Neuronal nitric oxide synthase signaling in the heart is regulated by the sarcolemmal calcium pump 4b

D Oceandy, EJ Cartwright, M Emerson, S Prehar… - Circulation, 2007 - Am Heart Assoc
D Oceandy, EJ Cartwright, M Emerson, S Prehar, FM Baudoin, M Zi, N Alatwi, L Venetucci
Circulation, 2007Am Heart Assoc
Background—Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) has recently been shown to be a major
regulator of cardiac contractility. In a cellular system, we have previously shown that nNOS is
regulated by the isoform 4b of plasma membrane calcium/calmodulin-dependent ATPase
(PMCA4b) through direct interaction mediated by a PDZ domain (PSD 95, Drosophilia Discs
large protein and Zona occludens-1) on nNOS and a cognate ligand on PMCA4b. It remains
unknown, however, whether this interaction has physiological relevance in the heart in vivo …
Background— Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) has recently been shown to be a major regulator of cardiac contractility. In a cellular system, we have previously shown that nNOS is regulated by the isoform 4b of plasma membrane calcium/calmodulin-dependent ATPase (PMCA4b) through direct interaction mediated by a PDZ domain (PSD 95, Drosophilia Discs large protein and Zona occludens-1) on nNOS and a cognate ligand on PMCA4b. It remains unknown, however, whether this interaction has physiological relevance in the heart in vivo.
Methods and Results— We generated 2 strains of transgenic mice overexpressing either human PMCA4b or PMCA ct120 in the heart. PMCA ct120 is a highly active mutant form of the pump that does not interact with or modulate nNOS function. Calcium was extruded normally from PMCA4b-overexpressing cardiomyocytes, but in vivo, overexpression of PMCA4b reduced the β-adrenergic contractile response. This attenuated response was not observed in ct120 transgenic mice. Treatment with a specific nNOS inhibitor (Nω-propyl-l-arginine) reduced the β-adrenergic response in wild-type and ct120 transgenic mice to levels comparable to those of PMCA4b transgenic animals. No differences in lusitropic response were observed in either transgenic strain compared with wild-type littermates.
Conclusions— These data demonstrate the physiological relevance of the interaction between PMCA4b and nNOS and suggests its signaling role in the heart.
Am Heart Assoc