TRPV4 channel is involved in the coupling of fluid viscosity changes to epithelial ciliary activity

YN Andrade, J Fernandes, E Vázquez… - The Journal of cell …, 2005 - rupress.org
YN Andrade, J Fernandes, E Vázquez, JM Fernández-Fernández, M Arniges, TM Sánchez…
The Journal of cell biology, 2005rupress.org
Autoregulation of the ciliary beat frequency (CBF) has been proposed as the mechanism
used by epithelial ciliated cells to maintain the CBF and prevent the collapse of mucociliary
transport under conditions of varying mucus viscosity. Despite the relevance of this
regulatory response to the pathophysiology of airways and reproductive tract, the underlying
cellular and molecular aspects remain unknown. Hamster oviductal ciliated cells express the
transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel, which is activated by increased …
Autoregulation of the ciliary beat frequency (CBF) has been proposed as the mechanism used by epithelial ciliated cells to maintain the CBF and prevent the collapse of mucociliary transport under conditions of varying mucus viscosity. Despite the relevance of this regulatory response to the pathophysiology of airways and reproductive tract, the underlying cellular and molecular aspects remain unknown. Hamster oviductal ciliated cells express the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channel, which is activated by increased viscous load involving a phospholipase A2–dependent pathway. TRPV4-transfected HeLa cells also increased their cationic currents in response to high viscous load. This mechanical activation is prevented in native ciliated cells loaded with a TRPV4 antibody. Application of the TRPV4 synthetic ligand 4α-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate increased cationic currents, intracellular Ca2+, and the CBF in the absence of a viscous load. Therefore, TRPV4 emerges as a candidate to participate in the coupling of fluid viscosity changes to the generation of the Ca2+ signal required for the autoregulation of CBF.
rupress.org