4.8 Article

CaMKII determines mitochondrial stress responses in heart

Journal

NATURE
Volume 491, Issue 7423, Pages 269-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11444

Keywords

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Funding

  1. AHA [0635357N]
  2. NIH [R01 HL090905, R01 HL079031, R01 HL62494, R01 HL70250, R01 HL113001, R01 HL084583, R01 HL083422]
  3. Fondation Leducq for the Alliance for CaMKII Signaling
  4. Pew Scholars Trust

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Myocardial cell death is initiated by excessive mitochondrial Ca2+ entry causing Ca2+ overload, mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opening and dissipation of the mitochondrial inner membrane potential (Delta Psi m)(1,2). However, the signalling pathways that control mitochondrial Ca2+ entry through the inner membrane mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter (MCU)(3-5) are not known. The multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is activated in ischaemia reperfusion, myocardial infarction and neurohumoral injury, common causes of myocardial death and heart failure; these findings suggest that CaMKII could couple disease stress to mitochondrial injury. Here we show that CaMKII promotes mPTP opening and myocardial death by increasing MCU current (I-MCU). Mitochondrial-targeted CaMKII inhibitory protein or cyclosporin A, an mPTP antagonist with clinical efficacy in ischaemia reperfusion injury(6), equivalently prevent mPTP opening, Delta Psi m deterioration and diminish mitochondrial disruption and programmed cell death in response to ischaemia reperfusion injury. Mice with myocardial and mitochondrial-targeted CaMKII inhibition have reduced I-MCU and are resistant to ischaemia reperfusion injury, myocardial infarction and neurohumoral injury, suggesting that pathological actions of CaMKII are substantially mediated by increasing I-MCU. Our findings identify CaMKII activity as a central mechanism for mitochondrial Ca2+ entry in myocardial cell death, and indicate that mitochondrial-targeted CaMKII inhibition could prevent or reduce myocardial death and heart failure in response to common experimental forms of pathophysiological stress.

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