4.7 Article

Cell-permeable peptide-based disruption of endogenous PKA-AKAP complexes: a tool for studying the molecular roles of AKAP-mediated PKA subcellular anchoring

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 296, Issue 2, Pages C306-C316

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00216.2008

Keywords

subcellular compartmentalization; signal transduction; cAMP; pancreatic beta-cells; insulin exocytosis; protein kinase A; A-kinase achoring protein

Funding

  1. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
  2. University of Montpellier
  3. Association de Recherche sur le Diabete via the Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Me Medicale/Programme National de la Recherche sur le Diabete Program
  4. French Ministry of Foreign Affairs (through the Egide Foundation)
  5. European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes/European Association for the Study of Diabetes

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Faruque OM, Le-Nguyen D, Lajoix A-D, Vives E, Petit P, Bataille D, Hani EH. Cell-permeable peptide-based disruption of endogenous PKA-AKAP complexes: a tool for studying the molecular roles of AKAP-mediated PKA subcellular anchoring. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 296: C306-C316, 2009. First published December 10, 2008; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00216.2008.-Stimulation of numerous G protein-coupled receptors leads to the elevation of intracellular concentrations of cAMP, which subsequently activates the PKA pathway. Specificity of the PKA signaling module is determined by a sophisticated subcellular targeting network that directs the spatiotemporal activation of the kinase. This specific compartmentalization mechanism occurs through high-affinity interactions of PKA with A-kinase anchoring proteins (AKAPs), the role of which is to target the kinase to discrete subcellular microdomains. Recently, a peptide designated AKAPis has been proposed to competitively inhibit PKA-AKAP interactions in vitro. We therefore sought to characterize a cell-permeable construct of the AKAPis inhibitor and use it as a tool to characterize the impact of PKA compartmentalization by AKAPs. Using insulin-secreting pancreatic beta-cells (INS-1 cells), we showed that TAT-AKAPis (at a micromolar range) dose dependently disrupted a significant fraction of endogenous PKA-AKAP interactions. Immunoflurescent analysis also indicated that TAT-AKAPis significantly affected PKA subcellular localization. Furthermore, TAT-AKAPis markedly attenuated glucagon-induced phosphorylations of p44/p42 MAPKs and cAMP response element binding protein, which are downstream effectors of PKA. In parallel, TAT-AKAPis dose dependently inhibited the glucagon-induced potentiation of insulin release. Therefore, AKAP-mediated subcellular compartmentalization of PKA represents a key mechanism for PKA-dependent phosphorylation events and potentiation of insulin secretion in intact pancreatic beta-cells. More interestingly, our data highlight the effectiveness of the cell-permeable peptide-mediated approach to monitoring in cellulo PKA-AKAP interactions and delineating PKA-dependent phosphorylation events underlying specific cellular responses.

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