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Proteomics and phosphoproteomics of failing human left ventricle identifies dilated cardiomyopathy-associated phosphorylation of CTNNA3

Authors :
Cristine J. Reitz
Marjan Tavassoli
Da Hye Kim
Saumya Shah
Robert Lakin
Allen C. T. Teng
Yu-Qing Zhou
Wenping Li
Sina Hadipour-Lakmehsari
Peter H. Backx
Andrew Emili
Gavin Y. Oudit
Uros Kuzmanov
Anthony O. Gramolini
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 120
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2023.

Abstract

The prognosis and treatment outcomes of heart failure (HF) patients rely heavily on disease etiology, yet the majority of underlying signaling mechanisms are complex and not fully elucidated. Phosphorylation is a major point of protein regulation with rapid and profound effects on the function and activity of protein networks. Currently, there is a lack of comprehensive proteomic and phosphoproteomic studies examining cardiac tissue from HF patients with either dilated dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) or ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). Here, we used a combined proteomic and phosphoproteomic approach to identify and quantify more than 5,000 total proteins with greater than 13,000 corresponding phosphorylation sites across explanted left ventricle (LV) tissue samples, including HF patients with DCM vs. nonfailing controls (NFC), and left ventricular infarct vs. noninfarct, and periinfarct vs. noninfarct regions of HF patients with ICM. Each pair-wise comparison revealed unique global proteomic and phosphoproteomic profiles with both shared and etiology-specific perturbations. With this approach, we identified a DCM-associated hyperphosphorylation cluster in the cardiomyocyte intercalated disc (ICD) protein, αT-catenin (CTNNA3). We demonstrate using both ex vivo isolated cardiomyocytes and in vivo using an AAV9-mediated overexpression mouse model, that CTNNA3 phosphorylation at these residues plays a key role in maintaining protein localization at the cardiomyocyte ICD to regulate conductance and cell–cell adhesion. Collectively, this integrative proteomic/phosphoproteomic approach identifies region- and etiology-associated signaling pathways in human HF and describes a role for CTNNA3 phosphorylation in the pathophysiology of DCM.

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d06b71f0cbf827b0d57975817e32af14
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2212118120