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Alpha 2-adrenergic receptors and the Na+/H+ exchanger in the intestinal epithelial cell line, HT-29
Authors:H F Cantiello  S M Lanier
Institution:Cellular and Molecular Research Laboratory, Cardiac Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114.
Abstract:alpha 2-Adrenergic receptors (alpha 2-AR) are negatively coupled to adenylyl cyclase via the GTP-binding protein Gi. However, inhibition of adenylylcyclase does not account for many effector cell responses to alpha 2-AR agonists, suggesting that the receptor can couple to other signal transduction pathways. One potential pathway may be the stimulation of Na+/H+ exchange elicited by alpha 2-AR activation in renal proximal tubule cells, platelets, and the NG-10815 cell line. To determine whether the various receptor-effector coupling mechanisms operate in a tissue-specific manner, we studied the effect of alpha 2-AR activation on basal and stimulated Na+/H+ exchange in epithelial cells isolated from human colon (HT-29 adenocarcinoma cells). Na+/H+ exchange was measured by quantitation of intracellular hydrogen ion concentration (acetoxymethyl ester 2,7-biscarboxyethyl-5(6)carboxyfluorescein) and 22Na+ uptake. HT-29 cells expressed an amiloride-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger that was activated by reduction of intracellular pH (pHi) to 6.0 but was quiescent at a physiological pHi. The rapid alkalinization observed after acid loading (0.57 +/- 0.07 pH units/min/10(4) cells) was dependent on external sodium and was blocked by amiloride (Ki approximately 2.1 microM). Although epinephrine and the selective alpha 2-AR agonists clonidine and UK-14304 inhibited forskolin-activated adenylylcyclase, these compounds did not alter basal Na+/H+ exchange. Stimulated Na+/H+ exchange was similarly unaffected by epinephrine. In contrast, stimulated Na+/H+ exchanger activity was completely inhibited by the selective alpha 2-agonists clonidine, UK-14304, and guanabenz. This inhibitory effect was not blocked by the alpha 2-AR antagonist rauwolscine, and it is likely due to a direct interaction with the exchanger molecule itself. Structure/activity studies indicated that the compounds inhibiting exchanger activity possess either an imidazoline or guanidinium moiety. Although these molecules bear structural similarity to amiloride, they did not inhibit the amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel in toad urinary bladder, suggesting that these compounds may be useful as "amiloride-like" ligands selective for the Na+/H+ exchanger. These data indicate that in the HT-29 intestinal cell line, in contrast to observations in other tissues, alpha 2-adrenergic receptors are not coupled to the Na+/H+ exchanger, suggesting that the cell-signaling mechanisms utilized by the alpha 2-AR are tissue specific.
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