Abstract

Human genetic studies and mouse models have classically linked mutations/deficiencies in components of the desmosomal cell-cell junction to arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC). However, growing evidence points to the importance of the desmosome in cardiac diseases beyond ARVC, which include electrical diseases that have no impact on cardiac structure/morphology. The mechanisms of how defects in cardiac desmosomal protein homeostasis drive these distinct forms of cardiac disease remain elusive to the field. To uncover mechanisms that underlie the distinct pathophysiology (structural versus non-structural) encompassed by desmosomal mutations/loss, we performed an unbiased yeast-two-hybrid screen using an adult human heart cDNA library and the desmosomal protein, desmoplakin (DSP) to uncover new regulators of cardiac desmosomal protein homeostasis. We identified synaptosomal-associated protein 29 (SNAP29), as a novel DSP-interacting protein in the adult human heart. Traditional functions of SNAP29 are to regulate membrane fusion and play a role in autophagy; however, its role at the desmosome and in the heart is undefined. We show that SNAP29 is a subcomponent of the cardiac desmosome, as it co-localizes with DSP in the adult heart and DSP-deficient hearts harbor loss of SNAP29. Cardiomyocyte-specific SNAP29 knockout (SNAP29-cKO) mice displayed baseline and pacing-induced ventricular arrhythmias in an age-dependent manner in the absence of cardiac structural and functional deficits. We show that a loss of a subset of desmosomal proteins and connexin43 as well as upregulation of selective autophagy-mediated degradation underlie SNAP29 deficient cardiomyocyte arrhythmias. In line with this, acute blockade of autophagy was sufficient to rescue desmosomal and connexin43 protein levels as well as arrhythmias in SNAP29 deficient cardiomyocytes. In conclusion, SNAP29 insulates a subset of desmosomal and gap junction proteins from selective autophagy-mediated degradation to restrict cardiac arrhythmias. Thus, loss of SNAP29-desmosome-gap junction interactome may predispose the heart to desmosomal based diseases of an electrical nature.

Full Text
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