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Small molecule AKAP-protein kinase A (PKA) interaction disruptors that activate PKA interfere with compartmentalized cAMP signaling in cardiac myocytes
Authors:Christian Frank  Szaszák Márta  Friedl Sabine  Drewianka Stephan  Lorenz Dorothea  Goncalves Andrey  Furkert Jens  Vargas Carolyn  Schmieder Peter  Götz Frank  Zühlke Kerstin  Moutty Marie  Göttert Hendrikje  Joshi Mangesh  Reif Bernd  Haase Hannelore  Morano Ingo  Grossmann Solveig  Klukovits Anna  Verli Judit  Gáspár Róbert  Noack Claudia  Bergmann Martin  Kass Robert  Hampel Kornelia  Kashin Dmitry  Genieser Hans-Gottfried  Herberg Friedrich W  Willoughby Debbie  Cooper Dermot M F  Baillie George S  Houslay Miles D  von Kries Jens Peter  Zimmermann Bastian  Rosenthal Walter  Klussmann Enno
Affiliation:Leibniz Institute for Molecular Pharmacology, Robert-R?ssle-Strasse 10, 13125 Berlin, Germany.
Abstract:A-kinase anchoring proteins (AKAPs) tether protein kinase A (PKA) and other signaling proteins to defined intracellular sites, thereby establishing compartmentalized cAMP signaling. AKAP-PKA interactions play key roles in various cellular processes, including the regulation of cardiac myocyte contractility. We discovered small molecules, 3,3'-diamino-4,4'-dihydroxydiphenylmethane (FMP-API-1) and its derivatives, which inhibit AKAP-PKA interactions in vitro and in cultured cardiac myocytes. The molecules bind to an allosteric site of regulatory subunits of PKA identifying a hitherto unrecognized region that controls AKAP-PKA interactions. FMP-API-1 also activates PKA. The net effect of FMP-API-1 is a selective interference with compartmentalized cAMP signaling. In cardiac myocytes, FMP-API-1 reveals a novel mechanism involved in terminating β-adrenoreceptor-induced cAMP synthesis. In addition, FMP-API-1 leads to an increase in contractility of cultured rat cardiac myocytes and intact hearts. Thus, FMP-API-1 represents not only a novel means to study compartmentalized cAMP/PKA signaling but, due to its effects on cardiac myocytes and intact hearts, provides the basis for a new concept in the treatment of chronic heart failure.
Keywords:Adenylate Cyclase (Adenylyl Cyclase)   Cyclic AMP (cAMP)   Protein Kinase A (PKA)   Protein Phosphorylation   Protein-Protein Interactions   Signal Transduction   AKAP   Compartmentalized Signaling   AKAP18   Yotiao   AKAP150   Compartmentalization
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