Subcellular compartmentalization of proximal G?q-receptor signaling produces unique hypertrophic phenotypes in adult cardiac myocytes.
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ABSTRACT: G protein-coupled receptors that signal through G?q (Gq receptors), such as ?1-adrenergic receptors (?1-ARs) or angiotensin receptors, share a common proximal signaling pathway that activates phospholipase C?1 (PLC?1), which cleaves phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) to produce inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol. Despite these common proximal signaling mechanisms, Gq receptors produce distinct physiological responses, yet the mechanistic basis for this remains unclear. In the heart, Gq receptors are thought to induce myocyte hypertrophy through a mechanism termed excitation-transcription coupling, which provides a mechanistic basis for compartmentalization of calcium required for contraction versus IP3-dependent intranuclear calcium required for hypertrophy. Here, we identified subcellular compartmentalization of Gq-receptor signaling as a mechanistic basis for unique Gq receptor-induced hypertrophic phenotypes in cardiac myocytes. We show that ?1-ARs co-localize with PLC?1 and PIP2 at the nuclear membrane. Further, nuclear ?1-ARs induced intranuclear PLC?1 activity, leading to histone deacetylase 5 (HDAC5) export and a robust transcriptional response (i.e. significant up- or down-regulation of 806 genes). Conversely, we found that angiotensin receptors localize to the sarcolemma and induce sarcolemmal PLC?1 activity, but fail to promote HDAC5 nuclear export, while producing a transcriptional response that is mostly a subset of ?1-AR-induced transcription. In summary, these results link Gq-receptor compartmentalization in cardiac myocytes to unique hypertrophic transcription. They suggest a new model of excitation-transcription coupling in adult cardiac myocytes that accounts for differential Gq-receptor localization and better explains distinct physiological functions of Gq receptors.
SUBMITTER: Dahl EF
PROVIDER: S-EPMC5995527 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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