PKC-α regulates cardiac contractility and propensity toward heart failure

Nature Medicine(2004)

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摘要
The protein kinase C (PKC) family of serine/threonine kinases functions downstream of nearly all membrane-associated signal transduction pathways. Here we identify PKC-α as a fundamental regulator of cardiac contractility and Ca 2+ handling in myocytes. Hearts of Prkca -deficient mice are hypercontractile, whereas those of transgenic mice overexpressing Prkca are hypocontractile. Adenoviral gene transfer of dominant-negative or wild-type PKC-α into cardiac myocytes enhances or reduces contractility, respectively. Mechanistically, modulation of PKC-α activity affects dephosphorylation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ ATPase-2 (SERCA-2) pump inhibitory protein phospholamban (PLB), and alters sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ loading and the Ca 2+ transient. PKC-α directly phosphorylates protein phosphatase inhibitor-1 (I-1), altering the activity of protein phosphatase-1 (PP-1), which may account for the effects of PKC-α on PLB phosphorylation. Hypercontractility caused by Prkca deletion protects against heart failure induced by pressure overload, and against dilated cardiomyopathy induced by deleting the gene encoding muscle LIM protein ( Csrp3 ). Deletion of Prkca also rescues cardiomyopathy associated with overexpression of PP-1. Thus, PKC-α functions as a nodal integrator of cardiac contractility by sensing intracellular Ca 2+ and signal transduction events, which can profoundly affect propensity toward heart failure.
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Biomedicine,general,Cancer Research,Metabolic Diseases,Infectious Diseases,Molecular Medicine,Neurosciences
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