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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol (May 6, 2009). doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00677.2008
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Submitted on December 31, 2008
Revised on April 1, 2009
Accepted on April 30, 2009

AMP-activated protein kinase phosphorylation of the R domain inhibits PKA stimulation of CFTR

J Darwin King Jr.1, Adam C. Fitch1, Jeffrey K. Lee1, Jill E. McCane2, Don-On Daniel Mak2, J. Kevin Foskett2, and Kenneth R Hallows1*

1 University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
2 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: hallows{at}pitt.edu.

The metabolic sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) has emerged as an important link between cellular metabolic status and ion transport activity. We previously found that AMPK binds to and phosphorylates CFTR in vitro and inhibits PKA-dependent stimulation of CFTR channel gating in Calu-3 bronchial serous gland epithelial cells. To further characterize the mechanism of AMPK-dependent regulation of CFTR, whole-cell patch-clamp measurements were performed with PKA activation in Calu-3 cells expressing either constitutively-active or dominant-negative AMPK mutants (AMPK-CA or AMPK-DN). Baseline CFTR conductance in cells expressing AMPK-DN was substantially greater than controls, suggesting tonic AMPK activity in these cells inhibits CFTR under basal conditions. Although baseline CFTR conductance in cells expressing AMPK-CA was comparable to that of controls, PKA stimulation of CFTR was completely blocked in AMPK-CA-expressing cells, suggesting that AMPK activation renders CFTR resistant to PKA activation in vivo. Phosphorylation studies of CFTR in HEK-293 cells utilizing tetracycline-inducible expression of AMPK-DN demonstrated AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of CFTR in vivo. However, AMPK activity modulation had no effect on CFTR in vivo phosphorylation in response to graded doses of PKA or PKC agonists. Thus, AMPK-dependent CFTR phosphorylation renders the channel resistant to activation by PKA and PKC without preventing phosphorylation by these kinases. We found that Ser-768, a CFTR R-domain residue considered to be an inhibitory PKA site, is the dominant site of AMPK phosphorylation in vitro. Ser-to-Ala mutation at this site enhanced baseline CFTR activity and rendered CFTR resistant to inhibition by AMPK, suggesting that AMPK phosphorylation at Ser-768 is required for its inhibition of CFTR. In summary, our findings indicate that AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of CFTR inhibits CFTR activation by PKA, thereby tuning the PKA-responsiveness of CFTR to metabolic and other stresses in the cell.







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