Temporal dissociation of frequency-dependent acceleration of relxation and protein phosphorylation by CaMKII

被引:65
|
作者
Huke, Sabine [1 ]
Bers, Donald M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Loyola Univ, Stritch Sch Med, Dept Physiol, Maywood, IL 60153 USA
关键词
frequency; relaxation; phosphorylation; calmodulin-dependent kinase; phospholamban; ryanodine receptor; autophosphorylation; protein phosphatase I;
D O I
10.1016/j.yjmcc.2006.12.007
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Frequency-dependent acceleration of relaxation (FDAR) is an important intrinsic mechanism that allows for diastolic filling of the ventricle at higher heart rates, yet its molecular mechanism is still not understood. Previous studies showed that FDAR is dependent on functional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and can be abolished by phosphatase or by Ca/CaM kinase (CaMKII) inhibition. Additionally, CaMKII activity/autophosphorylation has been shown to be frequency-dependent. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that CaMKII phosphorylation of SR Ca2+-handling proteins (Phospholamban (PLB), Ca2+ release channel (RyR)) mediates FDAR. Here we show that FDAR occurs abruptly in fluo-4 loaded isolated rat ventricular myocytes when frequency is raised from 0.1 to 2 Hz. The effect is essentially complete within four beats (2 s) with the tau of [Ca2+](i) decline decreasing by 42 +/- 3%. While there is a detectable increase in PLB Thr-17 and RyR Ser-2814 phosphorylation, the increase is quantitatively small (PLB < 5%, RyR similar to 8%) and the time-course is clearly delayed with regard to FDAR. The low substrate phosphorylation indicates that pacing of myocytes only mildly activates CaMKII and consistent with this CaMKII delta autophosphorylation did not increase with pacing alone. However, in the presence of phosphatase I inhibition pacing triggered a net-increase in autophosphorylated CaMKII and also greatly enhanced PLB and RyR phosphorylation. We conclude that FDAR does not rely on phosphorylation of PLB or RyR. Even though CaMKII does become activated when myocytes are paced, phosphatases immediately antagonize CaMKII action, limit substrate phosphorylation and also prevent sustained CaMKII autophosphorylation (thereby suppressing global CaMKII effects). (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:590 / 599
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Frequency-dependent electrical detection of protein binding events
    Lasseter, TL
    Cai, W
    Hamers, RJ
    ANALYST, 2004, 129 (01) : 3 - 8
  • [22] Use of acceleration spectra for determining the frequency-dependent attenuation coefficient and source parameters
    Joshi, A.
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2006, 96 (06) : 2165 - 2180
  • [23] A Frequency-Dependent Model for the Shape of the Fourier Amplitude Spectrum of Acceleration at High Frequencies
    Haendel, Annabel
    Anderson, John G.
    Pilz, Marco
    Cotton, Fabrice
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2020, 110 (06) : 2743 - 2754
  • [24] Direct evidence for the lack of role of Thr-17 phosphorylation of phospholamban (PLB), on the frequency-dependent acceleration of relaxation (FDAR) in the rat ventricle
    Mundiña-Weilenmann, C
    Said, M
    Valverde, C
    Vittone, L
    Mattiazzi, A
    CIRCULATION, 2003, 108 (17) : 53 - 54
  • [25] Amelioration of stress-reduced CaMKII-dependent hippocampal protein phosphorylation by chewing
    Iwamoto, Mayuko
    Kato, Keiko
    Kataoka, Tsuyoshi
    Miyake, Shinjiro
    Ono, Yumie
    Sasaguri, Kenichi
    Watanabe, Kazuko
    Sato, Sadao
    Onozuka, Minoru
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2008, 61 : S252 - S252
  • [26] Visually induced postural reactivity is velocity-dependent at low temporal frequencies and frequency-dependent at high temporal frequencies
    J.-M. Hanssens
    R. Allard
    G. Giraudet
    J. Faubert
    Experimental Brain Research, 2013, 229 : 75 - 84
  • [27] Visually induced postural reactivity is velocity-dependent at low temporal frequencies and frequency-dependent at high temporal frequencies
    Hanssens, J. -M.
    Allard, R.
    Giraudet, G.
    Faubert, J.
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2013, 229 (01) : 75 - 84
  • [28] The effect of myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation on the frequency-dependent regulation of cardiac function
    Dias, Fernando A. L.
    Walker, Lori A.
    Arteaga, Grace M.
    Walker, John S.
    Vijayan, Kalpana
    Pena, James R.
    Ke, Yunbo
    Fogaca, Rosalvo T. H.
    Sanbe, Atsushi
    Robbins, Jeffrey
    Wolska, Beata M.
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR CARDIOLOGY, 2006, 41 (02) : 330 - 339
  • [29] The role of myosin light chain 2 phosphorylation in the frequency-dependent regulation of cardiac function
    Dias, FAL
    Walker, LA
    Arteaga, GM
    Walker, JS
    Sanbe, A
    Robbins, J
    Wolska, BM
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2005, 88 (01) : 537A - 538A
  • [30] Cardiac force-frequency relationship and frequency-dependent acceleration of relaxation are impaired in LPS-treated rats
    Joulin, Olivier
    Marechaux, Sylvestre
    Hassoun, Sidi
    Montaigne, David
    Lancel, Steve
    Neviere, Remi
    CRITICAL CARE, 2009, 13 (01):