Abstract

There is increasing interest in establishing the roles that lysine acetylation of non nuclear proteins may exert in modulating cell function. Lysine deacetylase 8 (KDAC8), for example, has been suggested to interact with α-actin and control the differentiation of smooth muscle cells. However, a direct role of smooth muscle non nuclear protein acetylation in regulating tone is unresolved. We sought to define the actions of two separate KDAC inhibitors on arterial tone and identify filament-interacting protein targets of acetylation and association with KDAC8. Compound 2 (a specific KDAC8 inhibitor) or Trichostatin A (TSA, a broad-spectrum KDAC inhibitor) inhibited rat arterial contractions induced by phenylephrine (PE) or high potassium solution. In contrast to the predominantly nuclear localization of KDAC1 and KDAC2, KDAC8 was positioned in extranuclear areas of native vascular smooth muscle cells. Several filament-associated proteins identified as putative acetylation targets colocalized with KDAC8 by immunoprecipitation (IP): cortactin, α-actin, tropomyosin, HSPB1 (Hsp27) and HSPB6 (Hsp20). Use of anti-acetylated lysine antibodies showed that KDAC inhibition increased acetylation of each protein. A custom-made antibody targeting the C-terminal acetylated lysine of human HSPB6 identified this as a novel target of acetylation that was increased by KDAC inhibition. HSPB6 phosphorylation, a known vasodilatory modification, was concomitantly increased. Interrogation of publicly available mass spectrometry data identified 50 other proteins with an acetylated C-terminal lysine. These novel data, in alliance with other recent studies, alert us to the importance of elucidating the mechanistic links between changes in myofilament-associated protein acetylation, in conjunction with other posttranslational modifications, and the regulation of arterial tone.

Highlights

  • Protein posttranslational modification (PTM) of lysine residues by acetylation is increasingly recognized to play a prominent role in modulating cell function including that of the cardiovascular system (Kouzarides 2000; Yuan and Marmorstein 2013)

  • HSPB6 Protein Acetylation and Vascular Tone this necessitates a role for non nuclear lysine deacetylase (KDAC) and/or lysine acetylase (KAT) activities

  • Preconstricted aorta segments were exposed to the class I/II KDAC inhibitor Trichostatin A (TSA) or the KDAC8 inhibitor compound 2 (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Protein posttranslational modification (PTM) of lysine residues by acetylation is increasingly recognized to play a prominent role in modulating cell function including that of the cardiovascular system (Kouzarides 2000; Yuan and Marmorstein 2013). There is burgeoning proteomic evidence of lysine acetylation of non nuclear proteins (Kim et al 2006; Choudhury et al 2009; Sadoul et al 2011; Lundby et al 2012). HSPB6 Protein Acetylation and Vascular Tone this necessitates a role for non nuclear lysine deacetylase (KDAC) and/or lysine acetylase (KAT) activities. A direct role of non nuclear protein acetylation in regulating differentiated vascular smooth muscle tone, or a role for KDAC8 in this process, remains unresolved. Focusing on one of these proteins, we found that KDAC inhibition altered the site-specific acetylation of vascular HSPB6. Our data have revealed new information about the role of protein lysine acetylation in regulating blood vessel tone including the first identification of site-specific vascular smooth muscle protein acetylation following KDAC inhibition

Experimental Procedures
Results
Chen et al A
D KDAC8 α- SMA
C M TSA CP2 p-HSPB6
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