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CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Ranek, MJ; Oeing, C; Sanchez-Hodge, R; Kokkonen-Simon, KM; Dillard, D; Aslam, MI; Rainer, PP; Mishra, S; Dunkerly-Eyring, B; Holewinski, RJ ...
Published in: Nature communications
October 2020

Proteotoxicity from insufficient clearance of misfolded/damaged proteins underlies many diseases. Carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein (CHIP) is an important regulator of proteostasis in many cells, having E3-ligase and chaperone functions and often directing damaged proteins towards proteasome recycling. While enhancing CHIP functionality has broad therapeutic potential, prior efforts have all relied on genetic upregulation. Here we report that CHIP-mediated protein turnover is markedly post-translationally enhanced by direct protein kinase G (PKG) phosphorylation at S20 (mouse, S19 human). This increases CHIP binding affinity to Hsc70, CHIP protein half-life, and consequent clearance of stress-induced ubiquitinated-insoluble proteins. PKG-mediated CHIP-pS20 or expressing CHIP-S20E (phosphomimetic) reduces ischemic proteo- and cytotoxicity, whereas a phospho-silenced CHIP-S20A amplifies both. In vivo, depressing PKG activity lowers CHIP-S20 phosphorylation and protein, exacerbating proteotoxicity and heart dysfunction after ischemic injury. CHIP-S20E knock-in mice better clear ubiquitinated proteins and are cardio-protected. PKG activation provides post-translational enhancement of protein quality control via CHIP.

Published In

Nature communications

DOI

EISSN

2041-1723

ISSN

2041-1723

Publication Date

October 2020

Volume

11

Issue

1

Start / End Page

5237

Related Subject Headings

  • Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
  • Phosphorylation
  • Myocardium
  • Mice
  • Male
  • Ischemia
  • Humans
  • Heart
  • Female
  • Cyclic GMP-Dependent Protein Kinases
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Ranek, M. J., Oeing, C., Sanchez-Hodge, R., Kokkonen-Simon, K. M., Dillard, D., Aslam, M. I., … Kass, D. A. (2020). CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury. Nature Communications, 11(1), 5237. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18980-x
Ranek, Mark J., Christian Oeing, Rebekah Sanchez-Hodge, Kristen M. Kokkonen-Simon, Danielle Dillard, M Imran Aslam, Peter P. Rainer, et al. “CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury.Nature Communications 11, no. 1 (October 2020): 5237. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18980-x.
Ranek MJ, Oeing C, Sanchez-Hodge R, Kokkonen-Simon KM, Dillard D, Aslam MI, et al. CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury. Nature communications. 2020 Oct;11(1):5237.
Ranek, Mark J., et al. “CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury.Nature Communications, vol. 11, no. 1, Oct. 2020, p. 5237. Epmc, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-18980-x.
Ranek MJ, Oeing C, Sanchez-Hodge R, Kokkonen-Simon KM, Dillard D, Aslam MI, Rainer PP, Mishra S, Dunkerly-Eyring B, Holewinski RJ, Virus C, Zhang H, Mannion MM, Agrawal V, Hahn V, Lee DI, Sasaki M, Van Eyk JE, Willis MS, Page RC, Schisler JC, Kass DA. CHIP phosphorylation by protein kinase G enhances protein quality control and attenuates cardiac ischemic injury. Nature communications. 2020 Oct;11(1):5237.

Published In

Nature communications

DOI

EISSN

2041-1723

ISSN

2041-1723

Publication Date

October 2020

Volume

11

Issue

1

Start / End Page

5237

Related Subject Headings

  • Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
  • Phosphorylation
  • Myocardium
  • Mice
  • Male
  • Ischemia
  • Humans
  • Heart
  • Female
  • Cyclic GMP-Dependent Protein Kinases