35 research outputs found
Therapeutic targeting of protein S-acylation for the treatment of disease
The post-translational modification protein S-acylation (commonly known as palmitoylation) plays a critical role in regulating a wide range of biological processes including cell growth, cardiac contractility, synaptic plasticity, endocytosis, vesicle trafficking, membrane transport and biased-receptor signalling. As a consequence, zDHHC-protein acyl transferases (zDHHC-PATs), enzymes that catalyse the addition of fatty acid groups to specific cysteine residues on target proteins, and acyl proteins thioesterases, proteins that hydrolyse thioester linkages, are important pharmaceutical targets. At present, no therapeutic drugs have been developed that act by changing the palmitoylation status of specific target proteins. Here, we consider the role that palmitoylation plays in the development of diseases such as cancer and detail possible strategies for selectively manipulating the palmitoylation status of specific target proteins, a necessary first step towards developing clinically useful molecules for the treatment of disease
Greasing the wheels or a spanner in the works?:Regulation of the cardiac sodium pump by palmitoylation
The ubiquitous sodium/potassium ATPase (Na pump) is the most abundant primary active transporter at the cell surface of multiple cell types, including ventricular myocytes in the heart. The activity of the Na pump establishes transmembrane ion gradients that control numerous events at the cell surface, positioning it as a key regulator of the contractile and metabolic state of the myocardium. Defects in Na pump activity and regulation elevate intracellular Na in cardiac muscle, playing a causal role in the development of cardiac hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, arrhythmias and heart failure. Palmitoylation is the reversible conjugation of the fatty acid palmitate to specific protein cysteine residues; all subunits of the cardiac Na pump are palmitoylated. Palmitoylation of the pumpâs accessory subunit phospholemman (PLM) by the cell surface palmitoyl acyl transferase DHHC5 leads to pump inhibition, possibly by altering the relationship between the pump catalytic α subunit and specifically bound membrane lipids. In this review, we discuss the functional impact of PLM palmitoylation on the cardiac Na pump and the molecular basis of recognition of PLM by its palmitoylating enzyme DHHC5, as well as effects of palmitoylation on Na pump cell surface abundance in the cardiac muscle. We also highlight the numerous unanswered questions regarding the cellular control of this fundamentally important regulatory process
Substrate recognition by the cell surface palmitoyl transferase DHHC5
The cardiac phosphoprotein phospholemman (PLM) regulates the cardiac sodium pump, activating the pump when phosphorylated and inhibiting it when palmitoylated. Protein palmitoylation, the reversible attachment of a 16 carbon fatty acid to a cysteine thiol, is catalyzed by the Asp-His-His-Cys (DHHC) motif-containing palmitoyl acyltransferases. The cell surface palmitoyl acyltransferase DHHC5 regulates a growing number of cellular processes, but relatively few DHHC5 substrates have been identified to date. We examined the expression of DHHC isoforms in ventricular muscle and report that DHHC5 is among the most abundantly expressed DHHCs in the heart and localizes to caveolin-enriched cell surface microdomains. DHHC5 coimmunoprecipitates with PLM in ventricular myocytes and transiently transfected cells. Overexpression and silencing experiments indicate that DHHC5 palmitoylates PLM at two juxtamembrane cysteines, C40 and C42, although C40 is the principal palmitoylation site. PLM interaction with and palmitoylation by DHHC5 is independent of the DHHC5 PSD-95/Discs-large/ZO-1 homology (PDZ) binding motif, but requires a âŒ120 amino acid region of the DHHC5 intracellular C-tail immediately after the fourth transmembrane domain. PLM C42A but not PLM C40A inhibits the Na pump, indicating PLM palmitoylation at C40 but not C42 is required for PLM-mediated inhibition of pump activity. In conclusion, we demonstrate an enzymeâsubstrate relationship for DHHC5 and PLM and describe a means of substrate recruitment not hitherto described for this acyltransferase. We propose that PLM palmitoylation by DHHC5 promotes phospholipid interactions that inhibit the Na pump
Regulation of the Cardiac Na+/K+ ATPase by Phospholemman
Hansraj Dhayan, Rajender Kumar, Andreas Kukol, âRegulation of the Cardiac Na+/K+ ATPase by Phospholemmanâ, in Sajal Chakraborti, Naranjan Dhalla, eds., Regulation of Membrane Na+-K+ ATPase, (Switzerland: Springer, 2016), ISBN 978-3-319-24748-9, eISBN 978-3-319-24750-2.Peer reviewe
Palmitoylation of the pore-forming subunit of Ca(v)1.2 controls channel voltage sensitivity and calcium transients in cardiac myocytes
Mammalian voltage-activated L-type Ca2+ channels, such as Ca(v)1.2, control transmem-
brane Ca2+ fluxes in numerous excitable tissues. Here, we report that the pore-forming
α1C subunit of Ca(v)1.2 is reversibly palmitoylated in rat, rabbit, and human ventricular
myocytes. We map the palmitoylation sites to two regions of the channel: The N termi-
nus and the linker between domains I and II. Whole-cell voltage clamping revealed a
rightward shift of the Ca(v)1.2 currentâvoltage relationship when α1C was not palmi-
toylated. To examine function, we expressed dihydropyridine-resistant α1C in human
induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and measured Ca2+ transients in
the presence of nifedipine to block the endogenous channels. The transients generated
by unpalmitoylatable channels displayed a similar activation time course but signifi-
cantly reduced amplitude compared to those generated by wild-type channels. We thus
conclude that palmitoylation controls the voltage sensitivity of Ca(v)1.2. Given that
the identified Ca(v)1.2 palmitoylation sites are also conserved in most Ca(v)1 isoforms,
we propose that palmitoylation of the pore-forming α1C subunit provides a means
to regulate the voltage sensitivity of voltage-activated Ca 2+ channels in excitable cells