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Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II: Linking Heart Failure and Arrhythmias

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 110, Issue 12, Pages 1661-1677

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.111.243956

Keywords

arrhythmias; calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; heart failure; ion channels; remodeling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 HL 079031, R01 HL 096652, R01 HL 113001, R01 HL 070250]
  2. University of Iowa Research Foundation
  3. Fondation Leducq Transatlantic Alliance for CaMKII Signaling
  4. Heart Rhythm Society
  5. University of Iowa Cardiovascular Center Interdisciplinary Research Fellowship
  6. American Heart Association postdoctoral fellowship [10POST3620047]
  7. NIH [R00 HL 096805]
  8. Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in Cardiovascular Disease

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Understanding relationships between heart failure and arrhythmias, important causes of suffering and sudden death, remains an unmet goal for biomedical researchers and physicians. Evidence assembled over the past decade supports a view that activation of the multifunctional Ca2+ and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) favors myocardial dysfunction and cell membrane electrical instability. CaMKII activation follows increases in intracellular Ca2+ or oxidation, upstream signals with the capacity to transition CaMKII into a Ca2+ and calmodulin-independent constitutively active enzyme. Constitutively active CaMKII appears poised to participate in disease pathways by catalyzing the phosphorylation of classes of protein targets important for excitation-contraction coupling and cell survival, including ion channels and Ca2+ homeostatic proteins, and transcription factors that drive hypertrophic and inflammatory gene expression. This rich diversity of downstream targets helps to explain the potential for CaMKII to simultaneously affect mechanical and electrical properties of heart muscle cells. Proof-of-concept studies from a growing number of investigators show that CaMKII inhibition is beneficial for improving myocardial performance and for reducing arrhythmias. We review the molecular physiology of CaMKII and discuss CaMKII actions at key cellular targets and results of animal models of myocardial hypertrophy, dysfunction, and arrhythmias that suggest CaMKII inhibition may benefit myocardial function while reducing arrhythmias. (Circ Res. 2012;110:1661-1677.)

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