Abstract

The concentration of the second messenger cAMP is tightly controlled in cells by the activity of phosphodiesterases. We have previously described how the protein kinase A-anchoring protein mAKAP serves as a scaffold for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase PKA and the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase PDE4D3 in cardiac myocytes. PKA and PDE4D3 constitute a negative feedback loop whereby PKA-catalyzed phosphorylation and activation of PDE4D3 attenuate local cAMP levels. We now show that protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) associated with mAKAP complexes is responsible for reversing the activation of PDE4D3 by catalyzing the dephosphorylation of PDE4D3 serine residue 54. Mapping studies reveal that a C-terminal mAKAP domain (residues 2085-2319) binds PP2A. Binding to mAKAP is required for PP2A function, such that deletion of the C-terminal domain enhances both base-line and forskolin-stimulated PDE4D3 activity. Interestingly, PP2A holoenzyme associated with mAKAP complexes in the heart contains the PP2A targeting subunit B56delta. Like PDE4D3, B56delta is a PKA substrate, and PKA phosphorylation of mAKAP-bound B56delta enhances phosphatase activity 2-fold in the complex. Accordingly, expression of a B56delta mutant that cannot be phosphorylated by PKA results in increased PDE4D3 phosphorylation. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that PP2A associated with mAKAP complexes promotes PDE4D3 dephosphorylation, serving both to inhibit PDE4D3 in unstimulated cells and also to mediate a cAMP-induced positive feedback loop following adenylyl cyclase activation and B56delta phosphorylation. In general, PKA.PP2A.mAKAP complexes exemplify how protein kinases and phosphatases may participate in molecular signaling complexes to dynamically regulate localized intracellular signaling.

Highlights

  • CAMP controls a plethora of processes in virtually every cell type, including gene expression, intermediary metabolism, and ion channel activity

  • We tested in a heterologous system whether PP2A or PP2B might dephosphorylate PDE4 isoform D3 (PDE4D3) at Ser-54, the residue within the PDE4D3 upstream conserved region required for PKA activation [15]

  • HEK293 cells overexpressing mAKAP and PDE4D3 were treated with 300 ␮M Okadaic Acid (OA) to inhibit PP2A activity or 500 ␮M cyclosporin A to inhibit PP2B activity (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

CAMP controls a plethora of processes in virtually every cell type, including gene expression, intermediary metabolism, and ion channel activity. In response to elevated cAMP levels, mAKAP-bound PKA phosphorylates PDE4D3 on serine residues 13 and 54, resulting in 2–3-fold increased PDE4D3 binding to the complex and PDE activity [10, 15, 16].

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