Moore Christopher L, Nelson Piper L, Parelkar Nikhil K, Rusch Nancy J, Rhee Sung W
From the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock (C.L.M., P.L.N., N.J.R., S.W.R.); and University of Kansas Cancer Center, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City (N.K.P.).
Circ Res. 2014 Apr 11;114(8):1258-67. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.114.303167. Epub 2014 Feb 28.
Postsynaptic density-95 (PSD95) is a scaffolding protein that associates with voltage-gated, Shaker-type K(+) (KV1) channels and promotes the expression of KV1 channels in vascular smooth muscle cells of the cerebral (cVSMCs) circulation. However, the physiological role of PSD95 in mediating molecular signaling in cVSMCs is unknown.
We explored whether a specific interaction between PSD95 and KV1 channels enables protein kinase A phosphorylation of KV1 channels in cVSMCs to promote vasodilation.
Rat cerebral arteries were used for analyses. A membrane-permeable peptide (KV1-C peptide) corresponding to the postsynaptic density-95, discs large, zonula occludens-1 binding motif in the C terminus of KV1.2α was designed as a dominant-negative peptide to disrupt the association of KV1 channels with PSD95. Application of KV1-C peptide to cannulated, pressurized cerebral arteries rapidly induced vasoconstriction and depolarized cVSMCs. These events corresponded to reduced coimmunoprecipitation of the PSD95 and KV1 proteins without altering surface expression. Middle cerebral arterioles imaged in situ through cranial window also constricted rapidly in response to local application of KV1-C peptide. Patch-clamp recordings confirmed that KV1-C peptide attenuates KV1 channel blocker (5-(4-phenylalkoxypsoralen))-sensitive current in cVSMCs. Western blots using a phospho-protein kinase A substrate antibody revealed that cerebral arteries exposed to KV1-C peptide showed markedly less phosphorylation of KV1.2α subunits. Finally, phosphatase inhibitors blunted both KV1-C peptide-mediated and protein kinase A inhibitor peptide-mediated vasoconstriction.
These findings provide initial evidence that protein kinase A phosphorylation of KV1 channels is enabled by a dynamic association with PSD95 in cerebral arteries and suggest that a disruption of such association may compromise cerebral vasodilation and blood flow.
突触后致密蛋白95(PSD95)是一种支架蛋白,它与电压门控的Shaker型钾离子(KV1)通道相关联,并促进大脑循环血管平滑肌细胞(cVSMCs)中KV1通道的表达。然而,PSD95在介导cVSMCs分子信号传导中的生理作用尚不清楚。
我们探讨了PSD95与KV1通道之间的特异性相互作用是否能使cVSMCs中KV1通道的蛋白激酶A磷酸化,从而促进血管舒张。
使用大鼠脑动脉进行分析。设计了一种与KV1.2α C末端的突触后致密蛋白95、盘大蛋白、紧密连接蛋白1结合基序相对应的膜通透性肽(KV1-C肽),作为一种显性负性肽来破坏KV1通道与PSD95的结合。将KV1-C肽应用于插管加压脑动脉可迅速诱导血管收缩并使cVSMCs去极化。这些事件与PSD95和KV蛋白的共免疫沉淀减少相对应,而不改变表面表达。通过颅窗原位成像的大脑中动脉对局部应用KV1-C肽也迅速收缩。膜片钳记录证实,KV1-C肽减弱了cVSMCs中KV1通道阻滞剂(5-(4-苯基烷氧基补骨脂素))敏感电流。使用磷酸化蛋白激酶A底物抗体的蛋白质印迹显示,暴露于KV1-C肽的脑动脉中KV1.2α亚基的磷酸化明显减少。最后,磷酸酶抑制剂减弱了KV1-C肽介导的和蛋白激酶A抑制剂肽介导的血管收缩。
这些发现提供了初步证据,表明KV1通道的蛋白激酶A磷酸化是通过与脑动脉中PSD95的动态结合实现的,并表明这种结合的破坏可能会损害脑血管舒张和血流。