Nuclear-delimited angiotensin receptor-mediated signaling regulates cardiomyocyte gene expression

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Abstract

Angiotensin-II (Ang-II) from extracardiac sources and intracardiac synthesis regulates cardiac homeostasis, with mitogenic and growth-promoting effects largely due to altered gene expression. Here, we assessed the possibility that angiotensin-1 (AT1R) or angiotensin-2 (AT2R) receptors on the nuclear envelope mediate effects on cardiomyocyte gene expression. Immunoblots of nucleus-enriched fractions from isolated cardiomyocytes indicated the presence of AT1R and AT2R proteins that copurified with the nuclear membrane marker nucleoporin-62 and histone-3, but not markers of plasma (calpactin-I), Golgi (GRP-78), or endoplasmic reticulum (GM130) membranes. Confocal microscopy revealed AT1R and AT2R proteins on nuclear membranes. Microinjected Ang-II preferentially bound to nuclear sites of isolated cardiomyocytes. AT1R and AT2R ligands enhanced de novo RNA synthesis in isolated cardiomyocyte nuclei incubated with [α-32P]UTP (e.g. 36.0 ± 6.0 cpm/ng of DNA control versus 246.4 ± 15.4 cpm/ng of DNA Ang-II, 390.1 ± 15.5 cpm/ng of DNA L-162313 (AT1), 180.9 ± 7.2 cpm/ng of DNA CGP42112A (AT2), p < 0.001). Ang-II application to cardiomyocyte nuclei enhanced NFκB mRNA expression, a response that was suppressed by co-administration of AT1R (valsartan) and/or AT2R (PD123177) blockers. Dose-response experiments with Ang-II applied to purified cardiomyocyte nuclei versus intact cardiomyocytes showed greater increases in NFκB mRNA levels at saturating concentrations with ∼2-fold greater affinity upon nuclear application, suggesting preferential nuclear signaling. AT1R, but not AT2R, stimulation increased [Ca2+] in isolated cardiomyocyte nuclei. Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor blockade by 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate prevented AT1R-mediated Ca2+ release and attenuated AT1R-mediated transcription initiation responses. We conclude that cardiomyocyte nuclear membranes possess angiotensin receptors that couple to nuclear signaling pathways and regulate transcription. Signaling within the nuclear envelope (e.g. from intracellularly synthesized Ang-II) may play a role in Ang-II-mediated changes in cardiac gene expression, with potentially important mechanistic and therapeutic implications. © 2010 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Tadevosyan, A., Maguy, A., Villeneuve, L. R., Babin, J., Bonnefoy, A., Allen, B. G., & Nattel, S. (2010). Nuclear-delimited angiotensin receptor-mediated signaling regulates cardiomyocyte gene expression. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285(29), 22338–22349. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.121749

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