Adrenergic CaV1.2 Activation via Rad Phosphorylation Converges at α1C I-II Loop.

TitleAdrenergic CaV1.2 Activation via Rad Phosphorylation Converges at α1C I-II Loop.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsPapa A, Kushner J, Hennessey JA, Katchman AN, Zakharov SI, Chen B-X, Yang L, Lu R, Leong S, Diaz J, Liu G, Roybal D, Liao X, Morfin PJDel Rive, Colecraft HM, Pitt GS, Clarke O, Topkara V, Ben-Johny M, Marx SO
JournalCirc Res
Volume128
Issue1
Pagination76-88
Date Published2021 Jan 08
ISSN1524-4571
Abstract

RATIONALE: Changing activity of cardiac CaV1.2 channels under basal conditions, during sympathetic activation, and in heart failure is a major determinant of cardiac physiology and pathophysiology. Although cardiac CaV1.2 channels are prominently upregulated via activation of PKA (protein kinase A), essential molecular details remained stubbornly enigmatic.

OBJECTIVE: The primary goal of this study was to determine how various factors converging at the CaV1.2 I-II loop interact to regulate channel activity under basal conditions, during β-adrenergic stimulation, and in heart failure.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We generated transgenic mice with expression of CaV1.2 α1C subunits with (1) mutations ablating interaction between α1C and β-subunits, (2) flexibility-inducing polyglycine substitutions in the I-II loop (GGG-α1C), or (3) introduction of the alternatively spliced 25-amino acid exon 9* mimicking a splice variant of α1C upregulated in the hypertrophied heart. Introducing 3 glycine residues that disrupt a rigid IS6-α-interaction domain helix markedly reduced basal open probability despite intact binding of CaVβ to α1C I-II loop and eliminated β-adrenergic agonist stimulation of CaV1.2 current. In contrast, introduction of the exon 9* splice variant in the α1C I-II loop, which is increased in ventricles of patients with end-stage heart failure, increased basal open probability but did not attenuate stimulatory response to β-adrenergic agonists when reconstituted heterologously with β2B and Rad or transgenically expressed in cardiomyocytes.

CONCLUSIONS: Ca2+ channel activity is dynamically modulated under basal conditions, during β-adrenergic stimulation, and in heart failure by mechanisms converging at the α1C I-II loop. CaVβ binding to α1C stabilizes an increased channel open probability gating mode by a mechanism that requires an intact rigid linker between the β-subunit binding site in the I-II loop and the channel pore. Release of Rad-mediated inhibition of Ca2+ channel activity by β-adrenergic agonists/PKA also requires this rigid linker and β-binding to α1C.

DOI10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.317839
Alternate JournalCirc Res
PubMed ID33086983
PubMed Central IDPMC7790865
Grant ListR01 HL121253 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
R01 HL140934 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
R01 HL146149 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
T32 HL007854 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States