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Inadequate ubiquitination-proteasome coupling contributes to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury
Chengjun Hu, Yihao Tian, Hongxin Xu, Bo Pan, Erin M. Terpstra, Penglong Wu, Hongmin Wang, Faqian Li, Jinbao Liu, Xuejun Wang
Chengjun Hu, Yihao Tian, Hongxin Xu, Bo Pan, Erin M. Terpstra, Penglong Wu, Hongmin Wang, Faqian Li, Jinbao Liu, Xuejun Wang
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Research Article Cardiology

Inadequate ubiquitination-proteasome coupling contributes to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury

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Abstract

The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) degrades a protein molecule via 2 main steps: ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. Extraproteasomal ubiquitin receptors are thought to couple the 2 steps, but this proposition has not been tested in vivo with vertebrates. More importantly, impaired UPS performance plays a major role in cardiac pathogenesis, including myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), but the molecular basis of UPS impairment remains poorly understood. Ubiquilin1 is a bona fide extraproteasomal ubiquitin receptor. Here, we report that mice with a cardiomyocyte-restricted knockout of Ubiquilin1 (Ubqln1-CKO mice) accumulated a surrogate UPS substrate (GFPdgn) and increased myocardial ubiquitinated proteins without altering proteasome activities, resulting in late-onset cardiomyopathy and a markedly shortened life span. When subject to regional myocardial ischemia-reperfusion, young Ubqln1-CKO mice showed substantially exacerbated cardiac malfunction and enlarged infarct size, and conversely, mice with transgenic Ubqln1 overexpression displayed attenuated IRI. Furthermore, Ubqln1 overexpression facilitated proteasomal degradation of oxidized proteins and the degradation of a UPS surrogate substrate in cultured cardiomyocytes without increasing autophagic flux. These findings demonstrate that Ubiquilin1 is essential to cardiac ubiquitination-proteasome coupling and that an inadequacy in the coupling represents a major pathogenic factor for myocardial IRI; therefore, strategies to strengthen coupling have the potential to reduce IRI.

Authors

Chengjun Hu, Yihao Tian, Hongxin Xu, Bo Pan, Erin M. Terpstra, Penglong Wu, Hongmin Wang, Faqian Li, Jinbao Liu, Xuejun Wang

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Figure 7

Tg Ubqln1 overexpression attenuates LV malfunction induced by acute myocardial IRI in mice.

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Tg Ubqln1 overexpression attenuates LV malfunction induced by acute myoc...
(A) Representative image of Western blot analysis for myocardial Ubqln1 protein levels in Ubqln1 Tg mouse lines. Ventricular myocardial samples were collected from an adult mouse from each of the 3 Ubqln1 stable Tg mouse lines (U1, U2, and U3) and an nTg littermate mouse of each (N1, N2, and N3) and processed for analysis. β-Tubulin was probed for loading control. (B–D) Comparisons of hemodynamic parameters between Ubqln1 Tg and nTg mice at 24 hours after IRI or sham surgery. Mixed sex Tg and nTg littermate mice from the U2 line were subject to the IRI or sham surgical procedures; 24 hours after the initiation of reperfusion, LV was catheterized and changes in LV pressure were measured with the heart rate comparable among the 4 groups (data not shown). **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.005; ****P < 0.0001 vs. the respective sham group. Two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s test for pair-wise comparison. Each dot represents an individual animal.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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