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Regulated exocytosis: renal aquaporin-2 3D vesicular network organization and association with F-actin.

Mikkel R HolstLouis G JensenJesse AaronFrédéric H LoginSampavi RajkumarUte HahnLene N Nejsum
Published in: American journal of physiology. Cell physiology (2021)
Regulated vesicle exocytosis is a key response to extracellular stimuli in diverse physiological processes, including hormone regulated short-term urine concentration. In the renal collecting duct, the water channel aquaporin-2 (AQP2) localizes to the apical plasma membrane as well as to small, subapical vesicles. In response to stimulation with the antidiuretic hormone, arginine vasopressin, aquaporin-2-containing vesicles fuse with the plasma membrane, which increases collecting duct water reabsorption and thus, urine concentration. The nanoscale size of these vesicles has limited analysis of their three-dimensional (3D) organization. Using a cell system combined with 3D superresolution microscopy, we provide the first direct analysis of the 3D network of aquaporin-2-containing exocytic vesicles in a cell culture system. We show that aquaporin-2 vesicles are 43 ± 3 nm in diameter, a size similar to synaptic vesicles, and that one fraction of AQP2 vesicles localized with the subcortical F-actin layer and the other localized in between the F-actin layer and the plasma membrane. Aquaporin-2 vesicles associated with F-actin and this association were enhanced in a serine 256 phospho-mimic of aquaporin-2, whose phosphorylation is a key event in antidiuretic hormone-mediated aquaporin-2 vesicle exocytosis.
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