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Treatment of Polarized Cystic Fibrosis Airway Cells With HGF Prevents VX-661-Rescued F508del-CFTR Destabilization Caused by Prolonged Co-exposure to VX-770
Publication . Matos, Ana M.; Jordan, Peter; Matos, Paulo
Cystic fibrosis (CF), the most common inherited disease in Caucasians, is caused by mutations in CFTR, the most frequent of which is F508del. F508del causes ER retention and degradation of the mutant CFTR protein, but also defective channel gating and decreased half-life at the plasma membrane. Despite the recent successes with small molecule CFTR modulator drugs, the folding-corrector/gating-potentiator drug combinations approved for CF individuals carrying F508del-CFTR have sometimes produced severe side effects. Previously, we showed that a prolonged, 15-days treatment of polarized bronchial epithelial monolayers with the VX-809+VX-770 combination resulted in epithelial dedifferentiation effects that we found were caused specifically by VX-809. Moreover, prolonged VX-770 exposure also led to the destabilization of VX-809-rescued F508del-CFTR. Notably, co-treatment with the physiological factor HGF prevented VX-809-mediated epithelial differentiation and reverted the destabilizing effect of VX-770 on VX-809-rescued CFTR. Here, we show that prolonged treatment with VX-661, a second-generation corrector developed based on VX-809 structure, does not perturb epithelial integrity of polarized bronchial epithelial monolayers. Yet, its efficacy is still affected by co-exposure to VX-770, the potentiator present in all VX-661-containing combination therapies approved in the United States and Europe for treatment of F508del-CFTR carriers. Importantly, we found that co-treatment with HGF still ameliorated the impact of VX-770 in F508del-CFTR functional rescue by VX-661, without increasing cell proliferation (Ki-67) or altering the overall expression of epithelial markers (ZO-1, E-cadherin, CK8, CK18). Our findings highlight the importance of evaluating the cellular effects of prolonged exposure to CFTR modulators and suggest that the benefits of adding HGF to current combination therapies should be further investigated.
YES1 Kinase Mediates the Membrane Removal of Rescued F508del-CFTR in Airway Cells by Promoting MAPK Pathway Activation via SHC1
Publication . Barros, Patrícia; Matos, Ana M.; Matos, Paulo; Jordan, Peter
Recent developments in CFTR modulator drugs have had a significant transformational effect on the treatment of individuals with Cystic Fibrosis (CF) who carry the most frequent F508del- CFTR mutation in at least one allele. However, the clinical effects of these revolutionary drugs remain limited by their inability to fully restore the plasma membrane (PM) stability of the rescued mutant channels. Here, we shed new light on the molecular mechanisms behind the reduced half-life of rescued F508del-CFTR at the PM of airway cells. We describe that YES1 protein kinase is enriched in F508del-CFTR protein PM complexes, and that its interaction with rescued channels is mediated and dependent on the adaptor protein YAP1. Moreover, we show that interference with this complex, either by depletion of one of these components or inhibiting YES1 activity, is sufficient to significantly improve the abundance and stability of modulator-rescued F508del-CFTR at the surface of airway cells. In addition, we found that this effect was mediated by a decreased phosphorylation of the scaffold protein SHC1, a key regulator of MAPK pathway activity. In fact, we showed that depletion of SHC1 or inhibition of MAPK pathway signaling was sufficient to improve rescued F508del-CFTR surface levels, whereas an ectopic increase in pathway activation downstream of SHC1, through the use of a constitutively active H-RAS protein, abrogated the stabilizing effect of YES1 inhibition on rescued F508del-CFTR. Taken together, our findings not only provide new mechanistic insights into the regulation of modulator-rescued F508del-CFTR membrane stability, but also open exciting new avenues to be further explored in CF research and treatment.
Metabolic tumor cell adaptation: tyrosine phosphorylation modulates cell surface expression of NKCC2 and KCC3
Publication . Loureiro, Cláudia; Barros, Patrícia; Matos, Paulo; Jordan, Peter
Introduction: Tumor cells require cellular chloride and potassium transport to adapt to a changing microenvironment, both for cell volume regulation and membrane potential maintenance. Cellular chloride and potassium entry or exit are mediated at the plasma membrane by cotransporter proteins of the solute carrier 12 family. For example, NKCC2 resorbs chloride with sodium and potassium ions at the apical membrane of epithelial cells in the kidney, whereas KCC3 releases chloride with potassium ions at the basolateral membrane. Their ion transport activity is regulated by protein phosphorylation in response to signaling pathways. An additional regulatory mechanism concerns the amount of cotransporter molecules inserted into the plasma membrane. Material and Methods: Cotransporter constructs were transfected into HEK293 cells and the activity of spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) modulated by incubation with SYK inhibitors or by co-transfection with siRNAs, kinase-dead, or constitutively active SYK mutants. Cotransporter abundance in the plasma membrane was analyzed by biotinylation of cell surface proteins. Results and Discussions: Here we describe that tyrosine phosphorylation of NKCC2 and KCC3 regulates their plasma membrane expression levels. We identified that SYK phosphorylates a specific N-terminal tyrosine residue in each cotransporter. Experimental depletion of endogenous SYK or pharmacological inhibition of its kinase activity increased the abundance of NKCC2 at the plasma membrane of human embryonic kidney cells. In contrast, overexpression of a constitutively active SYK mutant decreased NKCC2 membrane abundance. Intriguingly, the same experimental approaches revealed the opposite effect on KCC3 abundance at the plasma membrane, compatible with the known antagonistic roles of NKCC and KCC cotransporters in cell volume regulation. Conclusion: We identified a novel pathway modulating the cell surface expression of NKCC2 and KCC3 and show that this same pathway has opposite functional outcomes for these two cotransporters. The findings add knowledge on how tumor cells may respond to microenvironmental changes that affect their cell volume or metabolic crosstalk.

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Funding agency

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Funding programme

3599-PPCDT

Funding Award Number

PTDC/BIA-CEL/28408/2017

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