The gamma subunit modulates Na(+) and K(+) affinity of the renal Na,K-ATPase.
The Na(+),K(+)-ATPase catalyzes the active transport of ions. It has two necessary subunits, alpha and beta, but in kidney it is also associated with a 7.4-kDa protein, the gamma subunit. Stable transfection was used to determine the effect of gamma on Na, K-ATPase properties. When isolated from either kidney or transfected cells, alphabetagamma had lower affinities for both Na(+) and K(+) than alphabeta. A post-translational modification of gamma selectively eliminated the effect on Na(+) affinity, suggesting three configurations (alphabeta, alphabetagamma, and alphabetagamma*) conferring different stable properties to Na, K-ATPase. In the nephron, segment-specific differences in Na(+) affinity have been reported that cannot be explained by the known alpha and beta subunit isoforms of Na,K-ATPase. Immunofluorescence was used to detect gamma in rat renal cortex. Cortical ascending limb and some cortical collecting tubules lacked gamma, correlating with higher Na(+) affinities in those segments reported in the literature. Selective expression in different segments of the nephron is consistent with a modulatory role for the gamma subunit in renal physiology.
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