Abstract

Heart failure (HF) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Patients with HF exhibit a loss of junctophilin-2 (JPH2), a structural protein critical in forming junctional membrane complexes in which excitation-contraction takes place. Several mechanisms have been proposed to mediate the loss of JPH2, one being cleavage by the calcium-dependent protease calpain. The downstream mechanisms underlying HF progression after JPH2 cleavage are presently poorly understood. In this study, we used Labcas to bioinformatically predict putative calpain cleavage sites on JPH2. We identified a cleavage site that produces a novel C-terminal JPH2 peptide (JPH2-CTP) using several domain-specific antibodies. Western blotting revealed elevated JPH2-CTP levels in hearts of patients and mice with HF, corresponding to increased levels of calpain-2. Moreover, immunocytochemistry demonstrated nuclear localization of JPH2-CTP within ventricular myocytes isolated from a murine model of pressure overload-induced HF as well as rat ventricular myocytes treated with isoproterenol. Nuclear localization of JPH2-CTP and cellular remodeling were abrogated by a genetic mutation of the nuclear localization sequence within JPH2-CTP. Taken together, our studies identified a novel C-terminal fragment of JPH2 (JPH2-CTP) generated by calpain-2 mediated cleavage which localizes within the cardiomyocyte nucleus during HF. Blocking nuclear localization of JPH2-CTP protects cardiomyocytes from isoproterenol-induced hypertrophy in vitro. Future in vivo studies of the nuclear role of JPH2-CTP may reveal a causal association with adverse remodeling during HF and establish CTP as a therapeutic target.

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