Manipulating L-type calcium channels in cardiomyocytes using split-intein protein transsplicing

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Abstract

Manipulating expression of large genes (>6 kb) in adult cardiomyocytes is challenging because these cells are only efficiently transduced by viral vectors with a 4-7 kb packaging capacity. This limitation impedes understanding structure-function mechanisms of important proteins in heart. L-type calcium channels (LTCCs) regulate diverse facets of cardiac physiology including excitation-contraction coupling, excitability, and gene expression. Many important questions about how LTCCs mediate such multidimensional signaling are best resolved by manipulating expression of the 6.6 kb pore-forming α1C-subunit in adult cardiomyocytes. Here, we use split-intein-mediated protein transsplicing to reconstitute LTCC α1C-subunit from two distinct halves, overcoming the difficulty of expressing full-length α1C in cardiomyocytes. Split-intein-tagged α1C fragments encoding dihydropyridine- resistant channels were incorporated into adenovirus and reconstituted in cardiomyocytes. Similar to endogenous LTCCs, recombinant channels targeted to dyads, triggered Ca2+ transients, associated with caveolin-3, and supported β-adrenergic regulation of excitation-contraction coupling. This approach lowers a longstanding technical hurdle to manipulating large proteins in cardiomyocytes.

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Subramanyam, P., Chang, D. D., Fang, K., Xie, W., Marks, A. R., & Colecraft, H. M. (2013). Manipulating L-type calcium channels in cardiomyocytes using split-intein protein transsplicing. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(38), 15461–15466. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1308161110

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