| Literature DB >> 24659967 |
Michael M Kreusser1, Johannes Backs1.
Abstract
CaMKII has been shown to be activated during different cardiac pathological processes, and CaMKII-dependent mechanisms contribute to pathological cardiac remodeling, cardiac arrhythmias, and contractile dysfunction during heart failure. Activation of CaMKII during cardiac stress results in a broad number of biological effects such as, on the one hand, acute effects due to phosphorylation of distinct cellular proteins as ion channels and calcium handling proteins and, on the other hand, integrative mechanisms by changing gene expression. This review focuses on transcriptional and epigenetic effects of CaMKII activation during chronic cardiac remodeling. Multiple mechanisms have been described how CaMKII mediates changes in cardiac gene expression. CaMKII has been shown to directly phosphorylate components of the cardiac gene regulation machinery. CaMKII phosphorylates several transcription factors such as CREB that induces the activation of specific gene programs. CaMKII activates transcriptional regulators also indirectly by phosphorylating histone deacetylases, especially HDAC4, which in turn inhibits transcription factors that drive cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and dysfunction. Recent studies demonstrate that CaMKII also phosphorylate directly histones, which may contribute to changes in gene expression. These findings of CaMKII-dependent gene regulation during cardiac remodeling processes suggest novel strategies for CaMKII-dependent "transcriptional or epigenetic therapies" to control cardiac gene expression and function. Manipulation of CaMKII-dependent signaling pathways in the settings of pathological cardiac growth, remodeling, and heart failure represents an auspicious therapeutic approach.Entities:
Keywords: CaMKII; HDAC4; epigenetics; remodeling; transcription factors
Year: 2014 PMID: 24659967 PMCID: PMC3950490 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Genetic mouse models for CaMKIIδ and γ.
| CaMKIIδ | Gain of function | α | Cardiac hypertrophy | Nucleus | Zhang et al., |
| CaMKIIδ | Gain of function | α | Dilated cardiomyopathy | Cytosol | Zhang et al., |
| CaMKIIδ | Loss of function | Global knockout exons 9–11 | Protection from fibrosis, dysfunction, and late hypertrophy | Nucleus/Cytosol | Ling et al., |
| CaMKIIδ | Loss of function | Global knockout exons 1–2 | Protection from early hypertrophy and fibrosis | Nucleus/Cytosol | Backs et al., |
| CaMKIIγ | Loss of function | Global knockout exons 1–2 | Not investigated | Nucleus/Cytosol | Backs et al., |
Cardiomyocyte-specific transgenic overexpression of CaMKIIδ (splice variants B and C) are driven by the αMHC promoter. Global knockout models for CaMKIIδ were generated by two labs. The second cardiac CaMKII isoform, CaMKIIγ, has so far not been investigated with regard to cardiac stress situations.
Figure 1Schematic of transcription factors and transcriptional repressors regulated by CaMKII in cardiomyocytes. CaMKII phosphorylates HDAC4 at Ser-467 and Ser-632, allowing binding of the chaperone protein 14-3-3, leading to nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling of a phospho-HDAC4/14-3-3 complex out of the nucleus and resulting in derepression of transcription factors such as MEF2 that regulates genes responsible for adverse cardiac remodeling. Other transcription factors such as NF-κB or HSP-1 may play maladaptive or adaptive roles and these factors can be directly or indirectly regulated by CaMKII. Another transcription factor regulated after β-adrenergic stimulation is CREB that can be phosphorylated by CaMKII at two serine residues, Ser-133 and Ser-142, resulting in opposing effects in regard to activation of CREB. However, the functional effects of CREB/CaMKII interaction during cardiac remodeling remain unclear. Another recently recognized mechanism is translocation of the transcriptional repressor DREAM from the cytosol to the nucleus. Calcineurin/NFAT interaction may also be inhibited by direct phosphorylation by CaMKII at Ser-411, leading to decreased NFAT translocation to the nucleus and subsequent reduced transcriptional activity. AP-1 activation protein-1, ATF-1 activating transcription factor-1, CaMKII Calcium/Calmodulin-dependent kinase II, CREB cAMP-response element binding protein, DREAM downstream regulatory element agonist modulator, HDAC4 histone deacetylase 4, HSF-1 heat shock factor 1, MEF2 myocyte elongation factor, NFAT nuclear factor of activated T-cells, NF-κB nuclear factor κB, and SRF serum response factor.
CaMKII-dependent regulators of cardiac transcription.
| cAMP-response element binding protein | CREB | Transcription factor | Unknown | Ser-133, Ser-142 | Yes | Sun et al., |
| Activating transcription factor 1 | ATF-1 | Transcription factor | Unknown | Ser-63 | Yes | Shimomura et al., |
| Myocyte elongation factor 2 | MEF2 | Transcription factor | Hypertrophy/remodeling | Unknown | / | Passier et al., |
| Serum response factor | SRF | Transcription factor | Unknown | Ser-103, Thr-160 | Yes | Fluck et al., |
| Nuclear factor κB | NF-κB | Transcription factor | Hypertrophy/remodeling | Indirect via IκB kinase | / | Kashiwase et al., |
| Histone deacetylase 4 | HDAC4 | Transcriptional repressor | Hypertrophy/remodeling | Ser-467, Ser-632 | Yes | Backs et al., |
| Histone deacetylase 5 | HDAC5 | Transcriptional repressor | Hypertrophy/remodeling | Unknown | / | Wu et al., |
| GATA4 | / | Transcription factor | Antiapoptotic | Unknown | / | Little et al., |
| Activation protein 1 | AP-1 | Transcription factor | Calcium homeostasis | Unknown | / | Mani et al., |
| Heat shock factor 1 | HSF-1 | Transcription factor | Antiapoptotic | Ser-230 | Yes | Holmberg et al., |
| Downstream regulatory element agonist modulator | DREAM | Transcriptional repressor | Calcium homeostasis | Unknown | / | Ronkainen et al., |
| Histone H3 | H3 | Histone | Hypertrophy/remodeling | Ser-10 | Yes | Awad et al., |
CaMKII interacts with various transcription factors, transcriptional repressors, and histone 3 and thereby influences cardiac gene expression. This interaction can be a direct phosphorylation of Ser/Thr residues by CaMKII, indirect via other proteins (other kinases or cardiac repressors) or by unknown mechanisms. Known phosphorylation site and proof of direct phosphorylation are indicated. CaMKII Calcium/Calmodulin-dependent kinase II.
Figure 2Schematic of CaMKII-dependent epigenetic mechanisms. (A) HDAC4 as a nodal point for CaMKII-dependent epigenetic regulation. CaMKII binds to HDAC4 and phosphorylates HDAC4 at Ser-467 and Ser-632, leading to nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling of HDAC4. When located in the nucleus, HDAC4 represses transcription factors such as MEF2, SRF, or the co-repressor CtBP. Binding to these transcriptional regulators directs HDAC4 to specific chromatin regions. HDAC4 recruits other chromatin modifying enzymes and direct them to the aforementioned specific chromatin regions. This results in CaMKII/HDAC4-dependent regulation of histone methylation (via interaction with HP1 and histone methyltransferase SUV39H1) and deacetylation (via interaction with SMRT/N-CoR and class I HDACs). Moreover, HDAC4 oligomerizes with HDAC5, and thereby induces 14-3-3 dependent nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling of the HDAC4/HDAC5 complex, leading to de-repression of HDAC4/HDAC5-dependent transcription factors. Thus HDAC4 integrates CaMKII-dependent signals via epigenetic mechanisms. (B) Histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) assemble with DNA to form nucleosomes. CaMKII directly phosphorylates Ser-10 in the N-terminal region of histone 3, which is located next to Lys-9, a major site for acetylation, and methylation. Phosphorylation at Ser-10 was suggested to result in cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and increased chromatin binding of CaMKII at specific gene loci reactivated during cardiac hypertrophy. CaMKII Calcium/Calmodulin-dependent kinase II, CtBP C-terminal binding protein, HDAC histone deacetylase, HP1 heterochromatin protein 1, MEF2 myocyte elongation factor, N-CoR nuclear receptor co-repressor, SMRT silencing mediator of retinoic acid and thyroid hormone receptor, and SRF serum response factor.