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Occludin S408 phosphorylation regulates tight junction protein interactions and barrier function
Authors:Raleigh David R  Boe Devin M  Yu Dan  Weber Christopher R  Marchiando Amanda M  Bradford Emily M  Wang Yingmin  Wu Licheng  Schneeberger Eveline E  Shen Le  Turner Jerrold R
Institution:1Department of Pathology, and 2Department of Surgery, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637;3Molecular Pathology Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, MA 02114
Abstract:Although the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of the tight junction protein occludin is heavily phosphorylated, the functional impact of most individual sites is undefined. Here, we show that inhibition of CK2-mediated occludin S408 phosphorylation elevates transepithelial resistance by reducing paracellular cation flux. This regulation requires occludin, claudin-1, claudin-2, and ZO-1. S408 dephosphorylation reduces occludin exchange, but increases exchange of ZO-1, claudin-1, and claudin-2, thereby causing the mobile fractions of these proteins to converge. Claudin-4 exchange is not affected. ZO-1 domains that mediate interactions with occludin and claudins are required for increases in claudin-2 exchange, suggesting assembly of a phosphorylation-sensitive protein complex. Consistent with this, binding of claudin-1 and claudin-2, but not claudin-4, to S408A occludin tail is increased relative to S408D. Finally, CK2 inhibition reversed IL-13-induced, claudin-2-dependent barrier loss. Thus, occludin S408 dephosphorylation regulates paracellular permeability by remodeling tight junction protein dynamic behavior and intermolecular interactions between occludin, ZO-1, and select claudins, and may have therapeutic potential in inflammation-associated barrier dysfunction.
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