Do adult rat ventricular myocytes express protein kinase C-alpha?

Author:

Rybin V.1,Steinberg S. F.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA.

Abstract

Although calcium-insensitive protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms (PKC-epsilon and PKC-delta) are consistently detected in adult ventricular myocytes, the evidence that adult ventricular myocytes also express calcium-sensitive PKC-alpha is inconsistent. The current study used four different anti-PKC-alpha-antibodies to resolve some of the uncertainties regarding the immunodetection of PKC-alpha in adult ventricular myocytes. Three of the antibodies used in this study barely (GIBCO-BRL) or rather faintly (Transduction Laboratories and Seikagaku America) recognize PKC-alpha in crude preparations from adult ventricular myocytes. Although each of these antibodies recognizes a prominent 80-kDa band, which is similar in size to PKC-alpha, this represents nonspecific immunoreactivity and should not be confused with PKC-alpha. This conclusion is based on peptide-blocking experiments (GIBCO-BRL), the absence of the requisite sensitivity to calcium- and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-induced translocation (Seikagaku America and Transduction Laboratories), and/or the failure to copurify with PKC-alpha on DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. Nevertheless, an antibody from Upstate Biotechnology clearly recognizes PKC-alpha and not other unrelated nonspecific immunoreactive species in crude preparations from adult ventricular myocytes. Each of the antisera used in this study could detect PKC-alpha immunoreactivity following chromatographic purification of the samples to enrich for PKC-alpha and remove nonspecific immunoreactive proteins. These results suggest that PKC-alpha is expressed by adult ventricular myocytes and argue that differences in the sensitivity and/or specificity of available antisera contribute to at least some of the confusion regarding PKC-alpha expression in adult ventricular myocytes.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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