Stress-Induced Proteasome Sub-Cellular Translocation in Cardiomyocytes Causes Altered Intracellular Calcium Handling and Arrhythmias

Author:

Neeman-Egozi Shunit1,Livneh Ido2,Dolgopyat Irit1ORCID,Nussinovitch Udi34ORCID,Milman Helena1,Cohen Nadav2,Eisen Binyamin1ORCID,Ciechanover Aaron2,Binah Ofer1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Biophysics and Systems Biology, Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3190601, Israel

2. The Rappaport-Technion Integrated Cancer Center (R-TICC) and The Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Research Institute, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 319060, Israel

3. Department of Cardiology, Edith Wolfson Medical Center, Holon 5822012, Israel

4. The Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel

Abstract

The ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) is an essential mechanism responsible for the selective degradation of substrate proteins via their conjugation with ubiquitin. Since cardiomyocytes have very limited self-renewal capacity, as they are prone to protein damage due to constant mechanical and metabolic stress, the UPS has a key role in cardiac physiology and pathophysiology. While altered proteasomal activity contributes to a variety of cardiac pathologies, such as heart failure and ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI), the environmental cues affecting its activity are still unknown, and they are the focus of this work. Following a recent study by Ciechanover’s group showing that amino acid (AA) starvation in cultured cancer cell lines modulates proteasome intracellular localization and activity, we tested two hypotheses in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs, CMs): (i) AA starvation causes proteasome translocation in CMs, similarly to the observation in cultured cancer cell lines; (ii) manipulation of subcellular proteasomal compartmentalization is associated with electrophysiological abnormalities in the form of arrhythmias, mediated via altered intracellular Ca2+ handling. The major findings are: (i) starving CMs to AAs results in proteasome translocation from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, while supplementation with the aromatic amino acids tyrosine (Y), tryptophan (W) and phenylalanine (F) (YWF) inhibits the proteasome recruitment; (ii) AA-deficient treatments cause arrhythmias; (iii) the arrhythmias observed upon nuclear proteasome sequestration(-AA+YWF) are blocked by KB-R7943, an inhibitor of the reverse mode of the sodium–calcium exchanger NCX; (iv) the retrograde perfusion of isolated rat hearts with AA starvation media is associated with arrhythmias. Collectively, our novel findings describe a newly identified mechanism linking the UPS to arrhythmia generation in CMs and whole hearts.

Funder

US–Israel Binational Foundation

Rappaport Research Institute

Israel Science Foundation

Niedersachsen Foundation

Israel Personal Medicine Partnership

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference65 articles.

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