| Literature DB >> 30293136 |
Silvana Olivares-Florez1, Martin Czolbe1,2, Fabian Riediger3, Lea Seidlmayer1,2, Tatjana Williams1,2, Peter Nordbeck1,2, Jörn Strasen1,2, Cristina Glocker3, Monique Jänsch3, Petra Eder-Negrin1,2, Paula Arias-Loza1,2, Melanie Mühlfelder1,2, Jelena Plačkić4, Katrin G Heinze5, Jeffery D Molkentin6, Stefan Engelhardt7,8, Jens Kockskämper4, Oliver Ritter9,10,11.
Abstract
In continuously beating cells like cardiac myocytes, there are rapid alterations of cytosolic Ca2+ levels. We therefore hypothesize that decoding Ca2+ signals for hypertrophic signaling requires intracellular Ca2+ microdomains that are partly independent from cytosolic Ca2+. Furthermore, there is a need for a Ca2+ sensor within these microdomains that translates Ca2+ signals into hypertrophic signaling. Recent evidence suggested that the nucleus of cardiac myocytes might be a Ca2+ microdomain and that calcineurin, once translocated into the nucleus, could act as a nuclear Ca2+ sensor. We demonstrate that nuclear calcineurin was able to act as a nuclear Ca2+ sensor detecting local Ca2+ release from the nuclear envelope via IP3R. Nuclear calcineurin mutants defective for Ca2+ binding failed to activate NFAT-dependent transcription. Under hypertrophic conditions Ca2+ transients in the nuclear microdomain were significantly higher than in the cytosol providing a basis for sustained calcineurin/NFAT-mediated signaling uncoupled from cytosolic Ca2+. Measurements of nuclear and cytosolic Ca2+ transients in IP3 sponge mice showed no increase of Ca2+ levels during diastole as we detected in wild-type mice. Nuclei, isolated from ventricular myocytes of mice after chronic Ang II treatment, showed an elevation of IP3R2 expression which was dependent on calcineurin/NFAT signaling and persisted for 3 weeks after removal of the Ang II stimulus. These data provide an explanation how Ca2+ and calcineurin might regulate transcription in cardiomyocytes in response to neurohumoral signals independently from their role in cardiac contraction control. KEY MESSAGES: • Calcineurin acts as an intranuclear Ca2+ sensor to promote NFAT activity. • Nuclear Ca2+ in cardiac myocytes increases via IP3R2 upon Ang II stimulation. • IP3R2 expression is directly dependent on calcineurin/NFAT.Entities:
Keywords: Calcineurin/NFAT signaling; Heart failure; IP3R2 receptor; Myocardial hypertrophy; Nuclear Ca2+
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30293136 DOI: 10.1007/s00109-018-1701-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) ISSN: 0946-2716 Impact factor: 4.599