4.6 Article

L-type calcium channel α-subunit and protein kinase inhibitors modulate Rem-mediated regulation of current

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00956.2005

Keywords

cardiac myocyte; monomeric GTPase; Rad and Gem/Kir-related family; insulin-secreting cell; calcium imaging; heart development

Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P-20RR20171] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL-072936, R01 HL072936, R01 HL072936-03, HL-074091] Funding Source: Medline

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Cardiac voltage-gated L-type Ca channels (CaV) are multiprotein complexes, including accessory subunits such as Ca-V beta 2 that increase current expression. Recently, members of the Rad and Gem/Kir-related family of small GTPases have been shown to decrease current, although the mechanism remains poorly defined. In this study, we evaluated the contribution of the L-type Ca channel alpha-subunit (Ca(V)1.2) to Ca-V beta 2-Rem inhibition of Ca channel current. Specifically, we addressed whether protein kinase A (PKA) modulation of the Ca channel modifies Ca-V beta 2-Rem inhibition of Ca channel current. We first tested the effect of Rem on Ca(V)1.2 in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK-293) cells using the whole cell patch-clamp configuration. Rem coexpression with Ca(V)1.2 reduces Ba current expression under basal conditions, and Ca-V beta 2a coexpression enhances Rem block of Ca(V)1.2 current. Surprisingly, PKA inhibition by 133 nM H-89 or 50 mu M Rp-cAMP-S partially relieved the Rem-mediated inhibition of current activity both with and without Ca-V beta 2a. To test whether the H-89 action was a consequence of the phosphorylation status of Ca(V)1.2, we examined Rem regulation of the PKA-insensitive Ca(V)1.2 serine 1928 (S1928) to alanine mutation (Ca(V)1.2-S1928A). Ca(V)1.2-S1928A current was not inhibited by Rem and when coexpression with Ca-V beta 2a was not completely blocked by Rem coexpression, suggesting that the phosphorylation of S1928 contributes to Rem-mediated Ca channel modulation. As a model for native Ca channel complexes, we tested the ability of Rem overexpression in HIT-T15 cells and embryonic ventricular myocytes to interfere with native current. We find that native current is also sensitive to Rem block and that H-89 pretreatment relieves the ability of Rem to regulate Ca current. We conclude that Rem is capable of regulating L-type current, that release of Rem block is modulated by cellular kinase pathways, and that the Ca(V)1.2 COOH terminus contributes to Rem- dependent channel inhibition.

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