Cells, Volume 8, Issue 2
2019 February - 121 articles
Cover Story: Membrane-bound water channels known as aquaporins facilitate water transport across cellular membranes along an osmotic gradient. In eukaryotes, aquaporins have evolved to be post-translationally regulated through gating or trafficking, allowing cells to adapt the membrane water flux in response to cellular or environmental triggers. A common way of controlling aquaporin regulation is through phosphorylation at specific sites. In mammals, this allows the 13 different aquaporin isoforms to be independently regulated in a tissue-dependent manner. This review provides a summary of what is currently known about phosphorylation-dependent regulation of mammalian aquaporins by both gating and trafficking, dissecting the roles of individual phosphorylation sites and of phosphorylation-dependent protein–protein interactions. View this paper. - Issues are regarded as officially published after their release is announced to the table of contents alert mailing list .
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