Stretch-regulated Exocytosis/Endocytosis in Bladder Umbrella Cells
Abstract
The epithelium of the urinary bladder must maintain a highly impermeable barrier despite large variations in urine volume during bladder filling and voiding. To study how the epithelium accommodates these volume changes, we mounted bladder tissue in modified Ussing chambers and subjected the tissue to mechanical stretch. Stretching the tissue for 5 h resulted in a 50% increase in lumenal surface area (from ∼2900 to 4300 μm), exocytosis of a population of discoidal vesicles located in the apical cytoplasm of the superficial umbrella cells, and release of secretory proteins. Surprisingly, stretch also induced endocytosis of apical membrane and 100% of biotin-labeled membrane was internalized within 5 min after stretch. The endocytosed membrane was delivered to lysosomes and degraded by a leupeptin-sensitive pathway. Last, we show that the exocytic events were mediated, in part, by a cyclic adenosine monophosphate, protein kinase A-dependent process. Our results indicate that stretch modulates mucosal surface area by coordinating both exocytosis and endocytosis at the apical membrane of umbrella cells and provide insight into the mechanism of how mechanical forces regulate membrane traffic in nonexcitable cells.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Drs. Rebecca Hughey, Nick Johnson, Linton Traub, and Ora Weisz for insightful comments and critiques while preparing this manuscript. This work was supported by R01 grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health to G.A. (R01DK51970) and M.Z (R01DK48217). The Laboratory of Epithelial Cell Biology is supported in part by an equipment grant from Dialysis Clinic Inc.
Abbreviations used:
| HRP | horseradish peroxidase |
| IBMX | 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine |
| MESNA | 2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid |
| PKA | protein kinase A |
| TEM | transmission electron microscopy |
| TER | transepithelial resistance |
Footnotes
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.01–09–0435. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.01–09–0435.






