ABSTRACT
The G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) kinase beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR) kinase-1 (beta-ARK1) is elevated during heart failure; however, its role is not fully understood. Beta-ARK1 contains several domains that are capable of protein-protein interactions that may play critical roles in the regulation of GPCR signaling. In this study, we developed a novel line of transgenic mice that express an amino-terminal peptide of beta-ARK1 that is comprised of amino acid residues 50-145 (beta-ARKnt) in the heart to determine whether this domain has any functional significance in vivo. Surprisingly, the beta-ARKnt transgenic mice presented with cardiac hypertrophy. Our data suggest that the phenotype was driven via an enhanced beta-AR system, as beta-ARKnt mice had elevated cardiac beta-AR density. Moreover, administration of a beta-AR antagonist reversed hypertrophy in these mice. Interestingly, signaling through the beta-AR in response to agonist stimulation was not enhanced in these mice. Thus the amino terminus of beta-ARK1 appears to be critical for normal beta-AR regulation in vivo, which further supports the hypothesis that beta-ARK1 plays a key role in normal and compromised cardiac GPCR signaling.
Subject(s)
Cardiomegaly/physiopathology , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/genetics , Receptors, Adrenergic, beta/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Animals , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/chemistry , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/metabolism , Down-Regulation/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Heart/physiology , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Protein Structure, Tertiary , RGS Proteins/physiology , beta-Adrenergic Receptor KinasesABSTRACT
The Gq-coupled receptor-signaling pathway has been implicated in the cardiac hypertrophic response to stress, but little is actually known about the contributions of Gq signaling in either the heart or the vasculature. Therefore, we developed a line of transgenic mice that express a peptide inhibitor of Gq (GqI) in vascular smooth muscle to determine if vascular Gq signaling was important in the cardiac hypertrophic response. After chronic administration of the Gq agonists phenylephrine, serotonin, and angiotensin II, we observed an attenuation of mean arterial blood pressure and an inhibition of cardiac hypertrophy in the transgenic mice with vascular-specific GqI expression. In contrast, cardiac GqI peptide expression did not attenuate the hypertension or the cardiac hypertrophy. Importantly, all mice were capable of cardiac hypertrophy, because direct beta-adrenergic receptor stimulation induced a similar level of hypertrophy in both lines of transgenic mice. This clearly suggests that after chronic Gq-coupled receptor agonist administration, it is the hypertensive state induced by vascular Gq activation that mediates remodeling of the heart, rather than direct stimulation of cardiac Gq-coupled receptors. Thus, the contribution of vascular Gq-coupled signaling to the development of cardiac hypertrophy is significant and suggests that expression of the GqI peptide is a novel therapeutic strategy to lower Gq-mediated hypertension and cardiac hypertrophy.