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  • Title: β-Adrenergic induced SR Ca2+ leak is mediated by an Epac-NOS pathway.
    Author: Pereira L, Bare DJ, Galice S, Shannon TR, Bers DM.
    Journal: J Mol Cell Cardiol; 2017 Jul; 108():8-16. PubMed ID: 28476660.
    Abstract:
    Cardiac β-adrenergic receptors (β-AR) and Ca2+-Calmodulin dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) regulate both physiological and pathophysiological Ca2+ signaling. Elevated diastolic Ca2+ leak from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) contributes to contractile dysfunction in heart failure and to arrhythmogenesis. β-AR activation is known to increase SR Ca2+ leak via CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of the ryanodine receptor. Two independent and reportedly parallel pathways have been implicated in this β-AR-CaMKII cascade, one involving exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (Epac2) and another involving nitric oxide synthase 1 (NOS1). Here we tested whether Epac and NOS function in a single series pathway to increase β-AR induced and CaMKII-dependent SR Ca2+ leak. Leak was measured as both Ca2+ spark frequency and tetracaine-induced shifts in SR Ca2+, in mouse and rabbit ventricular myocytes. Direct Epac activation by 8-CPT (8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-2'-O-methyl-cAMP) mimicked β-AR-induced SR Ca2+ leak, and both were blocked by NOS inhibition. The same was true for myocyte CaMKII activation (assessed via a FRET-based reporter) and ryanodine receptor phosphorylation. Inhibitor and phosphorylation studies also implicated phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and protein kinase B (Akt) downstream of Epac and above NOS activation in this pathway. We conclude that these two independently characterized parallel pathways function mainly via a single series arrangement (β-AR-cAMP-Epac-PI3K-Akt-NOS1-CaMKII) to mediate increased SR Ca2+ leak. Thus, for β-AR activation the cAMP-PKA branch effects inotropy and lusitropy (by effects on Ca2+ current and SR Ca2+-ATPase), this cAMP-Epac-NOS pathway increases pathological diastolic SR Ca2+leak. This pathway distinction may allow novel SR Ca2+ leak therapeutic targeting in treatment of arrhythmias in heart failure that spare the inotropic and lusitropic effects of the PKA branch.
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