4.6 Article

Identified and potential internalization signals involved in trafficking and regulation of Na+/K+ ATPase activity

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11010-023-04831

Keywords

Na+; K+ ATPase; Trafficking; Endocytic motifs; Internalization; Phosphorylation; PGE2

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The sodium-potassium pump (NKA) consumes a significant amount of energy in animal cells for creating electrochemical gradients of sodium and potassium ions. The regulation of its activity, including its expression, localization, enzymatic activity, and interactions with other proteins, is crucial. However, the mechanisms controlling the trafficking of NKA between the cell membrane and intracellular compartments are poorly understood. This review summarizes previous studies on the regulation of NKA trafficking and its potential endocytic signals, as well as highlights recent research on NKA trafficking and modulation in various cells.
The sodium-potassium pump (NKA) or Na+/K+ ATPase consumes around 30-40% of the total energy expenditure of the animal cell on the generation of the sodium and potassium electrochemical gradients that regulate various electrolyte and nutrient transport processes. The vital role of this protein entails proper spatial and temporal regulation of its activity through modulatory mechanisms involving its expression, localization, enzymatic activity, and protein-protein interactions. The residence of the NKA at the plasma membrane is compulsory for its action as an antiporter. Despite the huge body of literature reporting on its trafficking between the cell membrane and intracellular compartments, the mechanisms controlling the trafficking process are by far the least understood. Among the molecular determinants of the plasma membrane proteins trafficking are intrinsic sequence-based endocytic motifs. In this review, we (i) summarize previous reports linking the regulation of Na+/K+ ATPase trafficking and/or plasma membrane residence to its activity, with particular emphasis on the endocytic signals in the Na+/K+ ATPase alpha-subunit, (ii) map additional potential internalization signals within Na+/K+ ATPase catalytic alpha-subunit, based on canonical and noncanonical endocytic motifs reported in the literature, (iii) pinpoint known and potential phosphorylation sites associated with NKA trafficking, (iv) highlight our recent studies on Na+/K+ ATPase trafficking and PGE2-mediated Na+/K+ ATPase modulation in intestine, liver, and kidney cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available