1. Academic Validation
  2. Regulation of TRPP3 Channel Function by N-terminal Domain Palmitoylation and Phosphorylation

Regulation of TRPP3 Channel Function by N-terminal Domain Palmitoylation and Phosphorylation

  • J Biol Chem. 2016 Dec 2;291(49):25678-25691. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M116.756544.
Wang Zheng 1 JungWoo Yang 1 Erwan Beauchamp 2 Ruiqi Cai 1 Shaimaa Hussein 1 Laura Hofmann 3 Qiang Li 1 Veit Flockerzi 3 Luc G Berthiaume 2 Jingfeng Tang 4 Xing-Zhen Chen 5 6
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the Membrane Protein Disease Research Group, Departments of Physiology and.
  • 2 Cell Biology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H7, Canada.
  • 3 the Experimentelle und Klinische Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Universität des Saarlandes, 66421 Homburg, Germany, and.
  • 4 the Institute of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Provincial Cooperative Innovation Center, College of Bioengineering, Hubei University of Technology, 430068 Wuhan, China jingfeng9930@163.com.
  • 5 From the Membrane Protein Disease Research Group, Departments of Physiology and xzchen@ualberta.ca.
  • 6 the Institute of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Provincial Cooperative Innovation Center, College of Bioengineering, Hubei University of Technology, 430068 Wuhan, China.
Abstract

Transient receptor potential polycystin-3 (TRPP3) is a cation channel activated by calcium and proton and is involved in Hedgehog signaling, intestinal development, and sour tasting. How TRPP3 channel function is regulated remains poorly understood. By N-terminal truncation mutations, electrophysiology, and Xenopus oocyte expression, we first identified fragment Asp-21-Ser-42 to be functionally important. We then found that deletion mutant Δ1-36 (TRPP3 missing fragment Met-1-Arg-36) has a similar function as wild-type TRPP3, whereas Δ1-38 is functionally dead, suggesting the importance of Val-37 or Cys-38. Further studies found that Cys-38, but not Val-37, is functionally critical. Cys-38 is a predicted site of palmitoylation, and indeed TRPP3 channel activity was inhibited by palmitoylation inhibitor 2-bromopalmitate and rescued by palmitoylation substrate palmitic acid. The TRPP3 N terminus (TRPP3NT, Met-1-Leu-95) localized along the plasma membrane of HEK293 cells but stayed in the cytoplasm with 2-bromopalmitate treatment or C38A mutation, indicating that TRPP3NT anchors to the surface membrane through palmitoylation at Cys-38. By acyl-biotin exchange assays, we showed that TRPP3, but not mutant C38A, is indeed palmitoylated. When putative phosphorylation sites near Cys-38 were mutated to Asp or Glu to mimic phosphorylation, only T39D and T39E reduced TRPP3 function. Furthermore, TRPP3NT displayed double bands in which the upper band was abolished by λ Phosphatase treatment or T39A mutation. However, palmitoylation at Cys-38 and phosphorylation at Thr-39 independently regulated TRPP3 channel function, in contrast to previous reports about correlated palmitoylation with a proximate phosphorylation. Palmitoylation at Cys-38 represents a novel mechanism of functional regulation for TRPP3.

Keywords

Xenopus; acetylation; electrophysiology; phosphorylation; post-translational modification (PTM).

Figures