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1.
The impaired ubiquitin-proteasome activity is believed to be one of the leading factors that contribute to Parkinson disease pathogenesis partially by causing alpha-synuclein aggregation. However, the relationship between alpha-synuclein aggregation and the impaired proteasome activity is yet unclear. In this study, we examined the effects of three soluble alpha-synuclein species (monomer, dimer, and protofibrils) on the degradation activity of the 26 S proteasome by reconstitution of proteasomal degradation using highly purified 26 S proteasomes and model substrates. We found that none of the three soluble alpha-synuclein species impaired the three distinct peptidase activities of the 26 S proteasome when using fluorogenic peptides as substrates. In striking contrast, alpha-synuclein protofibrils, but not monomer and dimer, markedly inhibited the ubiquitin-independent proteasomal degradation of unstructured proteins and ubiquitin-dependent degradation of folded proteins when present at 5-fold molar excess to the 26 S proteasome. Together these results indicate that alpha-synuclein protofibrils have a pronounced inhibitory effect on 26 S proteasome-mediated protein degradation. Because alpha-synuclein is a substrate of the proteasome, impaired proteasomal activity could further cause alpha-synuclein accumulation/aggregation, thus creating a vicious cycle and leading to Parkinson disease pathogenesis. Furthermore we found that alpha-synuclein protofibrils bound both the 26 S proteasome and substrates of the 26 S proteasome. Accordingly we propose that the inhibitory effect of alpha-synuclein protofibrils on 26 S proteasomal degradation might result from impairing substrate translocation by binding the proteasome or sequestrating proteasomal substrates by binding the substrates.  相似文献   

2.
The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is involved in the replication of a broad range of viruses. Since replication of the murine hepatitis virus (MHV) is impaired upon proteasomal inhibition, the relevance of the UPS for the replication of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was investigated in this study. We demonstrate that the proteasomal inhibitor MG132 strongly inhibits SARS-CoV replication by interfering with early steps of the viral life cycle. Surprisingly, other proteasomal inhibitors (e.g., lactacystin and bortezomib) only marginally affected viral replication, indicating that the effect of MG132 is independent of proteasomal impairment. Induction of autophagy by MG132 treatment was excluded from playing a role, and no changes in SARS-CoV titers were observed during infection of wild-type or autophagy-deficient ATG5(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts overexpressing the human SARS-CoV receptor, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2). Since MG132 also inhibits the cysteine protease m-calpain, we addressed the role of calpains in the early SARS-CoV life cycle using calpain inhibitors III (MDL28170) and VI (SJA6017). In fact, m-calpain inhibition with MDL28170 resulted in an even more pronounced inhibition of SARS-CoV replication (>7 orders of magnitude) than did MG132. Additional m-calpain knockdown experiments confirmed the dependence of SARS-CoV replication on the activity of the cysteine protease m-calpain. Taken together, we provide strong experimental evidence that SARS-CoV has unique replication requirements which are independent of functional UPS or autophagy pathways compared to other coronaviruses. Additionally, this work highlights an important role for m-calpain during early steps of the SARS-CoV life cycle.  相似文献   

3.
Proteasome activity is an important part of viral replication. In this study, we examined the effect of proteasome inhibitors on the replication of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and poliovirus. We found that the proteasome inhibitors significantly suppressed VSV protein synthesis, virus accumulation, and protected infected cells from toxic effect of VSV replication. In contrast, poliovirus replication was delayed, but not diminished in the presence of the proteasome inhibitors MG132 and Bortezomib. We also found that inhibition of proteasomes stimulated stress-related processes, such as accumulation of chaperone hsp70, phosphorylation of eIF2alpha, and overall inhibition of translation. VSV replication was sensitive to this stress with significant decline in replication process. Poliovirus growth was less sensitive with only delay in replication. Inhibition of proteasome activity suppressed cellular and VSV protein synthesis, but did not reduce poliovirus protein synthesis. Protein kinase GCN2 supported the ability of proteasome inhibitors to attenuate general translation and to suppress VSV replication. We propose that different mechanisms of translational initiation by VSV and poliovirus determine their sensitivity to stress induced by the inhibition of proteasomes. To our knowledge, this is the first study that connects the effect of stress induced by proteasome inhibition with the efficiency of viral infection.  相似文献   

4.
The accumulation of aggregated alpha-synuclein is thought to contribute to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. Recent studies indicate that aggregated alpha-synuclein binds to S6', a component of the 19 S subunit in the 26 S proteasome and inhibits 26 S proteasomal degradation, both ubiquitin-independent and ubiquitin-dependent. The IC(50) of aggregated alpha-synuclein for inhibition of the 26 S ubiquitin-independent proteasomal activity is approximately 1 nm. alpha-Synuclein has two close homologues, termed beta-synuclein and gamma-synuclein. In the present study we compared the effects of the three synuclein homologues on proteasomal activity. The proteasome exists as a 26 S and a 20 S species, with the 26 S proteasome containing the 20 S core and 19 S cap. Monomeric alpha- and beta-synucleins inhibited the 20 S and 26 S proteasomal activities only weakly, but monomeric gamma-synuclein strongly inhibited ubiquitin-independent proteolysis. The IC(50) of monomeric gamma-synuclein for the 20 S proteolysis was 400 nm. In monomeric form, none of the three synuclein proteins inhibited 26 S ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal activity. Although beta-synuclein had no direct effect on proteasomal activity, co-incubating monomeric beta-synuclein with aggregated alpha-synuclein antagonized the inhibition of the 26 S ubiquitin-independent proteasome by aggregated alpha-synuclein when added before the aggregated alpha-synuclein. Co-incubating beta-synuclein with gamma-synuclein had no effect on the inhibition of the 20 S proteasome by monomeric gamma-synuclein. Immunoprecipitation and pull-down experiments suggested that antagonism by beta-synuclein resulted from binding to alpha-synuclein rather than binding to S6'. Pull-down experiments demonstrated that recombinant monomeric beta-synuclein does not interact with the proteasomal subunit S6', unlike alpha-synuclein, but beta-synuclein does bind alpha-synuclein and competes with S6' for binding to alpha-synuclein. Based on these data, we hypothesize that the alpha- and gamma-synucleins regulate proteasomal function and that beta-synuclein acts as a negative regulator of alpha-synuclein.  相似文献   

5.
It is well established that nitric oxide (NO) inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) proliferation by modulating cell cycle proteins. The 26S proteasome is integral to protein degradation and tightly regulates cell cycle proteins. Therefore, we hypothesized that NO directly inhibits the activity of the 26S proteasome. The three enzymatic activities (chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like and caspase-like) of the 26S proteasome were examined in VSMC. At baseline, caspase-like activity was approximately 3.5-fold greater than chymotrypsin- and trypsin-like activities. The NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) significantly inhibited all three catalytically active sites in a time- and concentration-dependent manner (P < 0.05). Caspase-like activity was inhibited to a greater degree (77.2% P < 0.05). cGMP and cAMP analogs and inhibitors had no statistically significant effect on basal or NO-mediated inhibition of proteasome activity. Dithiothreitol, a reducing agent, prevented and reversed the NO-mediated inhibition of the 26S proteasome. Nitroso-cysteine analysis following S-nitrosoglutathione exposure revealed that the 20S catalytic core of the 26S proteasome contains 10 cysteines which were S-nitrosylated by NO. Evaluation of 26S proteasome subunit protein expression revealed differential regulation of the α and β subunits in VSMC following exposure to NO. Finally, immunohistochemical analysis of subunit expression revealed distinct intracellular localization of the 26S proteasomal subunits at baseline and confirmed upregulation of distinct subunits following NO exposure. In conclusion, NO reversibly inhibits the catalytic activity of the 26S proteasome through S-nitrosylation and differentially regulates proteasomal subunit expression. This may be one mechanism by which NO exerts its effects on the cell cycle and inhibits cellular proliferation in the vasculature.  相似文献   

6.
The accumulation of aggregated alpha-synuclein is thought to contribute to the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease, but the mechanism of toxicity is poorly understood. Recent studies suggest that aggregated proteins cause toxicity by inhibiting the ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal system. In the present study, we explore how alpha-synuclein interacts with the proteasome. The proteasome exists as a 26 S and a 20 S species. The 26 S proteasome is composed of the 19 S cap and the 20 S core. Aggregated alpha-synuclein strongly inhibited the function of the 26 S proteasome. The IC(50) of aggregated alpha-synuclein for ubiquitin-independent 26 S proteasomal activity was 1 nm. Aggregated alpha-synuclein also inhibited 26 S ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal activity at a dose of 500 nm. In contrast, the IC(50) of aggregated alpha-synuclein for 20 S proteasomal activity was > 1 microm. This suggests that aggregated alpha-synuclein selectively interacts with the 19 S cap. Monomeric alpha-synuclein also inhibited proteasomal activity but with lower affinity and less potency. Recombinant monomeric alpha-synuclein inhibited the activity of the 20 S proteasomal core with an IC(50) > 10 microm, exhibited no inhibition of 26 S ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal activity at doses up to 5 microm, and exhibited only partial inhibition (50%) of the 26 S ubiquitin-independent proteasomal activity at doses up to 10 mm. Binding studies demonstrate that both aggregated and monomeric alpha-synuclein selectively bind to the proteasomal protein S6', a subunit of the 19 S cap. These studies suggest that proteasomal inhibition by aggregated alpha-synuclein could be mediated by interaction with S6'.  相似文献   

7.
In experimental alcoholic liver disease, protein degradation by the ATP-ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is inhibited. Failure of the proteasome to eliminate cytoplasmic proteins leads to the accumulation of oxidized and otherwise modified proteins. One possible explanation for the inhibition of the proteasome is hyperphosphorylation of proteasome subunits. To examine this possibility, the 26S proteasomes from the liver of rats fed ethanol and a pair-fed control were studied by isolating the proteasomes in a purified fraction. The effect of ethanol on the phosphorylation of proteasomal subunits was compared with the hyperphosphorylation of the proteasomes caused by okadaic acid given to rats in vivo. Ethanol ingestion caused an inhibition of the chymotrypsin-like activity of the purified proteasome. The 2D electrophoresis and Western blot analysis of the purified 20S and 26S proteasomes from the ethanol-fed rats indicated that hyperphosphorylation of proteasomal subunits had occured. The proteasomal alpha type subunits C9/alpha3 and C8/alpha7 were hyperphosphorylated compared to the controls. Chymotrypsin-like activity was also inhibited by okadaic acid treatment similar to ethanol feeding. The 26S proteasome fraction examined by isoelectric focusing gel revealed many hyperphosphorylated bands in the proteasomes from the okadaic acid treated and the ethanol fed rat livers compared with the controls. In conclusion hyperphosphorylation of the proteasome subunits occurs in the ethanol treated proteasomal subunits which could be one mechanism of the inhibition of the 26S proteasome caused by ethanol feeding.  相似文献   

8.
Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) is one of the most common pathogens for viral myocarditis. The lack of effective therapeutics for CVB3-caused viral diseases underscores the importance of searching for antiviral compounds. Pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) is an antioxidant and is recently reported to inhibit ubiquitin-proteasome-mediated proteolysis. Previous studies have shown that PDTC inhibits replication of rhinovirus, influenza virus, and poliovirus. In the present study, we report that PDTC is a potent inhibitor of CVB3. Coxsackievirus-infected HeLa cells treated with PDTC showed a significant reduction of CVB3 viral RNA synthesis, viral protein VP1 expression, and viral progeny release. Similar to previous observation that divalent ions mediate the function of PDTC, we further report that serum-containing copper and zinc are required for its antiviral activity. CVB3 infection resulted in massive generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Although PDTC alleviated ROS generation, the antiviral activity was unlikely dependent on its antioxidant effect because the potent antioxidant, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, failed to inhibit CVB3 replication. Consistent with previous reports that PDTC inhibits ubiquitin-proteasome-mediated protein degradation, we found that PDTC treatment led to the accumulation of several short-lived proteins in infected cells. We further provide evidence that the inhibitory effect of PDTC on protein degradation was not due to inhibition of proteasome activity but likely modulation of ubiquitination. Together with our previous findings that proteasome inhibition reduces CVB3 replication (H. Luo, J. Zhang, C. Cheung, A. Suarez, B. M. McManus, and D. Yang, Am. J. Pathol. 163:381-385, 2003), results in this study suggest a strong antiviral effect of PDTC on coxsackievirus, likely through inhibition of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.  相似文献   

9.
This study provides evidence that proteasomal activity is required at multiple steps in human cytomegalovirus replication. Electron microscopy revealed that no viral particles were assembled in the presence of proteasome inhibitor MG132. Immunofluorescence and Western blot analyses using MG132 demonstrated that immediate early gene expression was suppressed at low but not high MOI. In contrast, expression of late proteins was completely blocked independent of MOI. Additionally, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis demonstrated that MG132 interferes with cleavage of HCMV DNA. Bromodeoxyuridine incorporation studies showed that de novo viral DNA synthesis is reduced in the presence of MG132. Furthermore, in contrast to previous hypotheses we demonstrated that neither the ND10 components PML and hDaxx nor NFkappaB activation represent the target for MG132.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The ubiquitin/26S proteasome system plays an essential role not only in maintaining protein turnover, but also in regulating many other plant responses, including plant–pathogen interactions. Previous studies highlighted different roles of the 20S proteasome in plant defense during virus infection, either indirectly through viral suppressor-mediated degradation of Argonaute proteins, affecting the RNA interference pathway, or directly through modulation of the proteolytic and RNase activity of the 20S proteasome, a component of the 20S proteasome, by viral proteins, affecting the levels of viral proteins and RNAs. Here we show that MG132, a cell permeable proteasomal inhibitor, caused an increase in papaya ringspot virus (PRSV) accumulation in its natural host papaya (Carica papaya). We also show that the PRSV HcPro interacts with the papaya homologue of the Arabidopsis PAA (α1 subunit of the 20S proteasome), but not with the papaya homologue of Arabidopsis PAE (α5 subunit of the 20S proteasome), associated with the RNase activity, although the two 20S proteasome subunits interacted with each other. Mutated forms of PRSV HcPro showed that the conserved KITC54 motif in the N-terminal domain of HcPro was necessary for its binding to PAA. Co-agroinfiltration assays demonstrated that HcPro expression mimicked the action of MG132, and facilitated the accumulation of bothtotal ubiquitinated proteins and viral/non-viral exogenous RNA in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves. These effects were not observed by using an HcPro mutant (KITS54), which impaired the HcPro – PAA interaction. Thus, the PRSV HcPro interacts with a proteasomal subunit, inhibiting the action of the 20S proteasome, suggesting that HcPro might be crucial for modulating its catalytic activities in support of virus accumulation.  相似文献   

12.
The proteasome is a multicatalytic protease that is responsible for the degradation of the majority of intracellular proteins. Its role is correlated with several major regulatory pathways that are involved in cell cycle control, signaling, and antigen presentation, as well as in the removal of oxidatively damaged proteins. Although several proteasomal catalytic inhibitors have been described, very few activators have been reported to date. Some reports in the literature highlight the cellular protective effects of proteasome activation against oxidative stress and its effect on increased life span. In this work, we describe a peptide named proteasome-activating peptide 1 (PAP1), which increases the chymotrypsin-like proteasomal catalytic activity and, consequently, proteolytic rates both in vitro and in culture. PAP1 proteasomal activation is mediated by the opening of the proteasomal catalytic chamber. We also demonstrate that the observed proteasomal activation protected cells from oxidative stress; further, PAP1 prevented protein aggregation in a cellular model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The role of 20SPT gate opening underlying protection against oxidative stress was also explored in yeast cells. The present data indicate the importance of proteasomal activators as potential drugs for the treatment of pathologies associated with the impaired removal of damaged proteins, which is observed in many neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

13.
Several proteasome-associated proteins regulate degradation by the 26 S proteasome using the ubiquitin chains that mark most substrates for degradation. The proteasome-associated protein Ecm29, however, has no ubiquitin-binding or modifying activity, and its direct effect on substrate degradation is unclear. Here, we show that Ecm29 acts as a proteasome inhibitor. Besides inhibiting the proteolytic cleavage of peptide substrates in vitro, it inhibits the degradation of ubiquitin-dependent and -independent substrates in vivo. Binding of Ecm29 to the proteasome induces a closed conformation of the substrate entry channel of the core particle. Furthermore, Ecm29 inhibits proteasomal ATPase activity, suggesting that the mechanism of inhibition and gate regulation by Ecm29 is through regulation of the proteasomal ATPases. Consistent with this, we identified through chemical cross-linking that Ecm29 binds to, or in close proximity to, the proteasomal ATPase subunit Rpt5. Additionally, we show that Ecm29 preferentially associates with both mutant and nucleotide depleted proteasomes. We propose that the inhibitory ability of Ecm29 is important for its function as a proteasome quality control factor by ensuring that aberrant proteasomes recognized by Ecm29 are inactive.  相似文献   

14.
Cytotoxic action of a variety of antitumor drugs generate oxidatively modified proteins that are predominantly metabolized via the proteasome. In the present study, a differentiation-retrodifferentiation cell system was exposed to oxidative stress by hydrogen peroxide treatment. Thus, the activity of the nuclear proteasome in proliferating human U937 leukemic cells increased by 2.5-fold after hydrogen peroxide treatment. In contrast, growth-arrested differentiated U937 cells demonstrated 40% less constitutive proteasomal activity, which was not inducible after hydrogen peroxide exposure. After a retrodifferentiation process, however, in which differentiated U937 cells resume autonomous growth again, the proteasomal activity was indistinguishable from that in U937 control cells, both constitutively and after induction of oxidative stress. Moreover, cells of TUR, a differentiation-resistant U937 subclone, expressed an elevated constitutive proteasomal activity that increased by 2.5-fold after oxidative stress. Immunoblot analysis revealed that these differences in proteasomal activities did not correlate with proteasome protein expression but with protein levels of the nuclear enzyme poly-ADP-ribose-polymerase (PARP). Further studies using specific PARP inhibitors revealed that the noninducible proteasome activity in differentiated U937 cells was PARP independent, whereas the increased activity level in oxidatively stressed TUR cells was downregulated upon PARP inhibition. Immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated a protein-protein interaction of the functional active PARP with the proteasome in correlation with the proteasome activity. Similar results were obtained by analyzing protein carbonyls after oxidative stress. Taken together, these data suggest that proliferating, rather than growth-arrested, cells metabolize oxidatively damaged nuclear proteins via the proteasome by expressing high levels of PARP.  相似文献   

15.
ISG15 is a ubiquitin-like protein that is induced by interferon and microbial challenge. Ubiquitin-like proteins are covalently conjugated to cellular proteins and may intersect the ubiquitin-proteasome system via common substrates or reciprocal regulation. To investigate the relationship between ISG15 conjugation and proteasome function, we treated interferon-induced cells with proteasome inhibitors. Surprisingly, inhibition of proteasomal, but not lysosomal, proteases dramatically enhanced the level of ISG15 conjugates. The stimulation of ISG15 conjugates occurred rapidly in the absence of protein synthesis and was most dramatic in the cytoskeletal protein fraction. Inhibition of ISG15 conjugation by ATP depletion abrogated the proteasome inhibitor-dependent increase in ISG15 conjugates, suggesting that the effect was mediated by de novo conjugation, rather than protection from proteasomal degradation or inhibition of ISG15 deconjugating activity. The increase in ISG15 conjugates did not occur through a stabilization of the ISG15 E1 enzyme, UBE1L. Furthermore, simultaneous modification of proteins by both ISG15 and ubiquitin did not account for the proteasome inhibitor-dependent increase in ISG15 conjugates. These findings provide the first evidence for a link between ISG15 conjugation and proteasome function and support a model in which proteins destined for ISG15 conjugation are proteasome-regulated.  相似文献   

16.
Viruses commonly manipulate cell cycle progression to create cellular conditions that are most beneficial to their replication. To accomplish this feat, viruses often target critical cell cycle regulators in order to have maximal effect with minimal input. One such master regulator is the large, multisubunit E3 ubiquitin ligase anaphase-promoting complex (APC) that targets effector proteins for ubiquitination and proteasome degradation. The APC is essential for cells to progress through anaphase, exit from mitosis, and prevent a premature entry into S phase. These far-reaching effects of the APC on the cell cycle are through its ability to target a number of substrates, including securin, cyclin A, cyclin B, thymidine kinase, geminin, and many others. Recent studies have identified several proteins from a number of viruses that can modulate APC activity by different mechanisms, highlighting the potential of the APC in driving viral replication or pathogenesis. Most notably, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) protein pUL21a was recently identified to disable the APC via a novel mechanism by targeting APC subunits for degradation, both during virus infection and in isolation. Importantly, HCMV lacking both viral APC regulators is significantly attenuated, demonstrating the impact of the APC on a virus infection. Work in this field will likely lead to novel insights into viral replication and pathogenesis and APC function and identify novel antiviral and anticancer targets. Here we review viral mechanisms to regulate the APC, speculate on their roles during infection, and identify questions to be addressed in future studies.  相似文献   

17.
To better understand proteasomal degradation of nuclear proteins and viral antigens we studied mutated forms of influenza virus nucleoprotein (NP) that misfold and are rapidly degraded by proteasomes. In the presence of proteasome inhibitors, mutated NP (dNP) accumulates in highly insoluble ubiquitinated and nonubiquitinated species in nuclear substructures known as promyelocytic leukemia oncogenic domains (PODs) and the microtubule organizing center (MTOC). Immunofluorescence revealed that dNP recruits proteasomes and a selective assortment of molecular chaperones to both locales, and that a similar (though less dramatic) effect is induced by proteasome inhibitors in the absence of dNP expression. Biochemical evidence is consistent with the idea that dNP is delivered to PODs/MTOC in the absence of proteasome inhibitors. Restoring proteasome activity while blocking protein synthesis results in disappearance of dNP from PODs and the MTOC and the generation of a major histocompatibility complex class I-bound peptide derived from dNP but not NP. These findings demonstrate that PODs and the MTOC serve as sites of proteasomal degradation of misfolded dNP and probably cellular proteins as well, and imply that antigenic peptides are generated at one or both of these sites.  相似文献   

18.
Post-translational modification of proteins by ubiquitin is a fundamentally important regulatory mechanism. However, proteome-wide analysis of endogenous ubiquitylation remains a challenging task, and almost always has relied on cells expressing affinity tagged ubiquitin. Here we combine single-step immunoenrichment of ubiquitylated peptides with peptide fractionation and high-resolution mass spectrometry to investigate endogenous ubiquitylation sites. We precisely map 11,054 endogenous putative ubiquitylation sites (diglycine-modified lysines) on 4,273 human proteins. The presented data set covers 67% of the known ubiquitylation sites and contains 10,254 novel sites on proteins with diverse cellular functions including cell signaling, receptor endocytosis, DNA replication, DNA damage repair, and cell cycle progression. Our method enables site-specific quantification of ubiquitylation in response to cellular perturbations and is applicable to any cell type or tissue. Global quantification of ubiquitylation in cells treated with the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 discovers sites that are involved in proteasomal degradation, and suggests a nonproteasomal function for almost half of all sites. Surprisingly, ubiquitylation of about 15% of sites decreased more than twofold within four hours of MG-132 treatment, showing that inhibition of proteasomal function can dramatically reduce ubiquitylation on many sites with non-proteasomal functions. Comparison of ubiquitylation sites with acetylation sites reveals an extensive overlap between the lysine residues targeted by these two modifications. However, the crosstalk between these two post-translational modifications is significantly less frequent on sites that show increased ubiquitylation upon proteasome inhibition. Taken together, we report the largest site-specific ubiquitylation dataset in human cells, and for the first time demonstrate proteome-wide, site-specific quantification of endogenous putative ubiquitylation sites.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Myocardial remodeling and heart failure (HF) are common sequelae of many forms of cardiovascular disease and a leading cause of mortality worldwide. Accumulation of damaged cardiac proteins in heart failure has been described. However, how protein quality control (PQC) is regulated and its contribution to HF development are not known. Here, we describe a novel role for activated protein kinase C isoform βII (PKCβII) in disrupting PQC. We show that active PKCβII directly phosphorylated the proteasome and inhibited proteasomal activity in vitro and in cultured neonatal cardiomyocytes. Importantly, inhibition of PKCβII, using a selective PKCβII peptide inhibitor (βIIV5-3), improved proteasomal activity and conferred protection in cultured neonatal cardiomyocytes. We also show that sustained inhibition of PKCβII increased proteasomal activity, decreased accumulation of damaged and misfolded proteins and increased animal survival in two rat models of HF. Interestingly, βIIV5-3-mediated protection was blunted by sustained proteasomal inhibition in HF. Finally, increased cardiac PKCβII activity and accumulation of misfolded proteins associated with decreased proteasomal function were found also in remodeled and failing human hearts, indicating a potential clinical relevance of our findings. Together, our data highlights PKCβII as a novel inhibitor of proteasomal function. PQC disruption by increased PKCβII activity in vivo appears to contribute to the pathophysiology of heart failure, suggesting that PKCβII inhibition may benefit patients with heart failure. (218 words).  相似文献   

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