Sympathetic stimulation of adult cardiomyocytes requires association of AKAP5 with a subpopulation of L-type calcium channels

CB Nichols, CF Rossow, MF Navedo… - Circulation …, 2010 - Am Heart Assoc
CB Nichols, CF Rossow, MF Navedo, RE Westenbroek, WA Catterall, LF Santana
Circulation research, 2010Am Heart Assoc
Rationale: Sympathetic stimulation of the heart increases the force of contraction and rate of
ventricular relaxation by triggering protein kinase (PK) A-dependent phosphorylation of
proteins that regulate intracellular calcium. We hypothesized that scaffolding of cAMP
signaling complexes by AKAP5 is required for efficient sympathetic stimulation of calcium
transients. Objective: We examined the function of AKAP5 in the β-adrenergic signaling
cascade. Methods and Results: We used calcium imaging and electrophysiology to examine …
Rationale:
Sympathetic stimulation of the heart increases the force of contraction and rate of ventricular relaxation by triggering protein kinase (PK)A-dependent phosphorylation of proteins that regulate intracellular calcium. We hypothesized that scaffolding of cAMP signaling complexes by AKAP5 is required for efficient sympathetic stimulation of calcium transients.
Objective:
We examined the function of AKAP5 in the β-adrenergic signaling cascade.
Methods and Results:
We used calcium imaging and electrophysiology to examine the sympathetic response of cardiomyocytes isolated from wild type and AKAP5 mutant animals. The β-adrenergic regulation of calcium transients and the phosphorylation of substrates involved in calcium handling were disrupted in AKAP5 knockout cardiomyocytes. The scaffolding protein, AKAP5 (also called AKAP150/79), targets adenylyl cyclase, PKA, and calcineurin to a caveolin 3–associated complex in ventricular myocytes that also binds a unique subpopulation of Cav1.2 L-type calcium channels. Only the caveolin 3–associated Cav1.2 channels are phosphorylated by PKA in response to sympathetic stimulation in wild-type heart. However, in the AKAP5 knockout heart, the organization of this signaling complex is disrupted, adenylyl cyclase 5/6 no longer associates with caveolin 3 in the T-tubules, and noncaveolin 3–associated calcium channels become phosphorylated after β-adrenergic stimulation, although this does not lead to an enhanced calcium transient. The signaling domain created by AKAP5 is also essential for the PKA-dependent phosphorylation of ryanodine receptors and phospholamban.
Conclusions:
These findings identify an AKAP5-organized signaling module that is associated with caveolin 3 and is essential for sympathetic stimulation of the calcium transient in adult heart cells.
Am Heart Assoc