| Literature DB >> 34768996 |
Ryan B Williams1, Christopher N Johnson1,2.
Abstract
Calcineurin, also known as protein phosphatase 2B, is a heterodimeric serine threonine phosphatase involved in numerous signaling pathways. During the past 50 years, calcineurin has been the subject of extensive investigation. Many of its cellular and physiological functions have been described, and the underlying biophysical mechanisms are the subject of active investigation. With the abundance of techniques and experimental designs utilized to study calcineurin and its numerous substrates, it is difficult to reconcile the available information. There have been a plethora of reports describing the role of calcineurin in cardiac disease. However, a physiological role of calcineurin in healthy cardiomyocyte function requires clarification. Here, we review the seminal biophysical and structural details that are responsible for the molecular function and inhibition of calcineurin. We then focus on literature describing the roles of calcineurin in cardiomyocyte physiology and disease.Entities:
Keywords: calcineurin; calcium signaling; calmodulin; cardiac physiology; cardiomyocyte; hypertrophy; phosphatase; protein phosphatase 2B (PP2B)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34768996 PMCID: PMC8583826 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222111565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Diagram depicting the development of CaN nomenclature. Also known as (a.k.a.).
Figure 2Diagram illustrating the key components of the CaN heterodimer (developed from PDB ID: 1AUI [16]). CaN A shown in salmon, CaN B shown in blue, Auto-Inhibitory Domain (AID), Calmodulin-Binding Region (CMBR). Due to the disordered nature of the regulatory domain, this region has been represented by a line and boxes for the distal helix and CMBR. Zn and Fe are located at the active site for dephosphorylation of CaN substrates. The myristoylation site located at the N-terminal region of the CaN B subunit is cleaved so the two CaN subunits can form a heterodimer [28]. Ca2+ binding to the CaN B subunit can evoke a small enhancement of enzymatic activity in the absence of CaM. Ca2+–CaM–CaN interaction enriches CMBR α-helical content resulting in translocation of the autoinhibitory domain which leads to enhancement of CaN activity [29].
Calcineurin inhibitors. Exogenous contributors to CaN inhibition shown in red, endogenous proteins that contribute to CaN inhibition shown in blue.
| Inhibitor | Structure | Molecular Effect | Usage | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclosporin A-Cyclophilin A complex (CsA-CyA) | CsA binding to cyclophilin A → Binding/inhibition of CaN | Clinical and experimental | [ | |
| Tacrolimus-FKBP12 complex (FK506-FKBP) | FK506 binding to FKBP → Binding/inhibition of CaN | Clinical and experimental | [ | |
| Calcineurin inhibitor (cain) protein/Cabin1 | PKC hyperphosphorylation of cain/Cabin1 → Inhibition of CaN | Experimental | [ | |
| Guanylyl Cyclase A | Posited that GCA/cGMP/PKG signaling inhibits calcineurin | Experimental | [ | |
| Calmodulin-dependent Kinase II (CAMKII) | Posited that rise in [Ca2+]i → CaMKII activation → phosphorylation/inhibition of CaN | Experimental | [ | |
| Calcipressin 1 (RCAN1, MCIP1) | Phosphorylation of RCAN1 → binding/inhibition of CaN | Experimental | [ | |
| Muscle-specific RING finger protein 1 (MuRF1) | MuRF1 ubiquitinates CaN → CaN degradation | Experimental | [ |
Leads to (→); the Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatic website (rcsb.org) last accessed on 10/22/2021; Protein data bank identification (PDB ID).
Figure 3Chemical equation of dephosphorylation of a serine residue by an iron atom located in the CaN-active site adapted from Kissinger et al. (1995). A water molecule is deprotonated by the iron atom, followed by a hydrolysis reaction between the deprotonated (activated) water molecule and phosphorylated serine residue (phosphoserine). This reaction yields serine and phosphate. Threonine substrates follow a similar mechanism of water activation and dephosphorylation [16].
An overview of the roles calcineurin plays in cellular physiology.
| Ref. | Cellular Function | System | Results | Conclusion | Conditional |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Adaptive | Jurkat cells | NFATc translocates → nucleus and + newly synthesized NFATN; | CsA and FK506 (CaN inhibitors) block NFAT translocation | No stimulants |
| [ | Adaptive | Jurkat cell from rat | Synergistic activation of α1-α2 adrenergic receptors enhance Na+/K+ ATPase activity; | α-adrenergic stimulation → CaN dephosphorylates Na+/K+ ATPase → enhanced Na+/K+ ATPase activity | No stimulants |
| [ | Apoptosis | BHK-21 (lymphocyte not processed by thymus; responsible for antibody production) | CaN transfected cells + 4 h serum deprivation + calcium ionophore = 60% apoptosis; effects obvious in 15–30 min | CaN plays an important role in mediating upstream events in calcium-activated cell death | + Ca2+ and |
| [ | Adaptive | Jurkat cell | Indirect evidence suggests: CaN + PMA (PKC activator) = inactive IκB via unknown kinase | CaN activation → inactivated IκB = activate NF-κB | No stimulants |
| [ | Adaptive | B lymphocytes | >5 min @ 200–400 nM [Ca2+]i = activation NFATc alone | Amplitude and duration of [Ca2+]i = activation of specific proinflammatory transcriptional regulator (NFAT, NF-κB, or c-Jun N-terminal kinase) | No stimulants |
| [ | Adaptive | Jurkat cells and dominant negative NFAT transgenic mouse model | Dominant negative NFAT in cultured T-cell = ↓ expression of IL-2 protein | NFAT = critical component of signaling pathway that regulates IL-2 expression | No stimulants |
| [ | Adaptive | Rat ventricular | + Ca2+ = RyR2-CaN coimmunoprecipitation | CaN-RyR2 interaction may modulate calcium release in rat hearts | No stimulants |
| [ | Differentiation | Skeletal muscle cells (C2C12 and Sol8) | + CaN or + NFATc3 ↑ MyoD (myoblast determination protein) → myogenesis (formation of muscle) | CaN signaling contributes to initial myogenic myocyte differentiation through NFATc3-dependent mechanism | No stimulants |
| [ | Apoptosis | Cultured CM from 1-day Wistar rats and dominant negative CaN transgenic mice | Isoproterenol induces apoptosis | CaN and LTCC play a critical role in iso-induced apoptosis of rat CM | Isoproterenol |
| [ | Neonatal rat CM primary cultures | Harlan Sprague–Dawley | Constitutively active CaN = ↑MAKP1 expression and p38-MAPK inactivation in CM | CaN indirectly inactivates p38 MAPK | Phenylephrine |
| [ | Differentiation | Chondrogenic cells (RCJ3.1C5.18) | Ca2+ ionophore (ionomycin) induces limb buds in mouse embryos | CaN/NFAT4 activates bone morphogenetic protein expression → chondrogenesis (cartilage formation) | Ionomycin |
| [ | Apoptosis | Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes with Adenovirus modification | CaN dephosphorylates ASK1 = promotes dissociation from 14-3-3 protein → activates ASK1 | CaN and ASK1 contribute to a feedback regulatory mechanism involved with signaling CM apoptosis | No stimulants |
| [ | Apoptosis | CaNβ double knockout mouse model | Removal of CaNβ (β isoform of CaN) accelerated spontaneous T-cell apoptosis | CaN enhances B-cell lymphoma (Bcl-2) expression | No stimulants |
| [ | Growth | Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes | Na+/H+ Exchanger 1 (NHE1) interacts with CaN | NHE1 activity → local elevated pH → enhanced CaN activity → NFAT signaling → cardiomyocyte enlargement (hypertrophy) | Overexpression of NHE1 |
| [ | Adaptive | Bovine pulmonary atrial endothelial cells | CaN dephosphorylates MYPT1 | CaN dephosphorylation of cofilin and Myosin Phosphatase → may improve endothelial barrier function (i.e., increased electrical resistance) | Thrombin |
leads to (→); decrease (↓); and increase (↑).
Roles of calcineurin in cardiac disease.
| Ref. | System | Animal Model | Conditional Requirement | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Rat | Tg expression of constitutively active CaN | Angiotensin II or | NFAT3 interacts with GATA4 (transcription factor) | Constitutively active CaN → upregulates NFAT3 → cardiac dilation and hypertrophy |
| [ | Rat | Neonatal Wistar–Kyoto | Angiotensin II, phenylephrine, or 1% fetal | CaN (β-isoform) activity increased by hypertrophic stimuli | Increased CaN activity increases CM surface area |
| [ | Mouse | Sprague–Dawley mouse model of load-induced hypertrophy | Abdominal aortic banding (AAB) | ↑CaN activity, ↑coimmunoprecipitation of calmodulin-CaN complex | In pressure overload hypertrophy, CaN-CaM interaction is enhanced |
| [ | Rat and mouse | Sprague–Dawley rat neonate | DNA damage inducing agent (staurosporine or 2-deoxyglucose) | Constitutively active CaN = ↑CM surface area + protects from induced DNA damage | CaN may protect CM from apoptosis in vitro and in vivo |
| [ | Mouse | Tg expression of Cain/Cabin-1 | Isoproterenol | Genetic inhibition of CaN activity in the heart reduces load-induced hypertrophy | CaN is an important contributor to pressure-overload hypertrophy |
| [ | Mouse | Tg expression of: constitutively active CaN, CAIN, or AKAP79 | No stimulant required | ↑CaN activity → cardiac hypertrophy → quickly progresses to heart failure | CaN induced hypertrophy is |
| [ | Mouse | C57BL/6 | Abdominal aortic banding or angiotensin II | NFATc3 deletion reduces pathological CaN-induced hypertrophy | Mice lacking NFATc3 are partially protected from cardiac hypertrophy in response to CaN activation |
| [ | Mouse | Tg overexpression of KV4.2 N-terminus | KV4.2 | Reduced Ito leads to ↑CaN activity, ↑AP duration, and ↓SERCA2a expression | In mice, reduced Ito leads to enhanced Ca2+ cycling and |
| [ | Mouse ventricle | Tg expression of: constitutively active CaN or constitutively active NFAT3 (nuclear) | Overexpression of chronically active CaN and isoproterenol | ↑CaN activity or ↑NFAT3 = ↑ICa current density, ↑ICa inactivation kinetics, ↑heart contractility, ↓KV2.1 expression, ↑AP duration, ↓heart rate, and ↓β-adrenergic stimulation | CaN overexpression causes |
| [ | Rat | Sprague–Dawley | Phenylephrine or Verapamil and PKG | ↑Phenylephrine leads to ↑LTCC activity leads to ↑NFATc3 translocation leads to ↑transcriptional activity | Nitric oxide/cGMP activation of PKG I inhibits hypertrophic CaN-NFAT pathway in CM |
| [ | Mouse | Tg expression of dominant negative JNK1/2 | TAC | ↓JNK1/2 (kinase) activity = ↑heart to body weight ratio, ↑induced hypertrophy, ↑CaN-NFAT signaling | Dominant negative JNK (kinase) enhances CaN-NFAT signaling → cardiac hypertrophy |
| [ | Mouse | Tg expression of: dominant negative p38α, dominant negative MKK3, or dominant negative MKK6 | Aortic banding, angiotensin II, isoproterenol infusion, or phenylephrine infusion | dnp38α, dnMKK3, or dnMKK6 = ↑heart to body weight ratio, ↑heart dilation, ↑cross sectional area | dnp38α, dnMKK3, or dnMKK6 → enhance CaN-NFAT translocation and transcription (luciferase activity) |
| [ | Mouse | Tg knockout of guanylyl cyclase A (C57BL/6 and 129SVj) | No stimulants required | K.O. guanylyl cyclase A = ↑CaN activity, ↑NFATc3 translocation, ↑GATA4 DNA binding, ↑ANP and BNP (mRNA), ↑collagen I and III, ↑Fibronectin | Disruption of guanylyl cyclase A activates cardiac CaN-NFAT pathway |
| [ | Rat | Overexpression of constitutively active CaN Sprague–Dawley | Overexpression of CaN | ↑CaN activity = ↑cell capacitance, ↑3H-leucine uptake, ↑mRNA encoding KV4.2, ↑KV4.2 current, and ↑chord conductance (each ion’s contribution to membrane potential) | Constitutively active CaN increases cardiac KV4.2 current |
| [ | Mouse | Tg overexpression of ZAKI-4β (endogenous CaN inhibitor) | TAC | TAC + overexpression of ZAKI-4β (CaN inhibitor) = ↓PLB-PO4, ↓SERCA2a protein, ↓NCX protein, ↓RyR2-PO4, and ↑Left ventricular end diastolic pressure → increased myocardial stiffness | In TAC mouse model, CaN |
| [ | Rat and feline | Tg expression of: constitutively active CaMKII or dominant negative CaMKII | No stimulants required | ↑CaMKII activity = ↓NFATc3 accumulation in nucleus, ↓fractional shortening, ↑DNA damage | ↑CaMKII activity → phosphorylation of CaN → reduced NFAT accumulation in nucleus |
| [ | Mouse | Tg K.O. of CaN B subunit (C57BL/6 background) | No stimulants required | Deletion of CaN B-subunit = fatal < 1 day after birth, ↓NFAT activity, ↓mRNA of ion-handling genes, ↓capillaries per myocyte, ↓active force generation, ↑CM size | CaN signaling is linked to control of cardiac contractility, rhythm, and expression of Ca2+ handling proteins |
Leads to (→); decrease (↓); increase (↑); transgenic (Tg); Transaortic Constriction (TAC); Phosphate (PO4); Sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA); knock out (K.O.).
List of CaN substrates found in a cardiomyocyte.
| Ref. | Substrate | KD | Molecular Effect | Cellular Effect | Physiological Effect(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Nuclear factor of activated T cells 1-4 (NFAT1-4) | N/A | Dephosphorylation of NFATc | Relocalization of calmodulin-CaN-NFAT complex to nucleus → bind to NFATN → | Initiation of inflammatory immune response and/or cardiac hypertrophy |
| [ | ATP sensitive K+ channel | N/A | ↑ Ca2+ = ↓Kir6.1 current | N/A | N/A |
| [ | Myosin | 94 nM | CaN dephosphorylates 32P-MYPT1 | N/A | N/A |
| [ | L-Type Ca2+ Channel | N/A | Inside-out patch + CaN inhibits LTCC conduction | N/A | N/A |
| [ | Na+/K+ ATPase | N/A | +FK506 or CaN peptide inhibitor = no effect of Oxymetazoline (Na+/K+ ATPase activator) | N/A | N/A |
| [ | IκB | N/A | Constitutively active CaN + ionomycin = ↑NF-κB reporter activity | N/A | N/A |
| [ | RyR2 | N/A | Ca2+-dependent CaN binding to RyR2 → inactivation of RyR2 | N/A | N/A |
| [ | ASK1 | N/A | CaN B dephosphorylates ASK1 (S967) → ASK1 dissociation from 14-3-3 protein → ASK1 activation | Apoptosis | N/A |
| [ | Myopodin | N/A | CaN dephosphorylates myopodin → hindered | N/A | N/A |
| [ | Calsarcin1 | N/A | Calsarcin 1 binds to CaN A → formation of trimer with α-actinin | Localization of CaN to z-line of | Inhibition of calcineurin in hypertrophic signaling |
Not available (N/A); leads to (→); decrease (↓); increase (↑).