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1 From the Indiana University School of Optometry, Bloomington; and the 2 University of New South Wales, School of Optometry, Sydney, Australia.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Cl- and Na+ sensitive fluorescent dyes were used to measure furosemide-dependent ion fluxes in cultured and fresh endothelial cells. Immunoblot analysis and immunofluorescence were used to determine expression and location of the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter (NKCC1).
RESULTS. Application of furosemide (50100 µM) reduced Cl- and Na+ influx in approximately 50% of trials using cultured cells and only 10% of trials with fresh cells; however, in all cases pretreatment with furosemide slowed Cl- efflux when cells were bathed in Cl--free Ringers. Double-sided perfusion of cultured cells indicated that furosemide-sensitive Cl- fluxes were located on the basolateral side. Immunoblot analysis revealed 174-kDa bands in both fresh and cultured cells, but the bands were denser in fresh endothelial cells. Immunofluorescence showed distinct lateral membrane staining in addition to significant amounts of perinuclear staining.
CONCLUSIONS. The Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter is present in both fresh and cultured bovine corneal endothelium, and the expression is apparently higher in the fresh cells. The cotransporter is present on the lateral membrane consistent with a role in loading endothelial cells with Cl-, thereby possibly contributing to a transendothelial Cl- flux. However, in the resting cell, net flux through the transporter is often not apparent.
| Introduction |
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/cm2). Being so leaky, the endothelium is not
readily amenable to the study of transport by the usual measurements of
short circuit current or net fluxes of radioactive tracers in the
Ussing-type chamber. Nevertheless, early attempts have shown that short
circuit current is dependent on the presence of bicarbonate and reduced
by carbonic anhydrase inhibitors,1
2
which is consistent
with the reduction in fluid transport by these same
manipulations.3
4
More recently, it has been shown that
uptake of HCO3- by the
endothelium is provided by an electrogenic
Na+-nHCO3- cotransporter
(n
2), which is most likely positioned at the
basolateral membrane.5
Furthermore, it has been shown that
Cl- is necessary for fluid transport.6
Intracellular [Cl-] is above electrochemical equilibrium
in cultured endothelial cells,7
indicating that a
transporter uptake mechanism is likely to be present. One possibility
for Cl- uptake is coupling of
Na+/H+ exchange with
Cl-/HCO3- exchange. However,
recently we have shown that the anion exchanger is not expressed in
cultured endothelium, and expression in freshly isolated tissue is very
low.5
Another possible uptake mechanism, used by many
secretory epithelia, is through the loop diuretic-sensitive
Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter. In
fact, bumetanide-sensitive Rb+ uptake, further activated by
cell shrinkage, has been demonstrated in cultured bovine corneal
endothelial cells (BCECs),8
indicating the presence of
Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport, a role in
regulatory volume increase and possible role in fluid transport. On the
other hand, Rb+ uptake studies using fresh rabbit corneas
have failed to show bumetanide-sensitive uptake in endothelium bathed
in isotonic or hypertonic media.9
Further, fluid transport
studies using freshly isolated rabbit corneas have so far failed to
show bumetanide sensitivity of fluid transport.4
9
Taken
together, these studies indicate that the
Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter may not
be present in fresh endothelium, and its expression could be
upregulated by culturing. Given this uncertainty about the role of Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport in endothelial fluid transport, we used immunoblot analysis and immunofluorescence to determine whether the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter is present in cultured and fresh bovine corneal endothelium. Further, fluorescent probes for intracellular [Cl-i] and [Na+i] were used to determine whether the cotransporter provides net influx under isosmotic conditions in cultured BCECs. We also tested whether the cotransporter is segregated to the basolateral membrane. Together with an apical efflux mechanism (e.g., anion channels) a basolateral location for the cotransporter would be consistent with a role in transendothelial Cl- and fluid transport. Lastly, we attempted to extend the measurements for intracellular [Cl-] to fresh endothelial cells to determine whether Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport-dependent Cl- fluxes could be demonstrated.
| Materials and Methods |
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Solutions and Chemicals
The composition of the
HCO3--free Ringers solution
used throughout this study was (in mM) 150 Na+, 4
K+, 0.6 Mg2+, 1.4
Ca2+, 118 Cl-, 1
HPO4-, 10
HEPES-, 30 gluconate-,
and 5 glucose. Ringers was equilibrated with air and pH adjusted to
7.5 at 37°C. Cl--free Ringers was prepared
by equimolar substitution of NaCl with sodium nitrate. Osmolarity was
adjusted to 300 ± 5 mOsM with sucrose. The chloride-sensitive
fluorescent dyes SPQ and MEQ were obtained from Molecular Probes
(Eugene, OR). All other chemicals were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis,
MO). Cell culture supplies were obtained from Gibco (Grand Island, NY).
Perfusion
A coverslip perfusion system for fluorescence measurements with an
inverted microscope was used as described previously.10
Briefly, the coverslip with the monolayer of cells formed the bottom of
a perfusion channel (volume, 80 µl), the top of which was formed by
another permanently sealed coverslip. Each end of the channel was
fitted with 23-gauge stainless steel tubing and connected to perfusion
syringes by gas-impermeable tubing (Phar-Med, Fisher Scientific,
Fairlawn, NJ). The perfusion chamber was seated on a water-jacketed
(37°C) brass collar, held on the stage of an inverted microscope
(Diaphot; Nikon, Melville, NY). The cells were viewed with a x40
oil-immersion objective (Fluor, 1.3 numerical aperature; Nikon).
Ringers solutions were placed in syringes held in a Plexiglas warming
box maintained at 37°C. The flow of the perfusate (~0.5 ml/min)
was achieved by gravity. The desired solution was selected by means of
an eight-way valve.
For independent perfusion of the apical and basolateral sides, a double-sided perfusion chamber was used (see Reference 5 for details). Cell-coated filters (AnoDisc) were sandwiched between two thin (1-mm) plastic (Kel-F) plates, both of which had a perfusion slot cut out at the center. Each perfusion slot (7 mm long x 3.1 mm wide) was connected to 23-gauge stainless steel tubing. The filter was placed in a 40-µm recess in the bottom plate with the cells facing downward. Thus, only the cells facing the open slot were perfused. Round glass coverslips were seated on the outer surface of each plate with a thin layer of vacuum grease to form compartments (~22 µl) for independent apical and basolateral perfusion. Stainless steel clamps on the outer surface of the plastic plates were screwed together sandwiching the filter firmly. The assembled chamber was placed on a water-jacketed (37°C) brass collar held on the microscope stage. The apical compartment faced the microscope objective. The apical and basolateral compartments were connected to separate tubes (Phar-Med; Fisher), which in turn were connected to syringes in the Plexiglas warming box, as described. Two independent eight-way valves were used to select the desired perfusate for the apical and basolateral chambers. A long-working-distance, water-immersion x40 objective (1.2-mm working distance, 0.75 numerical aperture; Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) was used for fluorescence measurements.
Measurement of Cellular Fluorescence
Cellular fluorescence was measured with a microscope spot
fluorometer (Photon Technology, Monmouth Junction, NJ). Fluorescence
excitation was provided by a 75-W xenon arc. Excitation wavelengths
were obtained by passing the light through a DeltaRam monochromator
(Photon Technology). The excitation light was directed to the objective
by a dichroic mirror. The fluorescence emission collected by the
objective passed through the dichroic mirror and a barrier filter and
was led to a photomultiplier for detection. Neutral density filters
(12 optical density) were included in the excitation path to minimize
photobleaching. Synchronization of excitation with emission measurement
and data collection was controlled by software (Felix; Photon
Technology). Fluorescence ratios were obtained at one per second.
Measurement of SPQ Fluorescence and Intracellular
[Cl-]
Cultured endothelial cells were loaded with the halide-sensitive
dye SPQ at room temperature by a 6-minute exposure to hyposmotic
Ringers (180 mOsM NO3-
Ringers) containing 20 mM SPQ.7
11
After loading, the
cells were allowed to recover from the hyposmotic shock for 30 to 40
minutes in isosmotic HCO3--free
Ringers also containing 20 mM SPQ. Subsequently, the adhering dye was
washed with the same solution, and the coverslip was mounted into the
perfusion chamber. The excitation for SPQ fluorescence was 365 ±
10 nm, the dichroic mirror was centered at 400 nm, and the barrier
filter was a 420- to 450-nm band-pass. Relative differences in
Cl- flux between control and experimental
conditions were determined by comparing the percentage change in SPQ
fluorescence (
F/F) after removal or addition of
Cl-. In some experiments, absolute intracellular
[Cl-] was calculated by the SternVolmer
equation after determination of fluorescence at 0
[Cl-i] and halide-insensitive
fluorescence (i.e., background fluorescence by perfusion with 150 mM
SCN-).7
11
Because these dyes are
quenched by chloride, fluorescence increases as cytoplasmic
[Cl-] decreases.
Fresh corneal endothelial cells were prepared by dissecting small strips (3 x 7 mm) of Descemets membrane-endothelium. Relative [Cl-i] changes in fresh cells were assessed with the halide-sensitive fluorescent dye MEQ, which was also excited at 365 nm. Fresh endothelial cells were exposed to the nonfluorescent reduced cell-permeant quinoline derivative of MEQ (diH-MEQ),12 13 which is oxidized to MEQ within the cytoplasm. diH-MEQ was usually synthesized on the day of the experiment and saved for no more than 4 days in chloroform at -20°C. Fresh cells were exposed to 10 µM diH-MEQ for 15 minutes at 37°C, washed twice with Ringers solution and kept at 37°C for another 10 minutes. Endothelial strips were placed in the open coverslip perfusion chamber, and glass fibers were laid on top of the strips to restrict movement during perfusion. The chamber was then sealed with a blank coverslip. Strips were viewed with the x40 water-immersion long-working-distance objective.
Measurement of Intracellular [Na+]
Cultured cells were loaded with the
Na+-sensitive fluorescent dye SBFI. SBFI-AM stock
was first mixed 1:1 with 25% weightvolume solution of Pluronic F-127
and then added to Ringers at a final concentration of 10 µM. Cells
were incubated for 30 to 60 minutes at room temperature, washed, and
placed in the coverslip perfusion chamber. The dye was alternately
excited at 340 and 380 nm. The dichroic mirror was centered at 400 nm,
and the barrier filter was a 420- to 500-nm band-pass. Calibration of
the fluorescence ratio against intracellular
[Na+] was performed as previously
described.14
Immunoblot Analysis
Fresh BCECs were scraped from dissected corneas, placed into
ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing a protease
inhibitor cocktail (Complete; BoehringerMannheim, Indianapolis, IN)
and centrifuged at low speed for approximately 5 minutes. Cell pellets
was resuspended in 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer
containing protease inhibitors. Cultured cells were dissolved directly
in sample buffer. Both preparations were sonicated (model 250; Branson,
Danbury, CT) briefly on ice and then centrifuged at 6000g
for 5 to 10 minutes. An aliquot of the supernatant was taken for
protein assay using the Bradford method (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA).
ß-Mercaptoethanol (5%) and bromphenol blue were added to the
remainder of the supernatant and heated at 80°C for 4 minutes. The
samples were applied to a 7.5% polyacrylamide gel with 4.5% stacking
gel (60 µg/lane). After electrophoresis at 20 mA, proteins were
transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane overnight at 4°C.
Membranes were incubated in PBS containing 5% nonfat dry milk for 1
hour at room temperature and washed in PBS containing 0.05% Tween two
to three times for 5 minutes. The blots were then incubated with
antibodies against the
Na+-K+-2Cl-
cotransporter. T4 anti-NKCC1 mouse monoclonal antibody, (Developmental
Studies Hybridoma Bank, Iowa University, Iowa City) or N1 anti-NKCC1
rabbit polyclonal antibodies (1:100; a generous gift from C. Lytle,
University of California, Riverside) were used. Next, the blots were
washed four times with PBS-Tween, incubated with secondary antibody
coupled to horseradish peroxidase (Sigma), and finally developed by
enhanced chemiluminescence (Dupont, Wilmington, DE). Films were scanned
to produce digital images that were then assembled and labeled
(PowerPoint; Microsoft, Redmond, WA).
Immunofluorescence
Coverslips with cultured cells in 6-well plates were washed three
to four times with warmed (37°C) PBS, and fixed for 30 minutes in
fixation solution (PLP; containing 2% paraformaldehyde, 75 mM lysine,
10 mM sodium periodate, 45 mM sodium phosphate, [pH 7.4]) at 37°C
on a rocker. After fixation, the cells were washed three to four times
with PBS. Coverslips were then kept in PBS for 5 minutes containing 1%
SDS to unmask epitopes15
(and Christian Lytle, personal
communication, March 1998) and washed three times in PBS. Cells were
then washed with 0.01% saponin in PBS for 15 minutes and blocked for 1
hour in PBS containing 0.2% bovine serum albumin and 5% goat serum,
0.01% saponin, and 50 mM NH4Cl. T4 or N1 antibodies (1:100
in PBS), were applied at room temperature for 1 hour. Coverslips were
washed three times for 15 minutes in PBS containing 0.01% saponin.
Texas red or fluorescein-conjugated secondary antibody (1:500 dilution)
was applied for 1 hour at room temperature. Coverslips were then washed
and mounted with medium (Prolong Antifade; Molecular Probes), according
to the manufacturers instructions.
To prepare fresh endothelial cells for immunofluorescence staining, corneas were dissected within 15 minutes of death, washed with warmed PBS, and immediately fixed with warmed PLP fixative buffer at 37°C for 10 minutes. Corneas were rinsed with PBS and endothelium-Descemets strips were peeled off the corneas and flattened onto microscope slides (Superfrost; Fisher). Strips were fixed again at room temperature for 20 minutes and washed with PBS. The remainder of the procedure was the same as for staining cultured cells.
| Results |
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F/F was approximately twice the
F/F when
chloride was removed from the apical side but only 25% of the
F/F
when chloride was removed from both sides together. Figure 3B
shows
that in the presence of 100 µM furosemide the relative changes in
fluorescence when chloride was removed from both sides was reduced.
Further, in the presence of furosemide,
F/F was almost eliminated
when chloride was removed from the basolateral side; however,
F/F
was unaffected when chloride was removed from the apical side. Table 1 summarizes these results and suggests that furosemide slowed
Cl- efflux from both sides by approximately 32% and from
the basolateral side by 75%, and that it had no effect when
Cl- was removed from the apical side. These results
indicate that furosemide-sensitive Cl- flux was located
basolaterally in cultured cells.
|
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F/F was
reduced by 30% (mean reduction, 50%; n = 10;
P < 0.05). After 5 minutes, Cl- was
again added and in the presence of furosemide, the rate of decrease was
reduced by 63% (mean reduction, 67%; n = 10;
P < 0.05).
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| Discussion |
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Similar types of experiments using freshly isolated endothelial tissue are technically more difficult and fraught with more artifacts. The chloride-sensitive dye SPQ can be used with long-working-distance objectives; however, SPQ binds to the basement membrane of dissected endothelium and can be taken up into the stroma of intact corneas. MEQ is a halide-sensitive fluorescent dye with spectral properties similar to SPQ. MEQ is loaded in the form of the nonfluorescent compound diH-MEQ, which is membrane permeable and converted to MEQ intracellularly by an oxidative mechanism. Initially, we tried MEQ experiments with intact corneal buttons, but the responses to removing chloride were very slow. This was probably because the stroma acts as a large reservoir of chloride, so that removing chloride from the endothelial side causes stromal chloride to enter the cells leading to slow and incomplete depletion of cellular chloride. To avoid the effects of this stromal chloride, we used dissected Descemetsendothelial explants loaded with MEQ. As in the cultured cells, furosemide-sensitive Cl- fluxes were observed in MEQ-loaded fresh endothelial cells.
Western blot analyses showed that cultured cells expressed NKCC1 and the lateral membrane N1 antibody staining seen in the cultured cells was consistent with the furosemide-sensitive Cl- flux being on the basolateral side. It is not clear why we were unable to demonstrate lateral staining in cultured cells using the T4 antibody. Although not a general requirement, the NKCC1 epitopes recognized by T4 and N1 required unmasking by SDS treatment in the corneal endothelial cells. Five minutes of 1% SDS exposure was sufficient to unmask both epitopes in fresh cells and the N1 epitope in cultured cells. In an attempt to unmask the T4 epitope in cultured cells, we tried longer exposure to SDS; however, this treatment caused the fixed cells to separate from one another and in some cases to come off the coverslip. Although there was a question about whether Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport was even present in fresh cells,9 Western blot analysis indicated that expression was apparently greater in the fresh cells than in the cultured cells. This agrees with preliminary work showing greater transcriptional production of the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter message in fresh cells as well.17 Immunofluorescence staining with N1 and T4 antibodies was most apparent at the lateral membranes in the fresh bovine and rabbit endothelial cells; however, in the absence of higher spatial resolution we cannot exclude an apical or basal location as well.
These results indicate that NKCC1 is expressed in both cultured and fresh bovine corneal endothelium, it is located in the lateral membrane, and it is functional, inasmuch as furosemide slows induced Cl- fluxes. Loop diuretics such as furosemide have also been shown to block Cl- channels.18 Thus, it is possible that the inhibition of Cl- fluxes seen in these experiments could have been due to this effect. To block channels, however, 1 mM furosemide was needed, which is 10 times more than used currently. Further, if furosemide had a significant effect on anion channel conductance, then we would expect the membrane voltage to hyperpolarize and [Na+i] could increase. Previously, we have shown that furosemide had no effect on corneal endothelial membrane potential,7 and in these experiments we showed that furosemide decreased [Na+i]. Thus, it is unlikely that furosemide-sensitive anion channel fluxes exist in corneal endothelial cells.
Another possible source of Cl- fluxes is K+-Cl- cotransport, which can be measured as bumetanide-insensitivefurosemide-sensitive Rb+ fluxes.19 There have not been any studies that have specifically examined whether K+-Cl- cotransport is present in corneal endothelium. However, high concentrations of furosemide are used to block K+-Cl- cotransport (1 mM vs. 50100 µM used in the present study), and, furthermore, it has been shown that Rb+ fluxes are reduced to less than 10% of control in the presence of bumetanide and ouabain,8 arguing against a significant role of K+-Cl- cotransport in corneal endothelial cells. Taken together, these results are consistent with inhibition of coupled electroneutral Na+-K+-2Cl- entry and not with furosemide-sensitive Cl- fluxes due to Cl- channel blockade or K+-Cl- cotransport.
In addition to the lateral membrane staining obtained using the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter antibodies, there was significant cytosolic staining. This may indicate that there is a significant amount of Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter in reserve that may respond to upregulation in chloride transport (e.g., adenosine exposure7 or cell shrinkage8 ). Further studies are needed to explore this possibility.
Does Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport contribute to salt and water secretion across the corneal endothelium? The lateral membrane location of the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter indicates potential contribution to vectorial salt and water transport. In many secretory epithelia, for example, basolateral Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport provides Cl- influx, and Cl- channels serve as an apical efflux mechanism. When Cl- channels are closed, [Cl-i] is relatively high, which acts as a negative regulator of cotransporter activity (see Reference 20 for review). When apical Cl- channels are open, Cl- efflux occurs as long as [Cl-i] is above electrochemical equilibrium. This requires continual influx from the basolateral Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter, the negative regulation of which is possibly released by an initial decrease in [Cl-i]. Otherwise, the electrochemical gradient for Cl- is depleted. In fact, we have previously shown in cultured corneal endothelium that [Cl-i] is unaffected by Cl- secretagogues (e.g., forskolin) but is depleted if Cl- efflux is stimulated by forskolin and cotransporter uptake is blocked simultaneously by furosemide.7
In the present study we asked whether the cotransporter brings net salt into the cell in the unstimulated condition. If it does, then furosemide should reduce [Cl-i], even transiently, albeit at a much slower rate than in the stimulated cell. This occurred in approximately 50% of cultured cells and in only 1 of 10 trials in fresh cells. These results indicate that transendothelial Cl- flux that has the Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter as a component is possible in corneal endothelial cells, but that in the unstimulated condition, especially in fresh cells, it is close to equilibrium.
This contrasts with cotransporter activity assayed as bumetanide-inhibitable Rb+ uptake in the presence of ouabain, which indicates significant activity under isotonic unstimulated conditions in cultured cells.8 Rb+ uptake could still occur if the cotransporter were at equilibrium (i.e., if influx and efflux through the cotransporter are equal or if the cotransporter affected a net outward flux). In addition, evidence from other cell types indicates that at equilibrium the cotransporter can "run in neutral," allowing the partial reaction (K+[Rb+]/K+ exchange) to occur without any Cl- flux due to inhibition by intracellular Cl-.21 Thus 86Rb uptake, which measures unidirectional fluxes, does not provide information about the existence or direction of a net chloride flux.
Our results, together with the negative effects of bumetanide on rabbit corneal endothelial fluid transport,4 9 suggest that the cotransporter does not have a major direct role in ion-coupled fluid transport in the unstimulated corneal endothelium. Thus it may be that Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter blockade would have very little effect on endothelial fluid transport, as shown in rabbit corneas,4 9 unless fluid transport is stimulated by a Cl--dependent process as can occur with adenosine or cyclic adenosine monophosphate.7 22
| Footnotes |
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Submitted for publication June 16, 1999; revised August 18, 1999; accepted September 14, 1999.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Joseph A. Bonanno, Indiana University, School of Optometry, 800 E. Atwater Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47405. jbonanno{at}indiana.edu
| References |
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