4.4 Article

Osmosensing by WNK Kinases

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 32, Issue 18, Pages 1614-1623

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E20-01-0089

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DEAC02-06CH11357]
  2. American Heart Association [16CSA28530002]
  3. NIH [DK110358, P41 GM103622]
  4. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [RP190421]
  5. Welch Foundation [I1128]
  6. NIGMS [1S10OD018090-01]

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This study demonstrates the important role of WNK kinases in electro-neutral cotransporters regulated by osmotic stress and chloride, and shows that WNK isoforms can be activated in response to osmotic pressure by different solutes. Osmosensing in WNKs seems to occur through a conformational equilibrium between inactive chloride-binding dimers and autophosphorylation-competent monomers. The study also suggests that cavities, hydration, and specific bound water may participate in the osmosensing mechanism of WNKs.
With No Lysine (K) WNK kinases regulate electro-neutral cotransporters that are controlled by osmotic stress and chloride. We showed previously that autophosphorylation of WNK1 is inhibited by chloride, raising the possibility that WNKs are activated by osmotic stress. Here we demonstrate that unphosphorylated WNK isoforms 3 and 1 autophosphorylate in response to osmotic pressure in vitro, applied with the crowding agent polyethylene glycol (PEG)400 or osmolyte ethylene glycol (EG), and that this activation is opposed by chloride. Small angle x-ray scattering of WNK3 in the presence and absence of PEG400, static light scattering in EG, and crystallography of WNK1 were used to understand the mechanism. Osmosensing in WNK3 and WNK1 appears to occur through a conformational equilibrium between an inactive, unphosphorylated, chloride-binding dimer and an autophosphorylation-competent monomer. An improved structure of the inactive kinase domain of WNK1, and a comparison with the structure of a monophosphorylated form of WNK1, suggests that large cavities, greater hydration, and specific bound water may participate in the osmosensing mechanism. Our prior work showed that osmolytes have effects on the structure of phosphorylated WNK1, suggestive of multiple stages of osmotic regulation in WNKs.

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