Transcriptional upregulation of the -inositol biosynthesis pathway is enhanced by NFAT5 in hyperosmotically stressed tilapia cells.

Am J Physiol Cell Physiol

Department of Animal Sciences and Genome Center, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States.

Published: September 2024

Euryhaline fish experience variable osmotic environments requiring physiological adjustments to tolerate elevated salinity. Mozambique tilapia () possess one of the highest salinity tolerance limits of any fish. In tilapia and other euryhaline fish species, the -inositol biosynthesis (MIB) pathway enzymes, -inositol phosphate synthase (MIPS) and inositol monophosphatase 1 (IMPA1.1), are among the most upregulated mRNAs and proteins indicating the high importance of this pathway for hyperosmotic (HO) stress tolerance. These abundance changes must be precluded by HO perception and signaling mechanism activation to regulate the expression of and genes. In previous work using a cell line (OmB), a reoccurring osmosensitive enhancer element (OSRE1) in both and was shown to transcriptionally upregulate these enzymes in response to HO stress. The OSRE1 core consensus (5'-GGAAA-3') matches the core binding sequence of the predominant mammalian HO response transcription factor, nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT5). HO-challenged OmB cells showed an increase in mRNA suggesting NFAT5 may contribute to MIB pathway regulation in euryhaline fish. Ectopic expression of wild-type NFAT5 induced an promoter-driven reporter by 5.1-fold ( < 0.01). Moreover, expression of dominant negative NFAT5 in HO media resulted in a 47% suppression of the reporter signal ( < 0.005). Furthermore, reductions of IMPA1.1 (37-49%) and MIPS (6-37%) mRNA abundance were observed in HO-challenged NFAT5 knockout cells relative to control cells. Collectively, these multiple lines of experimental evidence establish NFAT5 as a tilapia transcription factor contributing to HO-induced activation of the MIB pathway. In our study, we use a multi-pronged synthetic biology approach to demonstrate that the fish homolog of the predominant mammalian osmotic stress transcription factor nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT5) also contributes to the activation of hyperosmolality inducible genes in cells of extremely euryhaline fish. However, in addition to NFAT5 the presence of other strong osmotically inducible signaling mechanisms is required for full activation of osmoregulated tilapia genes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00187.2024DOI Listing

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