4.6 Article

The voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ (CaV1.2) channel C-terminus fragment is a bi-modal vasodilator

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 591, Issue 12, Pages 2987-2998

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.251926

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NHLBI

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Key points center dot Voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ (CaV1.2) channels are the major Ca2+ influx pathway and are central to contractility regulation in arterial smooth muscle cells. center dot CaV1.2 exists as a full-length channel and undergoes cleavage to a short CaV1.2 and a C-terminus (CCt) fragment in rat and human arterial smooth muscle cells. center dot CCt decreases CaV1.2 transcription and shifts the voltage dependence of current activation and inactivation to more depolarized potentials in arterial smooth muscle cells. center dot CCt reduces pressure- and depolarization-induced vasoconstriction. center dot CCt is a bi-modal vasodilator. Abstract Voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channels (CaV1.2) are the primary Ca2+ entry pathway in vascular smooth muscle cells (myocytes). CaV1.2 channels control systemic blood pressure and organ blood flow and are pathologically altered in vascular diseases, which modifies vessel contractility. The CaV1.2 distal C-terminus is susceptible to proteolytic cleavage, which yields a truncated CaV1.2 subunit and a cleaved C-terminal fragment (CCt). Previous studies in cardiac myocytes and neurons have identified CCt as both a transcription factor and CaV1.2 channel inhibitor, with different signalling mechanisms proposed to underlie some of these effects. CCt existence and physiological functions in arterial myocytes are unclear, but important to study given the functional significance of CaV1.2 channels. Here, we show that CCt exists in myocytes of both rat and human resistance-size cerebral arteries, where it locates to both the nucleus and plasma membrane. Recombinant CCt expression in arterial myocytes inhibited CaV1.2 transcription and reduced CaV1.2 protein. CCt induced a depolarizing shift in the voltage dependence of both CaV1.2 current activation and inactivation, and reduced non-inactivating current in myocytes. Recombinant truncated CCt lacking a putative nuclear localization sequence (92CCt) did not locate to the nucleus and had no effect on arterial CaV1.2 transcription or protein. However, 92CCt shifted the voltage dependence of CaV1.2 activation and inactivation similarly to CCt. CCt and 92CCt both inhibited pressure- and depolarization-induced vasoconstriction, although CCt was a far more effective vasodilator. These data demonstrate that endogenous CCt exists and reduces both CaV1.2 channel expression and voltage sensitivity in arterial myocytes. Thus, CCt is a bi-modal vasodilator.

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