Junctophilin-2 is a target of matrix metalloproteinase-2 in myocardial ischemia–reperfusion injury

被引:0
作者
Brandon Y. H. Chan
Andrej Roczkowsky
Woo Jung Cho
Mathieu Poirier
Tim Y. T. Lee
Zabed Mahmud
Richard Schulz
机构
[1] University of Alberta,Departments of Pediatrics and Pharmacology, Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute, 462 Heritage Medical Research Centre
[2] University of Alberta,Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry Cell Imaging Centre
[3] University of Alberta,Department of Biochemistry
来源
Basic Research in Cardiology | 2019年 / 114卷
关键词
Ischemia–reperfusion injury; Myocardial infarction; Matrix metalloproteinase; Junctophilin; Excitation–contraction coupling; Oxidative stress;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Junctophilin-2 is a structural membrane protein that tethers T-tubules to the sarcoplasmic reticulum to allow for coordinated calcium-induced calcium release in cardiomyocytes. Defective excitation–contraction coupling in myocardial ischemia–reperfusion (IR) injury is associated with junctophilin-2 proteolysis. However, it remains unclear whether preventing junctophilin-2 proteolysis improves the recovery of cardiac contractile dysfunction in IR injury. Matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) is a zinc and calcium-dependent protease that is activated by oxidative stress in myocardial IR injury and cleaves both intracellular and extracellular substrates. To determine whether junctophilin-2 is targeted by MMP-2, isolated rat hearts were perfused in working mode aerobically or subjected to IR injury with the selective MMP inhibitor ARP-100. IR injury impaired the recovery of cardiac contractile function which was associated with increased degradation of junctophilin-2 and damaged cardiac dyads. In IR hearts, ARP-100 improved the recovery of cardiac contractile function, attenuated junctophilin-2 proteolysis, and prevented ultrastructural damage to the dyad. MMP-2 was co-localized with junctophilin-2 in aerobic and IR hearts by immunoprecipitation and immunohistochemistry. In situ zymography showed that MMP activity was localized to the Z-disc and sarcomere in aerobic hearts and accumulated at sites where the striated JPH-2 staining was disrupted in IR hearts. In vitro proteolysis assays determined that junctophilin-2 is susceptible to proteolysis by MMP-2 and in silico analysis predicted multiple MMP-2 cleavage sites between the membrane occupation and recognition nexus repeats and within the divergent region of junctophilin-2. Degradation of junctophilin-2 by MMP-2 is an early consequence of myocardial IR injury which may initiate a cascade of sequelae leading to impaired contractile function.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 329 条
[1]  
Ali MA(2010)Titin is a target of matrix metalloproteinase-2: implications in myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury Circulation 122 2039-2047
[2]  
Cho WJ(2012)Calpain inhibitors exhibit matrix metalloproteinase-2 inhibitory activity Biochem Biophys Res Commun 423 1-5
[3]  
Hudson B(2011)Cardiac sarcomeric proteins: novel intracellular targets of matrix metalloproteinase-2 in heart disease Trends Cardiovasc Med 21 112-118
[4]  
Kassiri Z(2002)Cardiac excitation–contraction coupling Nature 415 198-205
[5]  
Granzier H(2012)Matrix metalloproteinase-2 proteolysis of calponin-1 contributes to vascular hypocontractility in endotoxemic rats Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 32 662-668
[6]  
Schulz R(2014)Early short-term doxycycline therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction and left ventricular dysfunction to prevent the ominous progression to adverse remodelling: the TIPTOP trial Eur Heart J 35 184-191
[7]  
Ali MA(2000)Matrix metalloproteinase-2 contributes to ischemia–reperfusion injury in the heart Circulation 101 1833-1839
[8]  
Stepanko A(2016)Active site specificity profiling of the matrix metalloproteinase family: proteomic identification of 4300 cleavage sites by nine MMPs explored with structural and synthetic peptide cleavage analyses Matrix Biol 49 37-60
[9]  
Fan X(2017)Calcium and excitation–contraction coupling in the heart Circ Res 121 181-195
[10]  
Holt A(2003)Nitric oxide, superoxide, and peroxynitrite in myocardial ischaemia–reperfusion injury and preconditioning Br J Pharmacol 138 532-543