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Aldosterone induces ras methylation in A6 epithelia
Authors:Al-Baldawi N F  Stockand J D  Al-Khalili O K  Yue G  Eaton D C
Institution:Center for Cell and Molecular Signaling, Department of Physiology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.
Abstract:Aldosterone increases Na+ reabsorption by renalepithelial cells: the acute actions (<4 h) appear to be promoted byprotein methylation. This paper describes the relationship betweenprotein methylation and aldosterone's action and describesaldosterone-mediated targets for methylation in cultured renal cells(A6). Aldosterone increases protein methylation from 7.90 ± 0.60 to 20.1 ± 0.80 methyl ester cpm/µg protein. Aldosteronestimulates protein methylation by increasing methyltransferase activityfrom 14.0 ± 0.64 in aldosterone-depleted cells to 31.8 ± 2.60 methyl ester cpm/µg protein per hour in aldosterone-treated cells. Three known methyltransferase inhibitors reduce thealdosterone-induced increase in methyltransferase activity. One ofthese inhibitors, the isoprenyl-cysteine methyltransferase-specificinhibitor,S-trans,trans-farnesylthiosalicylic acid, completely blocks aldosterone-induced protein methylation and also aldosterone-induced short-circuit current. Aldosterone inducesprotein methylation in two molecular weight ranges: near 90 kDa andaround 20 kDa. The lower molecular weight range is the weight of smallG proteins, and aldosterone does increase both Ras protein 1.6-fold andRas methylation almost 12-fold. Also, Ras antisense oligonucleotidesreduce the activity of Na+ channels by about fivefold. Weconclude that 1) protein methylation is essential foraldosterone-induced increases in Na+ transport;2) one target for methylation is p21ras; and3) inhibition of Ras expression or Ras methylation inhibits Na+ channel activity.

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