4.6 Article

Phosphodiesterase 1C integrates store-operated calcium entry and cAMP signaling in leading-edge protrusions of migrating human arterial myocytes

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100606

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [PJT-156283]
  2. Ontario Graduate Scholarship

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Through experiments, it was found that PDE1C-mediated hydrolysis of cAMP is an important link between SOCE and the activation of ADCY8 in HASMCs, influencing cell migration by regulating cAMP signaling. This suggests that therapeutic agents targeting PDE1C may offer increased spatial specificity in HASMCs and could potentially be useful in regulating Ca2+/cAMP signaling crosstalk in other cells.
In addition to maintaining cellular ER Ca2+ stores, store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) regulates several Ca2+-sensitive cellular enzymes, including certain adenylyl cyclases (ADCYs), enzymes that synthesize the secondary messenger cyclic AMP (cAMP). Ca2+, acting with calmodulin, can also increase the activity of PDE1-family phosphodiesterases (PDEs), which cleave the phosphodiester bond of cAMP. Surprisingly, SOCE-regulated cAMP signaling has not been studied in cells expressing both Ca2+-sensitive enzymes. Here, we report that depletion of ER Ca2+ activates PDE1C in human arterial smooth muscle cells (HASMCs). Inhibiting the activation of PDE1C reduced the magnitude of both SOCE and subsequent Ca2+/calmodulin-mediated activation of ADCY8 in these cells. Because inhibiting or silencing Ca2+-insensitive PDEs had no such effects, these data identify PDE1C-mediated hydrolysis of cAMP as a novel and important link between SOCE and its activation of ADCY8. Functionally, we showed that PDE1C regulated the formation of leading-edge protrusions in HASMCs, a critical early event in cell migration. Indeed, we found that PDE1C populated the tips of newly forming leading-edge protrusions in polarized HASMCs, and co-localized with ADCY8, the Ca2+ release activated Ca2+ channel subunit, Orai1, the cAMP-effector, protein kinase A, and an A-kinase anchoring protein, AKAP79. Because this polarization could allow PDE1C to control cAMP signaling in a hyper-localized manner, we suggest that PDE1C-selective therapeutic agents could offer increased spatial specificity in HASMCs over agents that regulate cAMP globally in cells. Similarly, such agents could also prove useful in regulating crosstalk between Ca2+/cAMP signaling in other cells in which dysregulated migration contributes to human pathology, including certain cancers.

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