Abstract

Regulation of the heart by the sympathetic nervous system, fundamental to the physiological response to stress and exercise, requires coordinated phosphorylation of multiple downstream molecular targets, including the I(Ks) (slowly activating potassium current) channel. Sympathetic nervous system stimulation increases intracellular cAMP for which targeted regulation is directed in large part by distinct scaffold or anchoring proteins. Yotiao is an A-kinase-anchoring protein (AKAP) that recruits the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A (PKA)) and protein phosphatase 1 to the carboxyl terminus of the I(Ks) channel to form a molecular complex and control its phosphorylation state, crucial to the cardiac cellular response to sympathetic nervous system stimulation. Here we report that Yotiao itself is a substrate for PKA phosphorylation, and we identify a Yotiao amino-terminal (N-T) residue (Ser-43) that is PKA-phosphorylated in response to beta-adrenergic receptor stimulation. The replacement of Ser-43 by Ala ablates the PKA phosphorylation of N-T Yotiao and markedly diminishes the functional response of the wild type and pseudo-phosphorylated I(Ks) channel to cAMP but neither prevents the PKA phosphorylation of KCNQ1 nor its binding to Yotiao. These results suggest, for the first time, a critical role for the PKA phosphorylation of an AKAP in the functional regulation of an ion channel protein and postphosphorylation allosteric modulation of the I(Ks) channel by Yotiao.

Highlights

  • Regulation of the heart by the sympathetic nervous system, fundamental to the physiological response to stress and exercise, requires coordinated phosphorylation of multiple downstream molecular targets, including the IKs channel

  • The IKs channel forms a macromolecular complex consisting of an ␣ subunit (KCNQ1), a regulatory subunit (KCNE1), and the A-kinase-anchoring protein (AKAP) Yotiao bound to the channel carboxylterminal domain [12]

  • We explore the possibility that Yotiao itself is a substrate for protein kinase (PKA) phosphorylation and that phosphorylation of this adaptor protein participates in the overall functional response of the IKs channel complex to PKA

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Summary

Introduction

Regulation of the heart by the sympathetic nervous system, fundamental to the physiological response to stress and exercise, requires coordinated phosphorylation of multiple downstream molecular targets, including the IKs (slowly activating potassium current) channel. Yotiao is an A-kinase-anchoring protein (AKAP) that recruits the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A (PKA)) and protein phosphatase 1 to the carboxyl terminus of the IKs channel to form a molecular complex and control its phosphorylation state, crucial to the cardiac cellular response to sympathetic nervous system stimulation. Precedence for this possibility has been established by recent studies that have shown that phosphorylation of the AKAP-Lbc precedes release of protein kinase D and that phosphorylation of the AKAP Gravin may contribute to ␤-adrenergic receptor resensitization [18, 19]. Our results provide evidence for a role of PKA

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