Role of cardiac ryanodine receptor calmodulin-binding domains in mediating the action of arrhythmogenic calmodulin N-domain mutation N54I

Mads T Søndergaard, Yingjie Liu, Wenting Guo, Jinhong Wei, Ruiwu Wang, Malene Brohus, Michael T Overgaard, S R Wayne Chen

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12 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

The Ca2+ -sensing protein calmodulin (CaM) inhibits cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2)-mediated Ca2+ release. CaM mutations associated with arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death have been shown to diminish CaM-dependent inhibition of RyR2, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Nearly all arrhythmogenic CaM mutations identified are located in the C-domain of CaM and exert marked effects on Ca2+ binding to CaM and on the CaM C-domain interaction with the CaM-binding domain 2 (CaMBD2) in RyR2. Interestingly, the arrhythmogenic N-domain mutation CaM-N54I has little or no effect on Ca2+ binding to CaM or the CaM C-domain-RyR2 CaMBD2 interaction, unlike all CaM C-domain mutations. This suggests that CaM-N54I may diminish CaM-dependent RyR2 inhibition by affecting CaM N-domain interactions with RyR2 CaMBDs other than CaMBD2. To explore this possibility, we assessed the effects of deleting each of the four known CaMBDs in RyR2 (CaMBD1a, -1b, -2, or -3) on the CaM-dependent inhibition of RyR2-mediated Ca2+ release in HEK293 cells. We found that removing CaMBD1a, CaMBD1b, or CaMBD3 did not alter the effects of CaM-N54I or CaM-WT on RyR2 inhibition. On the other hand, deleting RyR2-CaMBD2 abolished the effects of both CaM-N54I and CaM-WT. Our results support that CaM-N54I causes aberrant RyR2 regulation via an uncharacterized CaMBD or less likely CaMBD2, and that RyR2 CaMBD2 is required for the actions of both N- and C-domain CaM mutations. Moreover, our results show that CaMBD1a is central to RyR2 regulation, but CaMBD1a, CaMBD1b, and CaMBD3 are not required for CaM-dependent inhibition of RyR2 in HEK293 cells.

Original languageEnglish
JournalThe FEBS Journal
Volume287
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)2256-2280
Number of pages25
ISSN1742-464X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2020

Bibliographical note

© 2019 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.

Keywords

  • arrhythmia
  • calmodulin
  • intracellular Ca signalling
  • ion channel regulation
  • ryanodine receptor

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