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Departments of 1 Pediatrics and 2 Physiology and Biophysics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and Rainbow Center for Childhood PKD, Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, University Hospitals of Cleveland, Research Institute, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-6003
Developmental control of cell
proliferation is crucial, and abnormal principal cell proliferation may
contribute to cystogenesis in polycystic kidney disease. This study
investigates roles of cAMP and its primary effector, cAMP-dependent
protein kinase (protein kinase A; PKA), in control of cell
proliferation in filter-grown noncystic (NC) and cystic (CY)-derived
principal cell cultures. These cultures had similar cAMP pathway
characteristics upstream of PKA subunit distribution but differed in
predicted PKA subtype distribution. Functionally, cultures were
proliferative before polarization, with constitutively higher
proliferation in CY cultures. NC cultures achieved levels similar to
those of CY cultures on pharmacological manipulation of cAMP production
or PKA activation or inhibition of PKA subtype I activity. Inhibition
of overall PKA activity, or of PKA subtype II anchoring, diminished
cAMP/PKA-mediated proliferation in NC cultures but had no effect on CY
cultures. Polarized CY monolayers remained proliferative, but NC
monolayers lost responsiveness. No large proliferation changes resulted
from treatments of polarized cultures; however, polarized NC and CY cultures differed in poststimulation handling of PKA catalytic and type
II
regulatory subunits. Our results support PKA subtype regulation
of prepolarization proliferation in NC principal cells and altered
regulation of PKA in CY cells and suggest that differences at or
downstream of PKA can contribute to altered proliferation in a
developmental renal disease.
epidermal growth factor receptor; polycystic kidney disease; protein kinase subtypes; immunolocalization
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