Protein kinase g positively regulates proteasome-mediated degradation of misfolded proteins

MJ Ranek, EJM Terpstra, J Li, DA Kass, X Wang - Circulation, 2013 - Am Heart Assoc
MJ Ranek, EJM Terpstra, J Li, DA Kass, X Wang
Circulation, 2013Am Heart Assoc
Background—Proteasome functional insufficiency is implicated in a large subset of
cardiovascular diseases and may play an important role in their pathogenesis. The
regulation of proteasome function is poorly understood, hindering the development of
effective strategies to improve proteasome function. Methods and Results—Protein kinase G
(PKG) was manipulated genetically and pharmacologically in cultured cardiomyocytes.
Activation of PKG increased proteasome peptidase activities, facilitated proteasome …
Background
Proteasome functional insufficiency is implicated in a large subset of cardiovascular diseases and may play an important role in their pathogenesis. The regulation of proteasome function is poorly understood, hindering the development of effective strategies to improve proteasome function.
Methods and Results
Protein kinase G (PKG) was manipulated genetically and pharmacologically in cultured cardiomyocytes. Activation of PKG increased proteasome peptidase activities, facilitated proteasome-mediated degradation of surrogate (enhanced green fluorescence protein modified by carboxyl fusion of degron CL1) and bona fide (CryABR120G) misfolded proteins, and attenuated CryABR120G overexpression–induced accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and cellular injury. PKG inhibition elicited the opposite responses. Differences in the abundance of the key 26S proteasome subunits Rpt6 and β5 between the PKG-manipulated and control groups were not statistically significant, but the isoelectric points were shifted by PKG activation. In transgenic mice expressing a surrogate substrate (GFPdgn), PKG activation by sildenafil increased myocardial proteasome activities and significantly decreased myocardial GFPdgn protein levels. Sildenafil treatment significantly increased myocardial PKG activity and significantly reduced myocardial accumulation of CryABR120G, ubiquitin conjugates, and aberrant protein aggregates in mice with CryABR120G-based desmin-related cardiomyopathy. No discernible effect on bona fide native substrates of the ubiquitin-proteasome system was observed from PKG manipulation in vitro or in vivo.
Conclusions
PKG positively regulates proteasome activities and proteasome-mediated degradation of misfolded proteins, likely through posttranslational modifications to proteasome subunits. This may be a new mechanism underlying the benefit of PKG stimulation in treating cardiac diseases. Stimulation of PKG by measures such as sildenafil administration is potentially a new therapeutic strategy to treat cardiac proteinopathies.
Am Heart Assoc