials: Compass
      • Careers
      • Human Resources
      • Emory Alumni Association
  • Browse
    • Works by Author
    • Works by Journal
    • Works by Subject
    • Works by Dept
    • Faculty by Dept
  • For Authors
    • How to Submit
    • Deposit Advice
    • Author Rights
    • Publishing Your Data
    • FAQ
    • Emory Open Access Policy
    • Open Access Fund
  • About OpenEmory
    • About OpenEmory
    • About Us
    • Citing Articles
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
 
Contact Us

Filter Results:

Year

  • 2016 (2)
  • 2017 (1)

Author

  • Al-Khalili, Otor (1)
  • Alli, Abdel (1)
  • Aufy, Mohammed (1)
  • Brown, Nicole E. (1)
  • Chakraborty, Trinad (1)
  • Chen, Yanyi (1)
  • Czikora, Istvan (1)
  • Duke, Billie Jeanne (1)
  • Eaton, Douglas (1)
  • Fischer, Bernhard (1)
  • Gameiro, Armanda Formigao (1)
  • Hamacher, Jürg (1)
  • Hepler, John R (1)
  • Hu, Qing-Qing (1)
  • Lebedyeva, Iryna (1)
  • Lemmens-Gruber, Rosa (1)
  • Li, Xin-Yuan (1)
  • Li, Yu-Xia (1)
  • Liu, Hui-Bin (1)
  • Loose, Maria (1)
  • Lou, Jie (1)
  • Lucas, Rudolf (1)
  • Ma, He-Ping (1)
  • Salarian, Mani (1)
  • Shabbir, Waheed (1)
  • Song, Bin-Lin (1)
  • Sridhar, Supriya (1)
  • Su, Huabo (1)
  • Thai, Tiffany (1)
  • Tzotzos, Susan (1)
  • Wang, Qiu-Shi (1)
  • Wang, Zi-Rui (1)
  • Yang, Jenny (1)
  • Yue, Qiang (1)
  • Zhang, Zhi-Ren (1)
  • Zheng, Wei-Wan (1)
  • Zhuo, You (1)
  • Zou, Juan (1)

Subject

  • Biology, Physiology (1)
  • Chemistry, General (1)
  • Health Sciences, General (1)
  • Health Sciences, Toxicology (1)

Journal

  • Biochemical Journal (1)
  • Journal of Biological Chemistry (1)
  • Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity (1)

Keyword

  • biomedicin (3)
  • life (3)
  • scienc (3)
  • technolog (3)
  • 3 (2)
  • biochemistri (2)
  • epitheli (2)
  • molecular (2)
  • na (2)
  • sodiumchannel (2)
  • transport (2)
  • 2 (1)
  • 35 (1)
  • 5 (1)
  • acut (1)
  • aldosteron (1)
  • alpha (1)
  • angstrom (1)
  • arteri (1)
  • bind (1)
  • c (1)
  • calcium (1)
  • calciumbind (1)
  • chain (1)
  • communic (1)
  • depend (1)
  • dietari (1)
  • edema (1)
  • ena (1)
  • enac (1)
  • energi (1)
  • energytransf (1)
  • epithelialcel (1)
  • express (1)
  • f (1)
  • factor (1)
  • factoralpha (1)
  • fluid (1)
  • gap (1)
  • gapjunct (1)
  • inhibit (1)
  • injuri (1)
  • iq (1)
  • iqmotif (1)
  • junction (1)
  • kinas (1)
  • len (1)
  • liddl (1)
  • liddlessyndrom (1)
  • light (1)
  • lightchain (1)
  • live (1)
  • lung (1)
  • motif (1)
  • necrosi (1)
  • peptid (1)
  • plasma (1)
  • protein (1)
  • pulmonari (1)
  • pulmonaryedema (1)
  • reabsorpt (1)
  • releas (1)
  • resolut (1)
  • reson (1)
  • salt (1)
  • streptococcus (1)
  • syndrom (1)
  • tnf (1)
  • traffick (1)
  • transfer (1)
  • tumor (1)
  • tumornecrosisfactor (1)
  • ubiquitin (1)
  • ubiquityl (1)
  • xenopus (1)

Author department

  • Physiology: Admin (2)
  • Medicine: Nephrology (1)
  • Pharmacology: Admin (1)

Search Results for all work with filters:

  • Health Sciences, Pharmacology
  • channel
  • cell
  • biolog
  • sodium

Work 1-3 of 3

Sorted by relevance

Article

The Lectin-like Domain of TNF Increases ENaC Open Probability through a Novel Site at the Interface between the Second Transmembrane and C-terminal Domains of the -Subunit

by Rudolf Lucas; Qiang Yue; Abdel Alli; Billie Jeanne Duke; Otor Al-Khalili; Tiffany Thai; Jürg Hamacher; Supriya Sridhar; Iryna Lebedyeva; Huabo Su; Susan Tzotzos; Bernhard Fischer; Armanda Formigao Gameiro; Maria Loose; Trinad Chakraborty; Waheed Shabbir; Mohammed Aufy; Rosa Lemmens-Gruber; Douglas Eaton; Istvan Czikora

2016

Subjects
  • Health Sciences, Pharmacology
  • Health Sciences, Toxicology
  • File Download
  • View Abstract

Abstract:Close

Regulation of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), which regulates fluid homeostasis and blood pressure, is complex and remains incompletely understood. The TIP peptide, a mimic of the lectin-like domain of TNF, activates ENaC by binding to glycosylated residues in the extracellular loop of ENaC-α as well as to a hitherto uncharacterized internal site. Molecular docking studies suggested three residues, Val 567 , Glu 568 , and Glu 571 , located at the interface between the second transmembrane and C-terminal domains of ENaC-α, as a critical site for binding of the TIP peptide. We generated Ala replacement mutants in this region of ENaC-α and examined its interaction with TIP peptide (3M, V567A/E568A/E571A; 2M, V567A/E568A; and 1M, E571A). 3M and 2M ENaC-α but not 1M ENaC-α, displayed significantly reduced binding capacity to TIP peptide and to TNF. When overexpressed in H441 cells,3M mutant ENaC-α formed functional channels with similar gating and density characteristics as the WT subunit and efficiently associated with the β and γ subunits in the plasma membrane. We subsequently assayed for increased open probability time and membrane expression, both of which define ENaC activity, following addition of TIP peptide. TIP peptide increased open probability time in H441 cells overexpressing wild type and 1M ENaC-α channels, but not 3M or 2M ENaC-α channels. On the other hand, TIP peptide-mediated reduction in ENaC ubiquitination was similar in cells overexpressing either WT or 3M ENaC-α subunits. In summary, this study has identified a novel site in ENaC-α that is crucial for activation of the open probability of the channel, but not membrane expression, by the lectin-like domain of TNF.

Article

AMP-Activated Protein Kinase Attenuates High Salt-Induced Activation of Epithelial Sodium Channels (ENaC) in Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells

by Wei-Wan Zheng; Xin-Yuan Li; Hui-Bin Liu; Zi-Rui Wang; Qing-Qing Hu; Yu-Xia Li; Bin-Lin Song; Jie Lou; Qiu-Shi Wang; He-Ping Ma; Zhi-Ren Zhang

2016

Subjects
  • Biology, Physiology
  • Health Sciences, General
  • Health Sciences, Pharmacology
  • File Download
  • View Abstract

Abstract:Close

Recent studies suggest that the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is expressed in the endothelial cells. To test whether high salt affects the NO production via regulation of endothelial ENaC, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were incubated in solutions containing either normal or high sodium (additional 20 mM NaCl). Our data showed that high sodium treatment significantly increased α-, β-, and γ-ENaC expression levels in HUVECs. Using the cell-attached patch-clamp technique, we demonstrated that high sodium treatment significantly increased ENaC open probability (PO). Moreover, nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) phosphorylation (Ser 1177) levels and NO production were significantly decreased by high sodium in HUVECs; the effects of high sodium on eNOS phosphorylation and NO production were inhibited by a specific ENaC blocker, amiloride. Our results showed that high sodium decreased AMP-activated kinase (AMPK) phosphorylation in endothelial cells. On the other hand, metformin, an AMPK activator, prevented high sodium-induced upregulation of ENaC expression and PO. Moreover, metformin prevented high salt-induced decrease in NO production and eNOS phosphorylation. These results suggest that high sodium stimulates ENaC activation by negatively modulating AMPK activity, thereby leading to reduction in eNOS activity and NO production in endothelial cells.

Article

Direct visualization of interaction between calmodulin and connexin45

by Juan Zou; Mani Salarian; Yanyi Chen; You Zhuo; Nicole E. Brown; Jenny Yang; John R Hepler

2017

Subjects
  • Chemistry, General
  • Health Sciences, Pharmacology
  • File Download
  • View Abstract

Abstract:Close

Calmodulin (CaM) is an intracellular Ca2+ transducer involved in numerous activities in a broad Ca2+ signaling network. Previous studies have suggested that the Ca2+/CaM complex may participate in gap junction regulation via interaction with putative CaMbinding motifs in connexins; however, evidence of direct interactions between CaM and connexins has remained elusive to date due to challenges related to the study of membrane proteins. Here, we report the first direct interaction of CaM with Cx45 (connexin45) of γ-family in living cells under physiological conditions by monitoring bioluminescence resonance energy transfer. The interaction between CaM and Cx45 in cells is strongly dependent on intracellular Ca2+ concentration and can be blocked by the CaM inhibitor, N-(6-Aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide hydrochloride (W7). We further reveal a CaM-binding site at the cytosolic loop (residues 164-186) of Cx45 using a peptide model. The strong binding (Kd ∼ 5 nM) observed between CaM and Cx45 peptide, monitored by fluorescence-labeled CaM, is found to be Ca2+-dependent. Furthermore, high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals that CaM and Cx45 peptide binding leads to global chemical shift changes of 15N-labeled CaM, but does not alter the size of the structure. Observations involving both N-And C-domains of CaM to interact with the Cx45 peptide differ from the embraced interaction with Cx50 from another connexin family. Such interaction further increases Ca2+ sensitivity of CaM, especially at the N-Terminal domain. Results of the present study suggest that both helicity and the interaction mode of the cytosolic loop are likely to contribute to CaM's modulation of connexins.
Site Statistics
  • 16,813
  • Total Works
  • 3,638,947
  • Downloads
  • 1,114,858
  • Downloads This Year
  • 6,807
  • Faculty Profiles

Copyright © 2016 Emory University - All Rights Reserved
540 Asbury Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322-2870
(404) 727-6861
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions

v2.2.8-dev

Contact Us Recent and Popular Items
Download now