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Polycystin-1 maturation requires polycystin-2 in a dose-dependent manner
Vladimir G. Gainullin, … , Cynthia J. Hommerding, Peter C. Harris
Vladimir G. Gainullin, … , Cynthia J. Hommerding, Peter C. Harris
Published January 9, 2015
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2015;125(2):607-620. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI76972.
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Research Article

Polycystin-1 maturation requires polycystin-2 in a dose-dependent manner

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Abstract

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a common inherited nephropathy responsible for 4%–10% of end-stage renal disease cases. Mutations in the genes encoding polycystin-1 (PC1, PKD1) or polycystin-2 (PC2, PKD2) cause ADPKD, and PKD1 mutations are associated with more severe renal disease. PC1 has been shown to form a complex with PC2, and the severity of PKD1-mediated disease is associated with the level of the mature PC1 glycoform. Here, we demonstrated that PC1 and PC2 first interact in the ER before PC1 cleavage at the GPS/GAIN site and determined that PC2 acts as an essential chaperone for PC1 maturation and surface localization. The chaperone function of PC2 was dependent on the presence of the distal coiled-coil domain and was disrupted by pathogenic missense mutations. In Pkd2–/– mice, complete loss of PC2 prevented PC1 maturation. In Pkd2 heterozygotes, the 50% PC2 reduction resulted in a nonequimolar reduction (20%–25%) of the mature PC1 glycoform. Interbreeding between various Pkd1 and Pkd2 models revealed that animals with reduced levels of functional PC1 and PC2 in the kidney exhibited severe, rapidly progressive disease, illustrating the importance of complexing of these proteins for function. Our results indicate that PC2 regulates PC1 maturation; therefore, mature PC1 levels are a determinant of disease severity in PKD2 as well as PKD1.

Authors

Vladimir G. Gainullin, Katharina Hopp, Christopher J. Ward, Cynthia J. Hommerding, Peter C. Harris

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Figure 3

PM and cilia colocalization of PC1 and PC2.

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PM and cilia colocalization of PC1 and PC2.
(A) Diagram of mCherry-PC1 a...
(A) Diagram of mCherry-PC1 and GFP-PC2 fusion proteins used in the IF experiments. (B) Confocal images of mCherry-PC1– and GFP-PC2–cotransfected RCTE cells showing prefixation surface labeling of PC1 (mCherry antibody) in live cells or all PC1 after permeabilization (total mCherry), with PC2 (GFP) and DAPI. Scale bar: 10 μm. Peripheral overlapping PC1/PC2 punctae are indicated with yellow arrows, with colocalization also seen in the ER. (C) Optical sectioning (z-stack, XZ plane) of confocal image of ciliated RCTE cells cotransfected with mCherry-PC1 and GFP-PC2 and subjected to prefixation PC1 labeling (mCherry antibodies). Surface PC1 and PC2 colocalized in primary cilia, while PC1 signal was also seen on the PM (red arrow). Scale bar: 10 μm. (D) Low-magnification image of surface-labeled RCTE cells cotransfected with mCherry-PC1 and GFP-PC2, showing mCherry-PC1 detected on the surface only in cells also expressing GFP-PC2 (arrows). Scale bar: 50 μm. (E) Deglycosylation analysis of RCTE cells expressing mCherry-PC1 alone or cotransfected with GFP-PC2. Mature mCherry-PC1 (PC1-NTR) was detected only in cells cotransfected with GFP-PC2, while cleaved ER-resident mCherry-PC1 (NTS) accumulated in the absence of PC2. Representative blots are shown from 3 independent experiments.
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