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Departments of 1Physiology and 2Pediatrics and 3The Center for Cell and Molecular Signaling, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia
Submitted 5 October 2005 ; accepted in final form 6 April 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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AT1 cells; epithelial sodium channel; single-channel recording; Erythrina crystagalli lectin; dopamine D1 and D2 receptors
There is evidence for epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC) in AT1 cells. ENaC are members of the degenerin family of extracellular ligand-gated channels. Specifically, ENaC is a heteromultimeric channel composed of homologous
-,
-, and
-subunits (8). Recently, using enzymatic digestion and mechanical separation of AT1 cells from adult rat lungs, Johnson et al. (20) showed that AT1 cells take up Na+ in an amiloride-inhibitable fashion and that these cells express proteins for all three ENaC subunits. In addition, Borok et al. (5) immunohistochemically identified
-ENaC and amplified
-ENaC message from AT1 cells. Under normal circumstances, ENaC is the rate-limiting step for normal Na+ reabsorption in epithelial cells, and ENaC activity controls alveolar salt and fluid absorption in the alveoli. These findings are underscored by the observation that transgenic
-ENaC-knockout mice die within 40 h of birth because of an inability to clear lung fluid (14, 18). The conventional wisdom has been that only AT2 cells transport Na+, but, because AT1 and AT2 cells express ENaC, both cell types might be responsible for Na+ transport and maintenance of air space fluid homeostasis. We have shown functional ENaC in AT1 cells that were isolated by enzymatic digestion and immunoaffinity purification, but we were concerned that the isolation procedure might alter the properties and prevalence of ion channels. It was also sometimes difficult to unequivocally determine the apical surface of the cells. However, in this study, we examined the specific channel characteristics of ENaC in a lung slice tissue preparation, circumventing concerns that the AT1 cell membrane might be damaged during the isolation procedure and confirming the presence in AT1 cells of highly Na+-selective and -nonselective cation (HSC and NSC, respectively) channels, which are blocked by amiloride and activated by dopamine, in an environment similar to that of AT1 cells in the lung.
Catecholamines can increase lung fluid clearance. Dopamine has been reported to increase Na+ channel and Na+-K+-ATPase activity in the alveolar epithelium to facilitate lung edema clearance (24, 10). The effects of dopamine appear to be mediated via the apically located dopamine D1 receptor and the basolateral dopamine D2 receptor. These two receptors exert their biological actions by coupling to and activating different G protein complexes. The D1 receptor interacts with the Gs complex to activate adenylyl cyclase, whereas the D2 receptor interacts with Gi or Gq to inhibit cAMP production or activate phospholipase C (7). We recently observed in L2 cells (a rat AT2 cell line) that activation of D1 receptors was responsible for increasing ENaC activity in cell-attached patches via a cAMP-mediated signaling pathway when dopamine was applied to the apical surface of cells (16); therefore, we were interested in whether AT1 cells also respond to dopamine. Thus we examined the effect of dopamine on Na+ channel activity in AT1 cells and whether D1 or D2 receptors might be involved in putative dopamine-induced effects.
Here, we show, for the first time, single-channel recordings of amiloride-sensitive ENaC from AT1 cells in lung slice preparations. We also show a dopamine-induced increase in ENaC activity in AT1 cells via D1 receptor activation. These findings provide evidence of a definitive role for AT1 cells in maintaining fluid/ion homeostasis in the alveolar spaces and a responsiveness of AT1 cells to catecholamine treatment.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Single-channel patch-clamp analysis of Na+ channels in AT1 cells. Lung slices were rinsed three times in recording solution (see below) before the patch-clamp procedure. The experiments were conducted at 2223°C; all patch solutions for the cell-attached configuration contained (in mM) 140 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, and 10 HEPES at pH 7.4. Gigaohm seals were formed using a fire-polished glass microelectrode (backfilled with patch solution), and the lung slices were immersed in patch solution. An amplifier (Axopatch 1-D, Molecular Devices), interfaced through an analog-to-digital board to a personal computer, collected single-channel data. Channel currents were amplified at 5 kHz and filtered at 1 kHz with a low-pass Bessel filter.
For cell-attached patches, voltages are given as the negative of the patch pipette potential (Vp), which is the displacement of the patch potential from the resting potential. Positive potentials represent depolarizations, and negative potentials represent hyperpolarizations of the cell membrane away from the resting potential. We used the product of the number of channels (N) and the single-channel open probability (Po) as a measure of ENaC activity within a patch, as described in previously (9). NPo was calculated using FETCHAN and pCLAMP 6 software (Molecular Devices).
Chemicals. Dopamine (3-hydroxytyramine, hydrochloride) was purchased from Calbiochem. Amiloride hydrochloride hydrate, sulpiride, and SCH-23390 [R-(+)-7-chloro-8-hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-H-3-benzazepine hydrochloride] were purchased from Sigma. Dopamine and amiloride were soluble in patch-clamp solution and prepared immediately before use. Dopamine receptor antagonists (sulpiride and SCH-23390) were dissolved in ethanol at 0.01 M stock concentrations. The specified amounts of dopamine and receptor blockers were applied directly to the bath solution, whereas amiloride was backfilled into patch pipettes (see below).
Fluorescent microscopy. Fluorescein-labeled lectin from the cry-baby tree Erythrina crystagalli (ECL; Vector Laboratories) can be used as a vital stain for AT1 cells in 250- to 300-µm lung slice preparations. When used to label AT1 cells for the purpose of recording single-channel activity, ECL was diluted 1:1,000 directly into the patch solution in which the lung tissue was immersed. For immunohistochemistry, lung slices were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (10 min at room temperature) and then labeled with a 1:1,000 dilution (in PBS-BSA with 3% goat serum) of fluorescein-labeled ECL and/or with antibodies. Lung tissue slices were colabeled with ECL and a final 1:20,000 dilution of anti-surfactant protein A antibody (Chemicon) for 1 h to identify AT1 and AT2 cells, respectively. Lung slices were then incubated in goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody conjugated to Alexa 568 (1:20,000 dilution; Molecular Probes) for 30 min. D1 and D2 receptor antibodies (Chemicon) were used at a 1:1,000 dilution. Goat anti-rabbit antibody conjugated to Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes) was used as the secondary detection antibody for dopamine receptors at a 1:10,000 dilution for 1 h. All tissue samples were mounted onto a glass slide with ProLong antifade reagent (Molecular Probes) and imaged using a laser scanning confocal microscope (model 510 NLO META, Zeiss).
Methods for statistical analysis. Statistical significance between two groups was determined by paired or unpaired t-tests, as appropriate. When the comparison between more than one group was required, statistical significance was determined by one-way ANOVA. P < 0.05 was considered significant.
| RESULTS |
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AT1 cells have ENaC.
Using F-ECL, we were able to positively identify AT1 cells for patch-clamp analysis, whereby we observed two types of Na+ channels with conductances and current-voltage relations similar to those of ENaC in other epithelial cells, including AT2 cells (9, 27). Seemingly, AT1 cells express HSC and NSC channels. Figure 2A is a representative recording from an AT1 cell with HSC and NSC channels within a very small surface area of patched membrane. In Fig. 2A, voltage values indicate displacement of the patch membrane potential away from the resting membrane potential (Vp) of the cell. The point amplitude histogram (Fig. 2B) clearly shows that the cell membrane has HSC channels with small unitary currents of 0.22 pA, as well as NSC channels with larger unitary currents of 0.77 pA. Additionally, Fig. 2B shows that the open probability of these channels is very high; HSC and NSC channels spend very little time in the closed state, and multiple channels are open simultaneously. Indeed, the additional levels of channel openings (peaks) in Fig. 2B correspond to various summations of HSC (0.22 pA) and NSC (0.77 pA) currents from simultaneous openings. Current-voltage relations for HSC and NSC channels are shown in Fig. 2, C and D, respectively. In this recording, conductance of the HSC channels was
5.5 ± 0.54 pS (Fig. 2C), with an apparent reversal potential positive to the apical membrane potential. The second type of channel in Fig. 2A had an average conductance of 17.6 ± 1.25 pS and a linear current-voltage relation, characteristic of NSC channels, as described elsewhere (28). Interestingly, NSC channels in AT1 cells appear to have a reversal potential approximately 10 mV more negative than the apical membrane potential (Fig. 2D). This may be an important difference between AT1 and AT2 cells, in which NSC channel currents reverse at a potential more positive than the apical membrane potential. In Fig. 2E, we show the distribution of single-channel conductances from several different patches, in which we obtained currents at four or more holding potentials (to accurately calculate slope conductance). The mean conductance of AT1 cell HSC channels is 8.2 ± 2.5 pS and that of NSC channels is 22 ± 3.2 pS.
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10 min are required for amiloride to reach the surface of the cell in a pipette tip used for single-channel patch-clamp analysis; this allows a patch to be used as its own control. Indeed, before complete amiloride blockade of Na+ channels (at 10 min) in Fig. 3 (at 0 mV applied potential), Na+ channel activity can be seen in the patch recording. However, after another
1 min of amiloride diffusion, Na+ channel activity in AT1 cells was completely blocked, even at hyperpolarizing potentials of 20 and 40 mV (Vp). Interestingly, at more negative intracellular potentials (Vp = 60 and 80 mV), some Na+ channel activity could still be detected (albeit with smaller unit currents than were initially observed at 10 min or than would be expected at such large hyperpolarizing potentials). This was expected, because the amiloride concentration is less than the half-blocking concentration of amiloride of
48 nM (19). By initially filling tips with regular patch solution before backfilling pipettes with 25 nM amiloride, in combination with applying large hyperpolarizing potentials, we are confident that the patches of membrane we examined indeed had ENaC activity initially. Therefore, this approach was taken in all patches used to examine the efficacy of amiloride inhibition. A summary of the results obtained at 40 mV (Vp) displacement potentials is shown in Fig. 3B; average ENaC NPo from four independent AT1 cell recordings decreased from 0.481 ± 0.126 to 0.0186 ± 0.003 (P < 0.05). Higher amiloride concentration (50 nM) completely blocked ENaC function at all holding potentials (data not shown).
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We began by investigating whether AT1 cells express detectable levels of dopamine receptors on the cell surface. Confocal images in Fig. 4A show D2 and D1 receptor expression in 250-µm lung slices fixed in paraformaldehyde. In both images, the characteristic morphology of AT1 cells (Fig. 1) was clearly visible in cells labeled with dopamine receptor antibodies. This strongly suggested that dopamine receptor subtypes are present in AT1 cells and that AT1 cells should be responsive to catecholamine treatment.
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D1 receptor antagonist SCH-23390 blocks the effect of dopamine on ENaC. Because D1 and D2 receptors were present in lung tissue, we next wanted to determine which receptor type was mediating the dopamine-induced increase in ENaC activity. We found that application of the D1 receptor blocker SCH-23390 (10 µM) to AT1 cells after seal formation blocked the effect of 10 µM dopamine on ENaC NPo. However, the D2 receptor blocker sulpiride (10 µM) did not inhibit dopamine activation of Na+ channel activity. [We also found that sulpiride and SCH-2390 inhibitors alone did not significantly change Na+ channel transport from control levels (data not shown).] Figure 5A shows that ENaC NPo increased significantly from 0.64 ± 0.16 to 1.25 ± 0.27 after 10 µM dopamine, even in the presence of the D2 receptor antagonist, whereas the D1 receptor blocker prevented the established dopamine-induced increases in ENaC NPo (Fig. 5B).
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5 min after the initial application of dopamine, we evaluated the effect of receptor inhibition and dopamine application on ENaC NPo. In the presence of the D2 receptor inhibitor, dopamine increased ENaC activity within minutes (Fig. 5C). A second open level of Na+ channels is very apparent in the recording period following sulpiride and dopamine treatment (similar to dopamine only in Fig. 4C). Conversely, dopamine did not increase ENaC NPo in AT1 cells treated with the D1 receptor blocker. Single-channel current remained unchanged (Fig. 5D). These studies strongly suggest that the effect of dopamine on ENaC is mediated through D1 receptors. | DISCUSSION |
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Our study examined the transport properties of AT1 cells accessed from 250- to 300-µm sections of live lung tissue. Studying AT1 cells in situ obviates concerns that protracted cell isolation procedures might compromise the properties of native lung cells.
Using a similar technique, Bourke et al. (6) also made patch recordings from live tissue preparations and demonstrated that instillation of agarose followed by sectioning of lung slices allows examination of AT1 cells. They found that AT1 cell viability in slice preparations can be maintained for several hours after the surgical procedure. In our studies, we have further shown that this new procedure for accessing AT1 cells in live tissue does not alter epithelial cell transport properties and that F-ECL can be used as a vital stain for AT1 cells. The present study provides, for the first time, unequivocal evidence for the presence of ENaC in native AT1 cells and raises the possibility that the entire alveolar epithelium (composed of AT1 and AT2 cells) participates in alveolar fluid homeostasis. Prior to our present study, Bourke et al. (6) successfully recorded ion channel activity in a lung slice preparation. However, they were unable to record ENaC activity; instead, they reported, in the presence of many inhibitors, a 21-pS voltage-dependent channel with characteristics consistent with K+ channels. We found that the biophysical properties of Na+-permeant channels in membrane patches from AT1 lung slice preparations are similar to those of HSC, as well as NSC, channels that have been reported in AT2 cells (19). HSC and NSC channels in AT1 cells were occasionally coexpressed in very small (<-1 µm) patches of the cell membrane and spent very little time in the closed state (Fig. 2). In our present studies, we were able to form seals in >90% of all lung slice tissue preparations obtained from healthy, well-perfused rat lungs; from these, ENaC activity was recorded 50% of the time. This suggests to us that ENaC is abundant in the apical membrane of AT1 cells in the lung slice preparation. This assumption is consistent with the finding that the reversal potentials of NSC channels from AT1 cells are slightly hyperpolarized. The 10-mV shift of the reversal potential (compared with NSC reversal potentials near 0 mV in AT2 cells) provides evidence that AT1 and AT2 cells play different roles in regulating alveolar fluid homeostasis and that Na+ channels may be more abundant in AT1 than in AT2 cells in the apical membrane. Johnson et al. (20) reported that Na+ uptake per microgram of protein was 2.5 times greater in AT1 than in AT2 cells. Together, these studies show that AT1 cells indeed play an important role in maintaining alveolar ion homeostasis, which affects total alveolar fluid balance.
Dopamine increases lung fluid clearance. Because catecholamines play an important role in lung liquid removal in the adult and newborn lung, we examined the responsiveness of ENaC in AT1 cells to dopamine. In humans, dopamine concentrations in the lungs can be very high, above levels reported in the adrenal glands (17), and circulating levels of dopamine sulfate can increase dramatically postprandially (15). In late-term fetal sheep, the average plasma level of dopamine rises 10-fold immediately before delivery (21, 26, 31). Furthermore, in several species, the fully developed and active pulmonary neuroendocrine system at birth contributes to local surges of catecholamine production (11). These studies suggest that dopamine is important in lung liquid removal at birth. Indeed, several isolated perfused lung studies have shown that dopamine substantially increases liquid clearance in lung epithelium (3, 4, 10). Despite these studies, the mechanism by which dopamine regulates fluid reabsorption remains unclear.
We have demonstrated that dopamine increases ENaC activity in AT1 (present study) and AT2 (16) cells. Therefore, we conclude from our studies that catecholamines can improve lung fluid clearance by increasing amiloride-sensitive ENaC activity in cells that comprise the entire alveolar epithelium. However, two independent studies showed that dopamine stimulation of Na+ transport and fluid clearance in the lung epithelium does not involve amiloride-sensitive channels (4, 10). In each study, 106104 M amiloride did not block dopamine stimulation of lung fluid clearance. Although it is possible for dopamine to affect amiloride-insensitive Na+ channels (which have been reported in the alveolar epithelium), our present study demonstrates a definite role for dopamine regulation of ENaC in AT1 cells and is at variance with these previously published reports.
Our present report and several previous studies in lung epithelia (1, 16, 25, 30, 32) suggest that dopamine binds to and activates D1 receptors to increase lung liquid clearance. In Fig. 5A, we clearly show that Na+ channel activity, which is responsible for the balance of reabsorption and secretion that maintains a closely controlled level of alveolar fluid, fails to respond to dopamine in the presence of a specific D1 receptor blocker. Similar to our present findings and our recent study of the effect of dopamine on AT2 cells (16), Adir et al. (1, 2) also reported that D1, but not D2, receptor antagonists inhibited the ability of endogenously produced dopamine to increase lung liquid clearance in lung cells. However, we believe that the effect of dopamine on AT1 D1 receptors differs from D1 receptor-mediated effects in AT2 cells. In this study, we have shown that dopamine does not increase the open probability of ENaC channels, as it does in AT2 cells (16); rather, dopamine might increase the number of channels in a patch (Fig. 4C). Apparently, D1 receptors are linked to different signaling cascades in AT1 cells, which requires further investigation.
In summary, we have developed a lung slice model for studying AT1 cells in an environment that is close to that of lung cells. Our use of F-ECL as a vital stain for identifying ATI cells in a lung slice preparation allowed us to positively identify AT1 cells in situ for single-channel patch-clamp analysis of cells. This led to the identification of amiloride-sensitive HSC and NSC channels, with mean conductances of 8.2 ± 2.5 and 22 ± 3.2 pS, respectively, in the membrane of AT1 cells. We also found that AT1 cells have D1 and D2 receptors and that dopamine acts through D1 receptors to increase net Na+ transport in alveolar epithelium. Overall, it is becoming increasingly apparent that AT1 cells contribute significantly to lung fluid homeostasis.
| GRANTS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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. Mol Biol Cell 13: 13811389, 2002.This article has been cited by other articles:
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