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β2-Adrenergic Receptor Signaling in the Cardiac Myocyte is Modulated by Interactions with CXCR4
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Chemokines are small secreted proteins with chemoattractant properties that play a key role in inflammation, metastasis, and embryonic development. We previously demonstrated a nonchemotactic role for one such chemokine pair, stromal cell-derived factor-1α and its G-protein coupled receptor, CXCR4. Stromal cell-derived factor-1/CXCR4 are expressed on cardiac myocytes and have direct consequences on cardiac myocyte physiology by inhibiting contractility in response to the nonselective β-adrenergic receptor (βAR) agonist, isoproterenol. As a result of the importance of β-adrenergic signaling in heart failure pathophysiology, we investigated the underlying mechanism involved in CXCR4 modulation of βAR signaling. Our studies demonstrate activation of CXCR4 by stromal cell-derived factor-1 leads to a decrease in βAR-induced PKA activity as assessed by cAMP accumulation and PKA-dependent phosphorylation of phospholamban, an inhibitor of SERCA2a. We determined CXCR4 regulation of βAR downstream targets is β2AR-dependent. We demonstrated a physical interaction between CXCR4 and β2AR as determined by coimmunoprecipitation, confocal microscopy, and BRET techniques. The CXCR4-β2AR interaction leads to G-protein signal modulation and suggests the interaction is a novel mechanism for regulating cardiac myocyte contractility. Chemokines are physiologically and developmentally relevant to myocardial biology and represent a novel receptor class of cardiac modulators. The CXCR4-β2AR complex could represent a hitherto unknown target for therapeutic intervention.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Receptors, CXCR4
Stromal cell
Biology
In Vitro Techniques
Article
Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled
Contractility
Internal medicine
medicine
Cyclic AMP
Myocyte
Animals
Myocytes, Cardiac
Phosphorylation
Receptor
G protein-coupled receptor
Pharmacology
Cardiac myocyte
Isoproterenol
Adrenergic beta-Agonists
Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases
Cell biology
Phospholamban
Rats
Endocrinology
Receptors, Adrenergic, beta-2
Signal transduction
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d5389a14d12ce3988a2e54f6a08264c0