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EHD3-dependent endosome pathway regulates cardiac membrane excitability and physiology.

Authors :
Curran J
Makara MA
Little SC
Musa H
Liu B
Wu X
Polina I
Alecusan JS
Wright P
Li J
Billman GE
Boyden PA
Gyorke S
Band H
Hund TJ
Mohler PJ
Source :
Circulation research [Circ Res] 2014 Jun 20; Vol. 115 (1), pp. 68-78. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Apr 23.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Rationale: Cardiac function is dependent on the coordinate activities of membrane ion channels, transporters, pumps, and hormone receptors to tune the membrane electrochemical gradient dynamically in response to acute and chronic stress. Although our knowledge of membrane proteins has rapidly advanced during the past decade, our understanding of the subcellular pathways governing the trafficking and localization of integral membrane proteins is limited and essentially unstudied in vivo. In the heart, to our knowledge, there are no in vivo mechanistic studies that directly link endosome-based machinery with cardiac physiology.<br />Objective: To define the in vivo roles of endosome-based cellular machinery for cardiac membrane protein trafficking, myocyte excitability, and cardiac physiology.<br />Methods and Results: We identify the endosome-based Eps15 homology domain 3 (EHD3) pathway as essential for cardiac physiology. EHD3-deficient hearts display structural and functional defects including bradycardia and rate variability, conduction block, and blunted response to adrenergic stimulation. Mechanistically, EHD3 is critical for membrane protein trafficking, because EHD3-deficient myocytes display reduced expression/localization of Na/Ca exchanger and L-type Ca channel type 1.2 with a parallel reduction in Na/Ca exchanger-mediated membrane current and Cav1.2-mediated membrane current. Functionally, EHD3-deficient myocytes show increased sarcoplasmic reticulum [Ca], increased spark frequency, and reduced expression/localization of ankyrin-B, a binding partner for EHD3 and Na/Ca exchanger. Finally, we show that in vivo EHD3-deficient defects are attributable to cardiac-specific roles of EHD3 because mice with cardiac-selective EHD3 deficiency demonstrate both structural and electric phenotypes.<br />Conclusions: These data provide new insight into the critical role of endosome-based pathways in membrane protein targeting and cardiac physiology. EHD3 is a critical component of protein trafficking in heart and is essential for the proper membrane targeting of select cellular proteins that maintain excitability.<br /> (© 2014 American Heart Association, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1524-4571
Volume :
115
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Circulation research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24759929
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.304149