Crucial Role for Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase-II in Regulating Diastolic Stress of Normal and Failing Hearts via Titin Phosphorylation

2013 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Crucial Role for Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase-II in Regulating Diastolic Stress of Normal and Failing Hearts via Titin Phosphorylation​
Hamdani, N.; Krysiak, J.; Kreusser, M. M.; Neef, S.; dos Remedios, C. G.; Maier, L. S. & Krueger, M. et al.​ (2013) 
Circulation Research112(4) pp. 664​-+​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.111.300105 

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Authors
Hamdani, Nazha; Krysiak, Judith; Kreusser, Michael M.; Neef, Stefan; dos Remedios, Cristobal G.; Maier, Lars. S.; Krueger, Markus; Backs, Johannes; Linke, Wolfgang A.
Abstract
Rationale: Myocardial diastolic stiffness and cardiomyocyte passive force (F-passive) depend in part on titin isoform composition and phosphorylation. Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase-II (CaMKII) phosphorylates ion channels, Ca2+-handling proteins, and chromatin-modifying enzymes in the heart, but has not been known to target titin. Objective: To elucidate whether CaMKII phosphorylates titin and modulates F-passive in normal and failing myocardium. Methods and Results: Titin phosphorylation was assessed in CaMKII delta/gamma double-knockout (DKO) mouse, transgenic CaMKII delta C-overexpressing mouse, and human hearts, by Pro-Q-Diamond/Sypro-Ruby staining, autoradiography, and immunoblotting using phosphoserine-specific titin-antibodies. CaMKII-dependent site-specific titin phosphorylation was quantified in vivo by mass spectrometry using stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture mouse heart mixed with wild-type (WT) or DKO heart. F-passive of single permeabilized cardiomyocytes was recorded before and after CaMKII-administration. All-titin phosphorylation was reduced by >50% in DKO but increased by up to approximate to 100% in transgenic versus WT hearts. Conserved CaMKII-dependent phosphosites were identified within the PEVK-domain of titin by quantitative mass spectrometry and confirmed in recombinant human PEVK-fragments. CaMKII also phosphorylated the cardiac titin N2B-unique sequence. Phosphorylation at specific PEVK/titin N2B-unique sequence sites was decreased in DKO and amplified in transgenic versus WT hearts. F-passive was elevated in DKO and reduced in transgenic compared with WT cardiomyocytes. CaMKII-administration lowered F-passive of WT and DKO cardiomyocytes, an effect blunted by titin antibody pretreatment. Human end-stage failing hearts revealed higher CaMKII expression/activity and phosphorylation at PEVK/titin N2B-unique sequence sites than nonfailing donor hearts. Conclusions: CaMKII phosphorylates the titin springs at conserved serines/threonines, thereby lowering F-passive. Deranged CaMKII-dependent titin phosphorylation occurs in heart failure and contributes to altered diastolic stress. (Circ Res. 2013; 112:664-674.)
Issue Date
2013
Journal
Circulation Research 
Project
SFB 1002: Modulatorische Einheiten bei Herzinsuffizienz 
SFB 1002 | A08: Translationale und posttranslationale Kontrolle trunkierter Titinproteine in Kardiomyozyten von Patienten mit dilatativer Kardiomyopathie 
Working Group
RG Linke (Kardiovaskuläre Physiologie) 
RG L. Maier (Experimentelle Kardiologie) 
ISSN
0009-7330

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