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CaMKII IN THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM: SENSING REDOX STATES

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 91, Issue 3, Pages 889-915

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00018.2010

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [R01-HL-079031, R01-HL-62494, R01-HL-70250, T32-HL-86350]
  2. Fondation Leducq for the Alliance for CaMKII Signaling
  3. American Heart Association [0930086N]
  4. Carver Trust Medical Initiative
  5. Department of Veterans Affairs
  6. National Research Service

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Erickson JR, He BJ, Grumbach IM, Anderson ME. CaMKII in the Cardiovascular System: Sensing Redox States. Physiol Rev 91: 889-915, 2011; doi: 10.1152/physrev.00018.2010.-The multifunctional Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is now recognized to play a central role in pathological events in the cardiovascular system. CaMKII has diverse downstream targets that promote vascular disease, heart failure, and arrhythmias, so improved understanding of CaMKII signaling has the potential to lead to new therapies for cardiovascular disease. CaMKII is a multimeric serine-threonine kinase that is initially activated by binding calcified calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM). Under conditions of sustained exposure to elevated Ca2+/CaM, CaMKII transitions into a Ca2+/CaM-autonomous enzyme by two distinct but parallel processes. Autophosphorylation of threonine-287 in the CaMKII regulatory domain traps CaMKII into an open configuration even after Ca2+/CaM unbinding. More recently, our group identified a pair of methionines (281/282) in the CaMKII regulatory domain that undergo a partially reversible oxidation which, like autophosphorylation, prevents CaMKII from inactivating after Ca2+/CaM unbinding. Here we review roles of CaMKII in cardiovascular disease with an eye to understanding how CaMKII may act as a transduction signal to connect pro-oxidant conditions into specific downstream pathological effects that are relevant to rare and common forms of cardiovascular disease.

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