Yuedan Li

Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Provincie Gelderland, Netherlands

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Publications (6)36.93 Total impact

  • Article: In mpkCCD cells, long-term regulation of aquaporin-2 by vasopressin occurs independent of protein kinase A and CREB but may involve Epac.
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    ABSTRACT: Urine concentration involves the hormone vasopressin (AVP), which stimulates cAMP production in renal principal cells, resulting in translocation and transcription of aquaporin-2 (AQP2) water channels, greatly increasing the water permeability, leading to a concentrated urine. As cAMP levels decrease shortly after AVP addition, whereas AQP2 levels still increase and are maintained for days, we investigated in the present study the mechanism responsible for the AQP2 increase after long-term 1-desamino-8-d-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP) application using mouse collecting duct (mpkCCD) cells. While 30 min of dDAVP incubation strongly increased cAMP, cAMP was lower with 1 day and was even further reduced with 4 days of dDAVP, although still significantly higher than in control cells. One day of dDAVP incubation increased AQP2 promoter-dependent transcription, which was blocked by the protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitor H89. Moreover, phosphorylation of the cAMP-responsive element binding protein (CREB) and CRE-dependent transcription was observed after short-term dDAVP stimulation. With 4 days of dDAVP, AQP2 transcription remained elevated, but this was not blocked by H89, and CRE-dependent transcription and CREB phosphorylation were not increased. Exchange factor directly activated by cAMP (Epac) 1 and 2 were found to be endogenously expressed in mpkCCD cells. Application of dDAVP increased the expression of Epac1, while Epac2 was reduced. Incubation with a specific Epac activator after dDAVP pretreatment increased both AQP2 abundance and transcription compared with cells left unstimulated the last day. In conclusion, the PKA-CRE pathway is involved in the initial rise in AQP2 levels after dDAVP stimulation but not in the long-term effect of dDAVP. Instead, long-term regulation of AQP2 may involve the activation of Epac.
    AJP Renal Physiology 03/2012; 302(11):F1395-401. · 4.42 Impact Factor
  • Article: Correction of murine SCID-X1 by lentiviral gene therapy using a codon-optimized IL2RG gene and minimal pretransplant conditioning.
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    ABSTRACT: Clinical trials have demonstrated the potential of ex vivo hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy to treat X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1) using γ-retroviral vectors, leading to immune system functionality in the majority of treated patients without pretransplant conditioning. The success was tempered by insertional oncogenesis in a proportion of the patients. To reduce the genotoxicity risk, a self-inactivating (SIN) lentiviral vector (LV) with improved expression of a codon optimized human interleukin-2 receptor γ gene (IL2RG) cDNA (coγc), regulated by its 1.1 kb promoter region (γcPr), was compared in efficacy to the viral spleen focus forming virus (SF) and the cellular phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) promoters. Pretransplant conditioning of Il2rg(-/-) mice resulted in long-term reconstitution of T and B lymphocytes, normalized natural antibody titers, humoral immune responses, ConA/IL-2 stimulated spleen cell proliferation, and polyclonal T-cell receptor gene rearrangements with a clear integration preference of the SF vector for proto-oncogenes, contrary to the PGK and γcPr vectors. We conclude that SIN lentiviral gene therapy using coγc driven by the γcPr or PGK promoter corrects the SCID phenotype, potentially with an improved safety profile, and that low-dose conditioning proved essential for immune competence, allowing for a reduced threshold of cell numbers required.
    Molecular Therapy 07/2011; 19(10):1867-77. · 6.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: p.R254Q mutation in the aquaporin-2 water channel causing dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus is due to a lack of arginine vasopressin-induced phosphorylation.
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    ABSTRACT: Vasopressin regulates human water homeostasis by re-distributing homotetrameric aquaporin-2 (AQP2) water channels from intracellular vesicles to the apical membrane of renal principal cells, a process in which phosphorylation of AQP2 at S256 by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) is thought to be essential. Dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), a disease in which the kidney is unable to concentrate urine in response to vasopressin, is caused by AQP2 gene mutations. Here, we investigated a reported patient case of dominant NDI caused by a novel p.R254Q mutation. Expressed in oocytes, AQP2-p.R254Q appeared to be a functional water channel, but was impaired in its transport to the cell surface to the same degree as AQP2-p.S256A, which mimics non-phosphorylated AQP2. In polarized MDCK cells, AQP2-p.R254Q was retained and was distributed similarly to that of unstimulated wt-AQP2 or AQP2-p.S256A. Upon co-expression, AQP2-p.R254Q interacted with, and retained wt-AQP2 in intracellular vesicles. In contrast to wild-type AQP2, forskolin did not increase AQP2-p.R254Q phosphorylation at S256 or its translocation to the apical membrane. Mimicking constitutive phosphorylation in AQP2-p.R254Q with the p.S256D mutation, however, rescued its apical membrane expression. These date indicate that a lack of S256 phosphorylation is the sole cause of dominant NDI here, and thereby, p.R254Q is a loss of function instead of a gain of function mutation in dominant NDI.
    Human Mutation 08/2009; 30(10):E891-903. · 5.69 Impact Factor
  • Article: Amiloride blocks lithium entry through the sodium channel thereby attenuating the resultant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.
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    ABSTRACT: Lithium therapy frequently induces nephrogenic diabetes insipidus; amiloride appears to prevent its occurrence in some clinical cases. Amiloride blocks the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) located in the apical membrane of principal cells; hence one possibility is that ENaC is the main entry site for lithium and the beneficial effect of amiloride may be through inhibiting lithium entry. Using a mouse collecting duct cell line, we found that vasopressin caused an increase in Aquaporin 2 (AQP2) expression which was reduced by clinically relevant lithium concentrations similar to what is seen with in vivo models of this disease. Further amiloride or benzamil administration prevented this lithium-induced downregulation of AQP2. Amiloride reduced transcellular lithium transport, intracellular lithium concentration, and lithium-induced inactivation of glycogen synthase kinase 3beta. Treatment of rats with lithium downregulated AQP2 expression, reduced the principal-to-intercalated cell ratio, and caused polyuria, while simultaneous administration of amiloride attenuated all these changes. These results show that ENaC is the major entry site for lithium in principal cells both in vitro and in vivo. Blocking lithium entry with amiloride attenuates lithium-induced diabetes insipidus, thus providing a rationale for its use in treating this disorder.
    Kidney International 05/2009; 76(1):44-53. · 6.61 Impact Factor
  • Article: Renal expression of exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac) 1 and 2.
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    ABSTRACT: In the kidney, many physiological processes of ion transport and cellular proliferation are mediated via cAMP, which classically activates protein kinase A (PKA). Recently, however, two new cAMP targets, the exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac) 1 and 2, were identified, which mediate alternative pathways to PKA. To investigate their renal expression, antibodies specifically recognizing Epac1 and Epac2 were generated and used in rat immunohistochemistry with antibodies recognizing aquaporin-1 (AQP1), Tamm-Horsfall protein, Calbindin-D(28K), and AQP2 to mark proximal tubules (PT)/thin descending limbs of Henle's loop (tDLH), thick ascending limbs of Henle's loop (TAL), distal convoluted tubule/connecting tubule (DCT/CNT), and the collecting duct (CD) principal cells, respectively. Epac1 and Epac2 were expressed at the brush border of PT cells but were absent from tDLH cells. In the TAL, Epac1 and Epac2 were expressed throughout the cells with some confinement toward the apical membrane. In the DCT/CNT, Epac1 was confined to the apical region of the cells, whereas Epac2 was mainly expressed in the apical and basolateral regions. In the CD, a dispersed Epac1 expression was found in intercalated cells only (cortical CD), principal and intercalated cells [outer medullary CD (OMCD)], and mainly AQP2-negative cells in the inner medullary CD (IMCD). In contrast, Epac2 expression was at the apical and basolateral membrane of cortical principal cells, dispersed and apical in the OMCD, and in all cells of the IMCD. A similar distribution for Epac1/2 was found in the human kidney. The observed expression in different tubular segments suggests a major role for Epac 1/2 in tubular transport physiology and cellular proliferation.
    American journal of physiology. Renal physiology 06/2008; 295(2):F525-33. · 3.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Development of lithium-induced nephrogenic diabetes insipidus is dissociated from adenylyl cyclase activity.
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    ABSTRACT: In antidiuresis, vasopressin (AVP) occupation of V2 receptors in renal collecting ducts activates adenylyl cyclase, resulting in increased intracellular cAMP levels, which activates protein kinase A (PKA). PKA phosphorylates both the cAMP responsive element binding protein, which induces aquaporin-2 (AQP2) transcription, and AQP2, which then is translocated to the apical membrane, allowing urine concentration. Lithium treatment often causes nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), which coincides with decreased AQP2 expression and which generally is ascribed to reduced adenylyl cyclase activity. However, the underlying mechanism by which lithium causes NDI is poorly understood. This study demonstrated that the mouse cortical collecting duct mpkCCD(c14) cells are a good model; the deamino-8 D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP)-induced endogenous AQP2 expression and plasma membrane localization was time-dependently reduced by treatment with clinically relevant lithium concentrations. Lithium did not affect AQP2 stability but decreased its mRNA levels. Surprising, the effect of lithium was cAMP independent; it did not alter AVP-stimulated cAMP production or PKA-dependent phosphorylation of AQP2 or cAMP responsive element binding protein. In vivo, kidney tissue of rats with lithium-induced NDI indeed generated less dDAVP-induced cAMP than that of controls, but this could be due to elevated blood AVP levels in rats with lithium-induced NDI. Indeed, Brattleboro rats, which lack endogenous AVP, with clamped blood dDAVP levels, showed no difference in dDAVP-generated cAMP generation between kidneys of rats with lithium-induced NDI and control rats. In conclusion, the first proper cell model to study lithium-induced NDI was developed, and it was demonstrated that the lithium-induced downregulation of AQP2 and development of NDI occur independent of adenylyl cyclase activity in vitro and in vivo.
    Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 05/2006; 17(4):1063-72. · 9.66 Impact Factor