Cardiac voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.5 is regulated by Nedd4-2 mediated ubiquitination.
Na(v)1.5, the cardiac isoform of the voltage-gated Na+ channel, is critical to heart excitability and conduction. However, the mechanisms regulating its expression at the cell membrane are poorly understood. The Na(v)1.5 C-terminus contains a PY-motif (xPPxY) that is known to act as binding site for Nedd4/Nedd4-like ubiquitin-protein ligases. Because Nedd4-2 is well expressed in the heart, we investigated its role in the ubiquitination and regulation of Na(v)1. 5. Yeast two-hybrid and GST-pulldown experiments revealed an interaction between Na(v)1.5 C-terminus and Nedd4-2, which was abrogated by mutating the essential tyrosine of the PY-motif. Ubiquitination of Na(v)1.5 was detected in both transfected HEK cells and heart extracts. Furthermore, Nedd4-2-dependent ubiquitination of Na(v)1.5 was observed. To test for a functional role of Nedd4-2, patch-clamp experiments were performed on HEK cells expressing wild-type and mutant forms of both Na(v)1.5 and Nedd4-2. Na(v)1.5 current density was decreased by 65% upon Nedd4-2 cotransfection, whereas the PY-motif mutant channels were not affected. In contrast, a catalytically inactive Nedd4-2 had no effect, indicating that ubiquitination mediates this downregulation. However, Nedd4-2 did not alter the whole-cell or the single channel biophysical properties of Na(v)1. 5. Consistent with the functional findings, localization at the cell periphery of Na(v)1.5-YFP fusion proteins was reduced upon Nedd4-2 coexpression. The Nedd4-1 isoform did not regulate Na(v)1.5, suggesting that Nedd4-2 is a specific regulator of Na(v)1. 5. These results demonstrate that Na(v)1.5 can be ubiquitinated in heart tissues and that the ubiquitin-protein ligase Nedd4-2 acts on Na(v)1.5 by decreasing the channel density at the cell surface.[1]References
- Cardiac voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.5 is regulated by Nedd4-2 mediated ubiquitination. van Bemmelen, M.X., Rougier, J.S., Gavillet, B., Apothéloz, F., Daidié, D., Tateyama, M., Rivolta, I., Thomas, M.A., Kass, R.S., Staub, O., Abriel, H. Circ. Res. (2004) [Pubmed]
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