Disruption of Phosphodiesterase 3A Binding to SERCA2 Increases SERCA2 Activity and Reduces Mortality in Mice With Chronic Heart Failure.


Journal

Circulation
ISSN: 1524-4539
Titre abrégé: Circulation
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0147763

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
18 04 2023
Historique:
medline: 19 4 2023
pubmed: 7 3 2023
entrez: 6 3 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Increasing SERCA2 (sarco[endo]-plasmic reticulum Ca Confocal microscopy, 2-color direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy, proximity ligation assays, immunoprecipitations, peptide arrays, and surface plasmon resonance were used to investigate colocalization between SERCA2 and PDE3A in cardiomyocytes, map the SERCA2/PDE3A interaction sites, and optimize disruptor peptides that release PDE3A from SERCA2. Functional experiments assessing the effect of PDE3A-binding to SERCA2 were performed in cardiomyocytes and HEK293 vesicles. The effect of SERCA2/PDE3A disruption by the disruptor peptide OptF (optimized peptide F) on cardiac mortality and function was evaluated during 20 weeks in 2 consecutive randomized, blinded, and controlled preclinical trials in a total of 148 mice injected with recombinant adeno-associated virus 9 (rAAV9)-OptF, rAAV9-control (Ctrl), or PBS, before undergoing aortic banding (AB) or sham surgery and subsequent phenotyping with serial echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, histology, and functional and molecular assays. PDE3A colocalized with SERCA2 in human nonfailing, human failing, and rodent myocardium. Amino acids 277-402 of PDE3A bound directly to amino acids 169-216 within the actuator domain of SERCA2. Disruption of PDE3A from SERCA2 increased SERCA2 activity in normal and failing cardiomyocytes. SERCA2/PDE3A disruptor peptides increased SERCA2 activity also in the presence of protein kinase A inhibitors and in phospholamban-deficient mice, and had no effect in mice with cardiomyocyte-specific inactivation of SERCA2. Cotransfection of PDE3A reduced SERCA2 activity in HEK293 vesicles. Treatment with rAAV9-OptF reduced cardiac mortality compared with rAAV9-Ctrl (hazard ratio, 0.26 [95% CI, 0.11 to 0.63]) and PBS (hazard ratio, 0.28 [95% CI, 0.09 to 0.90]) 20 weeks after AB. Mice injected with rAAV9-OptF had improved contractility and no difference in cardiac remodeling compared with rAAV9-Ctrl after aortic banding. Our results suggest that PDE3A regulates SERCA2 activity through direct binding, independently of the catalytic activity of PDE3A. Targeting the SERCA2/PDE3A interaction prevented cardiac mortality after AB, most likely by improving cardiac contractility.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Increasing SERCA2 (sarco[endo]-plasmic reticulum Ca
METHODS
Confocal microscopy, 2-color direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy, proximity ligation assays, immunoprecipitations, peptide arrays, and surface plasmon resonance were used to investigate colocalization between SERCA2 and PDE3A in cardiomyocytes, map the SERCA2/PDE3A interaction sites, and optimize disruptor peptides that release PDE3A from SERCA2. Functional experiments assessing the effect of PDE3A-binding to SERCA2 were performed in cardiomyocytes and HEK293 vesicles. The effect of SERCA2/PDE3A disruption by the disruptor peptide OptF (optimized peptide F) on cardiac mortality and function was evaluated during 20 weeks in 2 consecutive randomized, blinded, and controlled preclinical trials in a total of 148 mice injected with recombinant adeno-associated virus 9 (rAAV9)-OptF, rAAV9-control (Ctrl), or PBS, before undergoing aortic banding (AB) or sham surgery and subsequent phenotyping with serial echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, histology, and functional and molecular assays.
RESULTS
PDE3A colocalized with SERCA2 in human nonfailing, human failing, and rodent myocardium. Amino acids 277-402 of PDE3A bound directly to amino acids 169-216 within the actuator domain of SERCA2. Disruption of PDE3A from SERCA2 increased SERCA2 activity in normal and failing cardiomyocytes. SERCA2/PDE3A disruptor peptides increased SERCA2 activity also in the presence of protein kinase A inhibitors and in phospholamban-deficient mice, and had no effect in mice with cardiomyocyte-specific inactivation of SERCA2. Cotransfection of PDE3A reduced SERCA2 activity in HEK293 vesicles. Treatment with rAAV9-OptF reduced cardiac mortality compared with rAAV9-Ctrl (hazard ratio, 0.26 [95% CI, 0.11 to 0.63]) and PBS (hazard ratio, 0.28 [95% CI, 0.09 to 0.90]) 20 weeks after AB. Mice injected with rAAV9-OptF had improved contractility and no difference in cardiac remodeling compared with rAAV9-Ctrl after aortic banding.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results suggest that PDE3A regulates SERCA2 activity through direct binding, independently of the catalytic activity of PDE3A. Targeting the SERCA2/PDE3A interaction prevented cardiac mortality after AB, most likely by improving cardiac contractility.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36876489
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.054168
doi:

Substances chimiques

Calcium SY7Q814VUP
Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 3 EC 3.1.4.17
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases EC 3.6.3.8

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1221-1236

Commentaires et corrections

Type : CommentIn
Type : CommentIn

Auteurs

Jonas Skogestad (J)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Ingrid Albert (I)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Karina Hougen (K)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Gustav B Lothe (GB)

Department of Pharmacology, Oslo University Hospital, Norway (G.B.L.).
Bjørknes College, Oslo, Norway (G.B.L., J.M.A.).

Marianne Lunde (M)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Olav Søvik Eken (OS)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (O.S.E., I.V., N.T.T.-H., A.O.M., J.M.A.).

Ioanni Veras (I)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (O.S.E., I.V., N.T.T.-H., A.O.M., J.M.A.).

Ngoc Trang Thi Huynh (NTT)

Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (O.S.E., I.V., N.T.T.-H., A.O.M., J.M.A.).

Mira Børstad (M)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Serena Marshall (S)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Xin Shen (X)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

William E Louch (WE)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Emma Louise Robinson (EL)

Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (E.L.R., A.V.A., J.A.S., E.J.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

Joseph C Cleveland (JC)

Department of Surgery (J.C.C.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

Amrut V Ambardekar (AV)

Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (E.L.R., A.V.A., J.A.S., E.J.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

Jessica A Schwisow (JA)

Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (E.L.R., A.V.A., J.A.S., E.J.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

Eric Jonas (E)

Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (E.L.R., A.V.A., J.A.S., E.J.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.

Ana I Calejo (AI)

Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway, Nordic European Molecular Biology Laboratory Partnership (A.I.C.C., J.P.M., K.T.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Jens Preben Morth (JP)

Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway, Nordic European Molecular Biology Laboratory Partnership (A.I.C.C., J.P.M., K.T.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.
Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby (J.P.M.).

Kjetil Taskén (K)

Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway, Nordic European Molecular Biology Laboratory Partnership (A.I.C.C., J.P.M., K.T.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.
Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University Hospital and Institute for Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (K.T.).

Arne Olav Melleby (AO)

Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (O.S.E., I.V., N.T.T.-H., A.O.M., J.M.A.).

Per Kristian Lunde (PK)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Ivar Sjaastad (I)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Cathrine Rein Carlson (CR)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.

Jan Magnus Aronsen (JM)

Institute for Experimental Medical Research (J.S., I.A., K.H., M.L., O.S.E., I.V., M.B., S.M., X.S., W.E.L., P.K.L., I.S., C.R.C., J.M.A.), Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Norway.
Bjørknes College, Oslo, Norway (G.B.L., J.M.A.).
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway (O.S.E., I.V., N.T.T.-H., A.O.M., J.M.A.).

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