4.7 Article

Keratins modulate colonocyte electrolyte transport via protein mistargeting

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 164, Issue 6, Pages 911-921

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200308103

Keywords

ion transport; diarrhea; intestine; intermediate filaments; cytoskeleton

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Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK18777, R01 DK060069, R01 DK052951, DK56339, R01 DK018777, DK52951, DK02410, R56 DK052951, DK60069, P30 DK056339] Funding Source: Medline

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The function of intestinal keratins is unknown, although keratin 8 (K8)-null mice develop colitis, hyperplasia, diarrhea, and mistarget jejunal apical markers. We quantified the diarrhea in K8-null stool and examined its physiologic basis. Isolated crypt-units from K8-null and wild-type mice have similar viability. K8-null distal colon has normal tight junction permeability and paracellular transport but shows decreased short circuit current and net Na absorption associated with net Cl secretion, blunted intracellular Cl/HCO3-dependent pH regulation, hyperproliferation and enlarged goblet cells, partial loss of the membrane-proximal markers H,K-ATPase-beta and F-actin, increased and redistributed basolateral anion exchanger AE1/2 protein, and redistributed Na-transporter ENaC-gamma. Diarrhea and protein mistargeting are observed 1-2 d after birth while hyperproliferation/inflammation occurs later. The AE1/2 changes and altered intracellular pH regulation likely account, at least in part, for the ion transport defects and hyperproliferation. Therefore, colonic keratins have a novel function in regulating electrolyte transport, likely by targeting ion transporters to their cellular compartments.

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