Inhibition of nuclear import of calcineurin prevents myocardial hypertrophy

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Abstract

The time that transcription factors remain nuclear is a major determinant for transcriptional activity. It has recently been demonstrated that the phosphatase calcineurin is translocated to the nucleus with the transcription factor nuclear factor of activated T cells (NF-AT). This study identifies a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) and a nuclear export signal (NES) in the sequence of calcineurin. Furthermore we identified the nuclear cargo protein importinβ1 to be responsible for nuclear translocation of calcineurin. Inhibition of the calcineurin/importin interaction by a competitive peptide (KQECKIKYSERV), which mimicked the calcineurin NLS, prevented nuclear entry of calcineurin. A noninhibitory control peptide did not interfere with the calcineurin/importin binding. Using this approach, we were able to prevent the development of myocardial hypertrophy. In angiotensin II-stimulated cardiomyocytes, [H]-leucine incorporation (159%±9 versus 111%±11; P<0.01) and cell size were suppressed significantly by the NLS peptide compared with a control peptide. The NLS peptide inhibited calcineurin/NF-AT transcriptional activity (227%±11 versus 133%±8; P<0.01), whereas calcineurin phosphatase activity was unaffected (298%±9 versus 270%±11; P=NS). We conclude that calcineurin is not only capable of dephosphorylating NF-AT, thus enabling its nuclear import, but the presence of calcineurin in the nucleus is also important for full NF-AT transcriptional activity. © 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.

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APA

Hallhuber, M., Burkard, N., Wu, R., Buch, M. H., Engelhardt, S., Hein, L., … Ritter, O. (2006). Inhibition of nuclear import of calcineurin prevents myocardial hypertrophy. Circulation Research, 99(6), 626–635. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000243208.59795.d8

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