Multiple reaction monitoring to identify site-specific troponin I phosphorylated residues in the failing human heart

P Zhang, JA Kirk, W Ji, CG Dos Remedios, DA Kass… - Circulation, 2012 - Am Heart Assoc
Circulation, 2012Am Heart Assoc
Background—Human cardiac troponin I is known to be phosphorylated at multiple amino
acid residues by several kinases. Advances in mass spectrometry allow sensitive detection
of known and novel phosphorylation sites and measurement of the level of phosphorylation
simultaneously at each site in myocardial samples. Methods and Results—On the basis of in
silico prediction and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry data, 14 phosphorylation
sites on cardiac troponin I, including 6 novel residues (S4, S5, Y25, T50, T180, S198), were …
Background
Human cardiac troponin I is known to be phosphorylated at multiple amino acid residues by several kinases. Advances in mass spectrometry allow sensitive detection of known and novel phosphorylation sites and measurement of the level of phosphorylation simultaneously at each site in myocardial samples.
Methods and Results
On the basis of in silico prediction and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry data, 14 phosphorylation sites on cardiac troponin I, including 6 novel residues (S4, S5, Y25, T50, T180, S198), were assessed in explanted hearts from end-stage heart failure transplantation patients with ischemic heart disease or idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and compared with samples obtained from nonfailing donor hearts (n=10 per group). Thirty mass spectrometry–based multiple reaction monitoring quantitative tryptic peptide assays were developed for each phosphorylatable and corresponding nonphosphorylated site. The results show that in heart failure there is a decrease in the extent of phosphorylation of the known protein kinase A sites (S22, S23) and other newly discovered phosphorylation sites located in the N-terminal extension of cardiac troponin I (S4, S5, Y25), an increase in phosphorylation of the protein kinase C sites (S41, S43, T142), and an increase in phosphorylation of the IT-arm domain residues (S76, T77) and C-terminal domain novel phosphorylation sites of cardiac troponin I (S165, T180, S198). In a canine dyssynchronous heart failure model, enhanced phosphorylation at 3 novel sites was found to decline toward control after resynchronization therapy.
Conclusions
Selective, functionally significant phosphorylation alterations occurred on individual residues of cardiac troponin I in heart failure, likely reflecting an imbalance in kinase/phosphatase activity. Such changes can be reversed by cardiac resynchronization.
Am Heart Assoc