Abstract

Mechanical unloading of failing hearts by left ventricular (LV) assist devices is regularly used as a bridge to transplantation and may lead to symptomatic improvement. The latter has been associated with altered phosphorylation of cardiac regulatory proteins, but the underlying mechanisms remained unknown. Here, we tested whether cardiac unloading alters protein phosphorylation by affecting the corresponding kinase–phosphatase balance. Cardiac unloading and reduction in LV mass were induced by heterotopic heart transplantation in rats for two weeks ( n = 8). Native in situ hearts from the recipient animals were used as controls ( n = 8). The steady-state protein kinase A (PKA) and/or Ca 2+-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) phosphorylation levels of phospholamban (PLB, Ser 16 and Thr 17) and troponin I (TnI, Ser 23/24) were decreased by 40–60% in unloaded hearts. Consistently, in these hearts PKA activity was decreased by ∼ 80% and the activity of protein phosphatase 1 and 2A was increased by 50% and 90%, respectively. In contrast, CaMKII activity was ∼ 60% higher, which may serve as a partial compensation. These data indicate that unloading shifts the kinase–phosphatase balance towards net dephosphorylation of PLB and TnI. This shift may also contribute to the reduction in phosphorylation levels of cardiac phosphoproteins observed in diseased human hearts after LVAD.

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