Varying Selection Pressure for a Na+ Sensing Site in Epithelial Na+ Channel Subunits Reflect Divergent Roles in Na+ Homeostasis

Author:

Wang Xue-Ping1ORCID,Srinivasan Priyanka1ORCID,El Hamdaoui Mustapha2ORCID,Blobner Brandon M3ORCID,Grytz Rafael2ORCID,Kashlan Ossama B14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Renal-Electrolyte Division, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

2. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham , Birmingham, AL , USA

3. Department of Bioinformatics, BlueSphere Bio , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

4. Department of Computational and Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh , Pittsburgh, PA , USA

Abstract

Abstract The epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) emerged early in vertebrates and has played a role in Na+ and fluid homeostasis throughout vertebrate evolution. We previously showed that proteolytic activation of the channel evolved at the water-to-land transition of vertebrates. Sensitivity to extracellular Na+, known as Na+ self-inhibition, reduces ENaC function when Na+ concentrations are high and is a distinctive feature of the channel. A fourth ENaC subunit, δ, emerged in jawed fishes from an α subunit gene duplication. Here, we analyzed 849 α and δ subunit sequences and found that a key Asp in a postulated Na+ binding site was nearly always present in the α subunit, but frequently lost in the δ subunit (e.g. human). Analysis of site evolution and codon substitution rates provide evidence that the ancestral α subunit had the site and that purifying selection for the site relaxed in the δ subunit after its divergence from the α subunit, coinciding with a loss of δ subunit expression in renal tissues. We also show that the proposed Na+ binding site in the α subunit is a bona fide site by conferring novel function to channels comprising human δ subunits. Together, our findings provide evidence that ENaC Na+ self-inhibition improves fitness through its role in Na+ homeostasis in vertebrates.

Funder

The Pittsburgh Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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