The high-affinity sodium glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) plays a critical role in glucose absorption from the gastrointestinal tract. We have developed 3-(3-{4-[3-(-D-glucopyranosyloxy)-5-isopropyl-
In some forms of cardiac hypertrophy and failure, the gain of Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release [CICR; i.e., the amount of Ca(2+) released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum normalized to Ca(2+) influx through L-type Ca(2+) channels (LTCCs)] decreases despite the normal whole cell LTCC current density, ryanodine receptor number, and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) content. This decrease in CICR gain has been proposed to arise from a change in dyad architecture or derangement of the t-tubular (TT) structure. However, the activity of surface sarcolemmal LTCCs has been reported to increase despite the unaltered whole cell LTCC current density in failing human ventricular myocytes, indicating that the "decreased CICR gain" may reflect a decrease in the TT LTCC current density in heart failure. Thus, we analyzed LTCC currents of failing ventricular myocytes of mice chronically treated with isoproterenol (Iso). Although Iso-treated mice exhibited intact t-tubules and normal LTCC subunit expression, acute occlusion of t-tubules of isolated ventricular myocytes with osmotic shock (detubulation) revealed that the TT LTCC current density was halved in Iso-treated versus control myocytes. Pharmacological analysis indicated that kinases other than PKA or Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II insufficiently activated, whereas protein phosphatase 1/2A excessively suppressed, TT LTCCs in Iso-treated versus control myocytes. These results indicate that excessive β-adrenergic stimulation causes the decrease in TT LTCC current density by altering the regulation of TT LTCCs by protein kinases and phosphatases in heart failure. This phenomenon might underlie the decreased CICR gain in heart failure.
L-type Ca(2+) channels (LTCCs) play an essential role in the excitation-contraction coupling of ventricular myocytes. We previously found that t-tubular (TT) LTCC current density was halved by the activation of protein phosphatase (PP)1 and/or PP2A, whereas surface sarcolemmal (SS) LTCC current density was increased by the inhibition of PP1 and/or PP2A activity in failing ventricular myocytes of mice chronically treated with isoproterenol (ISO mice). In the present study, we examined the possible involvement of inhibitory heterotrimeric G proteins (G(i/o)) in these abnormalities by chronically administrating pertussis toxin (PTX) to ISO mice (ISO + PTX mice). Compared with ISO mice, ISO + PTX mice exhibited significantly higher fractional shortening of the left ventricle. The expression level of Gα(i2) proteins was not altered by the treatment of mice with ISO and/or PTX. ISO + PTX myocytes had normal TT and SS LTCC current densities because they had higher and lower availability and/or open probability of TT and SS LTCCs than ISO myocytes, respectively. A selective PKA inhibitor, H-89, did not affect LTCC current densities in ISO + PTX myocytes. A selective PP2A inhibitor, fostriecin, did not affect SS or TT current density in control or ISO + PTX myocytes but significantly increased TT but not SS LTCC current density in ISO myocytes. These results indicate that chronic receptor-mediated activation of G(i/o) in vivo decreases basal TT LTCC activity by activating PP2A and increases basal SS LTCC activity by inhibiting PP1 without modulating PKA in heart failure.
In cardiac myocytes, LTCCs (L-type calcium channels) form a functional signalling complex with ryanodine receptors at the JM (junctional membrane). Although the specific localization of LTCCs to the JM is critical for excitation-contraction coupling, their targeting mechanism is unclear. Transient transfection of GFP (green fluorescent protein)-α(1S) or GFP-α(1C), but not P/Q-type calcium channel α(1A), in dysgenic (α(1S)-null) GLT myotubes results in correct targeting of these LTCCs to the JMs and restoration of action-potential-induced Ca2+ transients. To identify the sequences of α(1C) responsible for JM targeting, we generated a range of α(1C)-α(1A) chimaeras, deletion mutants and alanine substitution mutants and studied their targeting properties in GLT myotubes. The results revealed that amino acids L(1681)QAGLRTL(1688) and P(1693)EIRRAIS(1700), predicted to form two adjacent α-helices in the proximal C-terminus, are necessary for the JM targeting of α(1C). The efficiency of restoration of action-potential-induced Ca2+ transients in GLT myotubes was significantly decreased by mutations in the targeting motif. JM targeting was not disrupted by the distal C-terminus of α(1C) which binds to the second α-helix. Therefore we have identified a new structural motif in the C-terminus of α(1C) that mediates the targeting of cardiac LTCCs to JMs independently of the interaction between proximal and distal C-termini of α(1C).
Abstractand 0 mV, respectively, but did not affect channels' kinetics at -100 mV. Nifedipine equipotently blocked these channels at -80 mV. In wild-type LTCCs, nifedipine promoted fast CSI and OSI at -40 and 0 mV and promoted or stabilized slow CSI at -40 and -100 mV, respectively. In LTCCs with the mutation, nifedipine resumed the impaired fast CSI and OSI at -40 and 0 mV, respectively, and had the same effect on slow CSI as in wild-type LTCCs. Therefore, nifedipine has two mechanistically distinct effects on LTCCs: the promotion of fast CSI/OSI caused by L I-II at potentials positive to the sub-threshold potential and the promotion or stabilization of slow CSI caused by different mechanisms at potentials negative to the sub-threshold potential.
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