Tmprss2 maintains epithelial barrier integrity and transepithelial sodium transport

Life Sci Alliance. 2024 Jan 3;7(3):e202302304. doi: 10.26508/lsa.202302304. Print 2024 Mar.

Abstract

The mouse cortical collecting duct cell line presents a tight epithelium with regulated ion and water transport. The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is localized in the apical membrane and constitutes the rate-limiting step for sodium entry, thereby enabling transepithelial transport of sodium ions. The membrane-bound serine protease Tmprss2 is co-expressed with the alpha subunit of ENaC. αENaC gene expression followed the Tmprss2 expression, and the absence of Tmprss2 resulted not only in down-regulation of αENaC gene and protein expression but also in abolished transepithelial sodium transport. In addition, RNA-sequencing analyses unveiled drastic down-regulation of the membrane-bound protease CAP3/St14, the epithelial adhesion molecule EpCAM, and the tight junction proteins claudin-7 and claudin-3 as also confirmed by immunohistochemistry. In summary, our data clearly demonstrate a dual role of Tmprss2 in maintaining not only ENaC-mediated transepithelial but also EpCAM/claudin-7-mediated paracellular barrier; the tight epithelium of the mouse renal mCCD cells becomes leaky. Our working model proposes that Tmprss2 acts via CAP3/St14 on EpCAM/claudin-7 tight junction complexes and through regulating transcription of αENaC on ENaC-mediated sodium transport.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Transport / physiology
  • Claudins* / genetics
  • Claudins* / metabolism
  • Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule / metabolism
  • Ion Transport
  • Mice
  • Sodium* / metabolism

Substances

  • Claudins
  • Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule
  • Sodium
  • TMPRSS2 protein, mouse