WNK1 is a chloride-stimulated scaffold that regulates mTORC2 activity and ion transport

Author:

Saha Bidisha1,Leite-Dellova Deise C. A.2,Demko John1,Sørensen Mads Vaarby3,Takagi Enzo1,Gleason Catherine E.1,Shabbir Waheed1,Pearce David1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California at San Francisco 1 Division of Nephrology, Departments of Medicine and Cellular & Molecular Pharmacology, , San Francisco, CA 94158 , USA

2. Faculty of Animal Science and Food Engineering, University of São Paulo 2 Department of Veterinary Medicine , , Pirassununga, Sao Paulo 13635-900 , Brazil

3. Aarhus University 3 Departments of Biomedicine and Physiology , , 8000 Aarhus C , Denmark

Abstract

ABSTRACT Mammalian (or mechanistic) target of rapamycin complex 2 (mTORC2) is a kinase complex that targets predominantly Akt family proteins, SGK1 and protein kinase C (PKC), and has well-characterized roles in mediating hormone and growth factor effects on a wide array of cellular processes. Recent evidence suggests that mTORC2 is also directly stimulated in renal tubule cells by increased extracellular K+ concentration, leading to activation of the Na+ channel, ENaC, and increasing the electrical driving force for K+ secretion. We identify here a signaling mechanism for this local effect of K+. We show that an increase in extracellular [K+] leads to a rise in intracellular chloride (Cl−), which stimulates a previously unknown scaffolding activity of the protein ‘with no lysine-1’ (WNK1) kinase. WNK1 interacts selectively with SGK1 and recruits it to mTORC2, resulting in enhanced SGK1 phosphorylation and SGK1-dependent activation of ENaC. This scaffolding effect of WNK1 is independent of its own kinase activity and does not cause a generalized stimulation of mTORC2 kinase activity. These findings establish a novel WNK1-dependent regulatory mechanism that harnesses mTORC2 kinase activity selectively toward SGK1 to control epithelial ion transport and electrolyte homeostasis.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

James Hilton Manning and Emma Austin Manning Foundation

University of California, San Francisco

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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