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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 295: C1528-C1534, 2008. First published October 8, 2008; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00081.2008
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GROWTH, DIFFERENTIATION, AND APOPTOSIS

Does the intracellular ionic concentration or the cell water content (cell volume) determine the activity of TonEBP in NIH3T3 cells?

Tina Rødgaard, Kenneth Schou, Martin B. Friis, and Else K. Hoffmann

Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Submitted 14 February 2008 ; accepted in final form 30 September 2008

The transcription factor, tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP), is involved in the adaptive response against hypertonicity. TonEBP regulates the expression of genes that catalyze the accumulation of osmolytes, and its transcriptional activity is increased by hypertonicity. The goal of the present investigation was to investigate whether cell shrinkage or high intracellular ionic concentration induced the activation of TonEBP. We designed a model system for isotonically shrinking cells over a prolonged period of time. Cells swelled in hypotonic medium and performed a regulatory volume decrease. Upon return to the original isotonic medium, cells shrank initially, followed by a regulatory volume increase. To maintain cell shrinkage, the RVI process was inhibited as follows: ethyl-isopropyl-amiloride inhibited the Na+/H+ antiport, bumetanide inhibited the Na+-K+-2Cl cotransporter, and gadolinium inhibited shrinkage-activated Na+ channels. Cells remained shrunken for at least 4 h (isotonically shrunken cells). The activity of TonEBP was investigated with a Luciferase assay after isotonic shrinkage and after shrinkage in a high-NaCl hypertonic medium. We found that TonEBP was strongly activated after 4 and 16 h in cells in high-NaCl hypertonic medium, but not after 4 or 16 h in isotonically shrunken cells. Cells treated with high-NaCl hypertonic medium for 4 h had significantly higher intracellular concentrations of both K+ and Na+ than isotonically shrunken cells. This strongly suggested that an increase in intracellular ionic concentration and not cell shrinkage is involved in TonEBP activation.

cell volume; cell ionic strength; cell ionic concentration; NIH3T3 cells; isosmotic shrinkage; tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: E. K. Hoffmann. Dept. of Biology, Univ. of Copenhagen, 13, Universitetsparken, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark (e-mail: ekhoffmann{at}bio.ku.dk)







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