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The RS1 protein (gene RSC1A1) participates in regulation of Na+-D-glucose cotransporter SGLT1 and some other solute carriers. In subconfluent LLC-PK1 cells, RS1 inhibits release of SGLT1 from the trans-Golgi network and transcription of SGLT1. In subconfluent cells, RS1 is localized in the nucleus and the cytoplasm whereas confluent cells contain predominantly cytoplasmic RS1. In the present study, the mechanism and regulation of confluence-dependent nuclear location of RS1 was investigated. Confluence dependent nuclear location of RS1 was shown to be regulated by the cell cycle. A nuclear shuttling signal (NS) in pRS1 was identified that ensures confluence-dependent distribution of pRS1 and comprises nuclear localization signal (NLS) and nuclear export signal (NES). The NLS and NES of RS1 mediate translocation into and out of the nucleus via importin ß1 and CRM1, respectively, and the nuclear/cytoplasmic distribution of the RS1 protein is determined by the nuclear export activity. The adjacent protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation site at serine 370 of pRS1 was shown to control nuclear localization driven by NS and is necessary for the differential localization of RS1 in quiescent versus proliferating cells. Basing on the data of site-directed mutagenesis, PKC activation experiments and mass spectrometry analysis of RS1 phosphorylation, the following model of the regulation of RS1 nuclear location in LLC-PK1 cells was proposed. In subconfluent cells, RS1 is actively imported into the nucleus whereas nuclear export of RS1 is not active leading to accumulation of RS1 in the nucleus. After confluence, phosphorylation of serine 370 of pRS1 by PKC takes place leading to enhancement of RS1 nuclear export and predominantly cytoplasmic distribution of the protein in the confluent cells. The confluence-dependent regulation of RS1 localization may control SGLT1 expression during regeneration of enterocytes in small intestine and during regeneration of renal tubular cells after hypoxemic stress. Moreover, the gene expression profiling of mouse embryonic fibroblasts with RS1-/- genotype suggests that transcriptional regulation by RS1 might be important for the cell cycle and cell division. Since RS1 localization depends on the cell cycle, RS1 might play a role in the regulation of the solute carriers during specific phases of the cell cycle.
RS1, a gene product of RSC1A1, is critically involved in cell density-dependent transcriptional down-regulation of SGLT1 in LLC-PK1 cells and in the post-transcriptional down-regulation of SGLT1 in small intestine. RS1 inhibits the release of SGLT1 containing vesicles from the trans-Golgi network and migrates into the nucleus where it inhibits transcription of SGLT1. In the present work we identified a novel 21 amino acids-long nonconventional nuclear localization sequence (RS1 NLS) in porcine RS1 (pRS1) that is necessary and sufficient for nuclear targeting of pRS1. RS1 NLS is framed by two consensus sequences for phosphorylation which are responsible for confluence-dependent regulation of RS1 NLS: a casein kinase 2 (CK2) site in position 348 and a protein kinase C (PKC) site in position 370. Confluence-dependent nuclear targeting was observed with amino acids 342-374 (R-NLS-Reg). Mutation analysis suggested that nuclear targeting is blocked by phosphorylation of serine 370 (PKC) and that phosphorylation of serine 348 (CK2) prevents phosphorylation of serine 370. Because CK2 is down-regulated and PKC is up-regulated during confluence of LLC-PK1 cells, our data suggest that nuclear localization coordinates cell density-dependent changes in transcriptional and post-transcriptional inhibition of SGLT1 expression.