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Protein kinase C contributes to the maintenance of contractile force in human ventricular cardiomyocytes
Authors:Molnár Andrea  Borbély Attila  Czuriga Dániel  Ivetta Siket M  Szilágyi Szabolcs  Hertelendi Zita  Pásztor Eniko T  Balogh Agnes  Galajda Zoltán  Szerafin Tamás  Jaquet Kornelia  Papp Zoltán  Edes István  Tóth Attila
Institution:Division of Clinical Physiology, Institute of Cardiology, Faculty of Medicine, Medical and Health Science Center, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary.
Abstract:Prolonged Ca(2+) stimulations often result in a decrease in contractile force of isolated, demembranated human ventricular cardiomyocytes, whereas intact cells are likely to be protected from this deterioration. We hypothesized that cytosolic protein kinase C (PKC) contributes to this protection. Prolonged contracture (10 min) of demembranated human cardiomyocytes at half-maximal Ca(2+) resulted in a 37 +/- 5% reduction of active force (p < 0.01), whereas no decrease (2 +/- 3% increase) was observed in the presence of the cytosol (reconstituted myocytes). The PKC inhibitors GF 109203X and G? 6976 (10 micromol/liter) partially antagonized the cytosol-mediated protection (15 +/- 5 and 9 +/- 2% decrease in active force, p < 0.05). Quantitation of PKC isoform expression revealed the dominance of the Ca(2+)-dependent PKCalpha over PKCdelta and PKCepsilon (189 +/- 31, 7 +/- 3, and 7 +/- 2 ng/mg protein, respectively). Ca(2+) stimulations of reconstituted human cardiomyocytes resulted in the translocation of endogenous PKCalpha, but not PKCbeta1, delta, and epsilon from the cytosol to the contractile system (PKCalpha association: control, 5 +/- 3 arbitrary units; +Ca(2+), 39 +/- 8 arbitrary units; p < 0.01, EC(50,Ca) = 645 nmol/liter). One of the PKCalpha-binding proteins were identified as the thin filament regulatory protein cardiac troponin I (TnI). Finally, the Ca(2+)-dependent interaction between PKCalpha and TnI was confirmed using purified recombinant proteins (binding without Ca(2+) was only 28 +/- 18% of that with Ca(2+)). Our data suggest that PKCalpha translocates to the contractile system and anchors to TnI in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner in the human heart, contributing to the maintenance of contractile force.
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