When size matters: transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor

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When size matters : transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor. / Toft-Bertelsen, Trine L.; Križaj, David; MacAulay, Nanna.

In: Journal of Physiology, Vol. 595, No. 11, 2017, p. 3287-3302.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Toft-Bertelsen, TL, Križaj, D & MacAulay, N 2017, 'When size matters: transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor', Journal of Physiology, vol. 595, no. 11, pp. 3287-3302. https://doi.org/10.1113/JP274135

APA

Toft-Bertelsen, T. L., Križaj, D., & MacAulay, N. (2017). When size matters: transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor. Journal of Physiology, 595(11), 3287-3302. https://doi.org/10.1113/JP274135

Vancouver

Toft-Bertelsen TL, Križaj D, MacAulay N. When size matters: transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor. Journal of Physiology. 2017;595(11):3287-3302. https://doi.org/10.1113/JP274135

Author

Toft-Bertelsen, Trine L. ; Križaj, David ; MacAulay, Nanna. / When size matters : transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor. In: Journal of Physiology. 2017 ; Vol. 595, No. 11. pp. 3287-3302.

Bibtex

@article{f078752a2bbd4ea586196a87431376a0,
title = "When size matters: transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor",
abstract = "Key points: Mammalian cells are frequently exposed to stressors causing volume changes. The transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel translates osmotic stress into ion flux. The molecular mechanism coupling osmolarity to TRPV4 activation remains elusive. TRPV4 responds to isosmolar cell swelling and osmolarity translated via different aquaporins. TRPV4 functions as a volume-sensing ion channel irrespective of the origin of the cell swelling. Abstract: Transient receptor potential channel 4 of the vanilloid subfamily (TRPV4) is activated by a diverse range of molecular cues, such as heat, lipid metabolites and synthetic agonists, in addition to hyposmotic challenges. As a non-selective cation channel permeable to Ca2+, it transduces physical stress in the form of osmotic cell swelling into intracellular Ca2+-dependent signalling events. Its contribution to cell volume regulation might include interactions with aquaporin (AQP) water channel isoforms, although the proposed requirement for a TRPV4–AQP4 macromolecular complex remains to be resolved. To characterize the elusive mechanics of TRPV4 volume-sensing, we expressed the channel in Xenopus laevis oocytes together with AQP4. Co-expression with AQP4 facilitated the cell swelling induced by osmotic challenges and thereby activated TRPV4-mediated transmembrane currents. Similar TRPV4 activation was induced by co-expression of a cognate channel, AQP1. The level of osmotically-induced TRPV4 activation, although proportional to the degree of cell swelling, was dependent on the rate of volume changes. Importantly, isosmotic cell swelling obtained by parallel activation of the co-expressed water-translocating Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter promoted TRPV4 activation despite the absence of the substantial osmotic gradients frequently employed for activation. Upon simultaneous application of an osmotic gradient and the selective TRPV4 agonist GSK1016790A, enhanced TRPV4 activation was observed only with subsaturating stimuli, indicating that the agonist promotes channel opening similar to that of volume-dependent activation. We propose that, contrary to the established paradigm, TRPV4 is activated by increased cell volume irrespective of the molecular mechanism underlying cell swelling. Thus, the channel functions as a volume-sensor, rather than as an osmo-sensor.",
keywords = "aquaporin, ion channel, osmo-sensor, osmotic swelling, transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4), TRP channels, volume regulation, volume-sensor, water channel",
author = "Toft-Bertelsen, {Trine L.} and David Kri{\v z}aj and Nanna MacAulay",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1113/JP274135",
language = "English",
volume = "595",
pages = "3287--3302",
journal = "The Journal of Physiology",
issn = "0022-3751",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - When size matters

T2 - transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 channel as a volume-sensor rather than an osmo-sensor

AU - Toft-Bertelsen, Trine L.

AU - Križaj, David

AU - MacAulay, Nanna

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Key points: Mammalian cells are frequently exposed to stressors causing volume changes. The transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel translates osmotic stress into ion flux. The molecular mechanism coupling osmolarity to TRPV4 activation remains elusive. TRPV4 responds to isosmolar cell swelling and osmolarity translated via different aquaporins. TRPV4 functions as a volume-sensing ion channel irrespective of the origin of the cell swelling. Abstract: Transient receptor potential channel 4 of the vanilloid subfamily (TRPV4) is activated by a diverse range of molecular cues, such as heat, lipid metabolites and synthetic agonists, in addition to hyposmotic challenges. As a non-selective cation channel permeable to Ca2+, it transduces physical stress in the form of osmotic cell swelling into intracellular Ca2+-dependent signalling events. Its contribution to cell volume regulation might include interactions with aquaporin (AQP) water channel isoforms, although the proposed requirement for a TRPV4–AQP4 macromolecular complex remains to be resolved. To characterize the elusive mechanics of TRPV4 volume-sensing, we expressed the channel in Xenopus laevis oocytes together with AQP4. Co-expression with AQP4 facilitated the cell swelling induced by osmotic challenges and thereby activated TRPV4-mediated transmembrane currents. Similar TRPV4 activation was induced by co-expression of a cognate channel, AQP1. The level of osmotically-induced TRPV4 activation, although proportional to the degree of cell swelling, was dependent on the rate of volume changes. Importantly, isosmotic cell swelling obtained by parallel activation of the co-expressed water-translocating Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter promoted TRPV4 activation despite the absence of the substantial osmotic gradients frequently employed for activation. Upon simultaneous application of an osmotic gradient and the selective TRPV4 agonist GSK1016790A, enhanced TRPV4 activation was observed only with subsaturating stimuli, indicating that the agonist promotes channel opening similar to that of volume-dependent activation. We propose that, contrary to the established paradigm, TRPV4 is activated by increased cell volume irrespective of the molecular mechanism underlying cell swelling. Thus, the channel functions as a volume-sensor, rather than as an osmo-sensor.

AB - Key points: Mammalian cells are frequently exposed to stressors causing volume changes. The transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel translates osmotic stress into ion flux. The molecular mechanism coupling osmolarity to TRPV4 activation remains elusive. TRPV4 responds to isosmolar cell swelling and osmolarity translated via different aquaporins. TRPV4 functions as a volume-sensing ion channel irrespective of the origin of the cell swelling. Abstract: Transient receptor potential channel 4 of the vanilloid subfamily (TRPV4) is activated by a diverse range of molecular cues, such as heat, lipid metabolites and synthetic agonists, in addition to hyposmotic challenges. As a non-selective cation channel permeable to Ca2+, it transduces physical stress in the form of osmotic cell swelling into intracellular Ca2+-dependent signalling events. Its contribution to cell volume regulation might include interactions with aquaporin (AQP) water channel isoforms, although the proposed requirement for a TRPV4–AQP4 macromolecular complex remains to be resolved. To characterize the elusive mechanics of TRPV4 volume-sensing, we expressed the channel in Xenopus laevis oocytes together with AQP4. Co-expression with AQP4 facilitated the cell swelling induced by osmotic challenges and thereby activated TRPV4-mediated transmembrane currents. Similar TRPV4 activation was induced by co-expression of a cognate channel, AQP1. The level of osmotically-induced TRPV4 activation, although proportional to the degree of cell swelling, was dependent on the rate of volume changes. Importantly, isosmotic cell swelling obtained by parallel activation of the co-expressed water-translocating Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter promoted TRPV4 activation despite the absence of the substantial osmotic gradients frequently employed for activation. Upon simultaneous application of an osmotic gradient and the selective TRPV4 agonist GSK1016790A, enhanced TRPV4 activation was observed only with subsaturating stimuli, indicating that the agonist promotes channel opening similar to that of volume-dependent activation. We propose that, contrary to the established paradigm, TRPV4 is activated by increased cell volume irrespective of the molecular mechanism underlying cell swelling. Thus, the channel functions as a volume-sensor, rather than as an osmo-sensor.

KW - aquaporin

KW - ion channel

KW - osmo-sensor

KW - osmotic swelling

KW - transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4)

KW - TRP channels

KW - volume regulation

KW - volume-sensor

KW - water channel

U2 - 10.1113/JP274135

DO - 10.1113/JP274135

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28295351

AN - SCOPUS:85018928601

VL - 595

SP - 3287

EP - 3302

JO - The Journal of Physiology

JF - The Journal of Physiology

SN - 0022-3751

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 182419120