Physiological Reports (Jan 2024)

Role of the Ste20‐like kinase SLK in podocyte adhesion

  • Andrey V. Cybulsky,
  • Joan Papillon,
  • Craig Bryan,
  • José R. Navarro‐Betancourt,
  • Luc A. Sabourin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.15897
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract SLK controls the cytoskeleton, cell adhesion, and migration. Podocyte‐specific deletion of SLK in mice leads to podocyte injury as mice age and exacerbates injury in experimental focal segment glomerulosclerosis (FSGS; adriamycin nephrosis). We hypothesized that adhesion proteins may be substrates of SLK. In adriamycin nephrosis, podocyte ultrastructural injury was exaggerated by SLK deletion. Analysis of a protein kinase phosphorylation site dataset showed that podocyte adhesion proteins—paxillin, vinculin, and talin‐1 may be potential SLK substrates. In cultured podocytes, deletion of SLK increased adhesion to collagen. Analysis of paxillin, vinculin, and talin‐1 showed that SLK deletion reduced focal adhesion complexes (FACs) containing these proteins mainly in adriamycin‐induced injury; there was no change in FAC turnover (focal adhesion kinase Y397 phosphorylation). In podocytes, paxillin S250 showed basal phosphorylation that was slightly enhanced by SLK; however, SLK did not phosphorylate talin‐1. In adriamycin nephrosis, SLK deletion did not alter glomerular expression/localization of talin‐1 and vinculin, but increased focal adhesion kinase phosphorylation modestly. Therefore, SLK decreases podocyte adhesion, but FAC proteins in podocytes are not major substrates of SLK in health and disease.

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