Palmitoyl acyltransferase Aph2 in cardiac function and the development of cardiomyopathy

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Abstract

Protein palmitoylation regulates many aspects of cell function and is carried out by acyl transferases that contain zf-DHHC motifs. The in vivo physiological function of protein palmitoylation is largely unknown. Here we generated mice deficient in the acyl transferase Aph2 (Ablphilin 2 or zf-DHHC16) and demonstrated an essential role for Aph2 in embryonic/postnatal survival, eye development, and heart development. Aph2-/- embryos and pups showed cardiomyopathy and cardiac defects including bradycardia. We identified phospholamban, a protein often associated with human cardiomyopathy, as an interacting partner and a substrate of Aph2. Aph2-mediated palmitoylation of phospholamban on cysteine 36 differentially alters its interaction with PKA and protein phosphatase 1 α, augmenting serine 16 phosphorylation, and regulates phospholamban pentamer formation. Aph2 deficiency results in phospholamban hypophosphorylation, a hyperinhibitory form. Ablation of phospholamban in Aph2-/- mice histologically and functionally alleviated the heart defects. These findings establish Aph2 as a critical in vivo regulator of cardiac function and reveal roles for protein palmitoylation in the development of other organs including eyes.

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Zhou, T., Li, J., Zhao, P., Liu, H., Jia, D., Jia, H., … Li, B. (2015). Palmitoyl acyltransferase Aph2 in cardiac function and the development of cardiomyopathy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(51), 15666–15671. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518368112

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