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BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules

The BAR domain protein superfamily is involved in membrane invagination and endocytosis, but its role in organizing membrane proteins has not been explored. In particular, the membrane scaffolding protein BIN1 functions to initiate T-tubule genesis in skeletal muscle cells. Constitutive knockdown of...

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Autores principales: Hong, Ting-Ting, Smyth, James W., Gao, Danchen, Chu, Kevin Y., Vogan, Jacob M., Fong, Tina S., Jensen, Brian C., Colecraft, Henry M., Shaw, Robin M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2821894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20169111
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000312
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author Hong, Ting-Ting
Smyth, James W.
Gao, Danchen
Chu, Kevin Y.
Vogan, Jacob M.
Fong, Tina S.
Jensen, Brian C.
Colecraft, Henry M.
Shaw, Robin M.
author_facet Hong, Ting-Ting
Smyth, James W.
Gao, Danchen
Chu, Kevin Y.
Vogan, Jacob M.
Fong, Tina S.
Jensen, Brian C.
Colecraft, Henry M.
Shaw, Robin M.
author_sort Hong, Ting-Ting
collection PubMed
description The BAR domain protein superfamily is involved in membrane invagination and endocytosis, but its role in organizing membrane proteins has not been explored. In particular, the membrane scaffolding protein BIN1 functions to initiate T-tubule genesis in skeletal muscle cells. Constitutive knockdown of BIN1 in mice is perinatal lethal, which is associated with an induced dilated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. However, the functional role of BIN1 in cardiomyocytes is not known. An important function of cardiac T-tubules is to allow L-type calcium channels (Cav1.2) to be in close proximity to sarcoplasmic reticulum-based ryanodine receptors to initiate the intracellular calcium transient. Efficient excitation-contraction (EC) coupling and normal cardiac contractility depend upon Cav1.2 localization to T-tubules. We hypothesized that BIN1 not only exists at cardiac T-tubules, but it also localizes Cav1.2 to these membrane structures. We report that BIN1 localizes to cardiac T-tubules and clusters there with Cav1.2. Studies involve freshly acquired human and mouse adult cardiomyocytes using complementary immunocytochemistry, electron microscopy with dual immunogold labeling, and co-immunoprecipitation. Furthermore, we use surface biotinylation and live cell confocal and total internal fluorescence microscopy imaging in cardiomyocytes and cell lines to explore delivery of Cav1.2 to BIN1 structures. We find visually and quantitatively that dynamic microtubules are tethered to membrane scaffolded by BIN1, allowing targeted delivery of Cav1.2 from the microtubules to the associated membrane. Since Cav1.2 delivery to BIN1 occurs in reductionist non-myocyte cell lines, we find that other myocyte-specific structures are not essential and there is an intrinsic relationship between microtubule-based Cav1.2 delivery and its BIN1 scaffold. In differentiated mouse cardiomyocytes, knockdown of BIN1 reduces surface Cav1.2 and delays development of the calcium transient, indicating that Cav1.2 targeting to BIN1 is functionally important to cardiac calcium signaling. We have identified that membrane-associated BIN1 not only induces membrane curvature but can direct specific antegrade delivery of microtubule-transported membrane proteins. Furthermore, this paradigm provides a microtubule and BIN1-dependent mechanism of Cav1.2 delivery to T-tubules. This novel Cav1.2 trafficking pathway should serve as an important regulatory aspect of EC coupling, affecting cardiac contractility in mammalian hearts.
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spelling pubmed-28218942010-02-19 BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules Hong, Ting-Ting Smyth, James W. Gao, Danchen Chu, Kevin Y. Vogan, Jacob M. Fong, Tina S. Jensen, Brian C. Colecraft, Henry M. Shaw, Robin M. PLoS Biol Research Article The BAR domain protein superfamily is involved in membrane invagination and endocytosis, but its role in organizing membrane proteins has not been explored. In particular, the membrane scaffolding protein BIN1 functions to initiate T-tubule genesis in skeletal muscle cells. Constitutive knockdown of BIN1 in mice is perinatal lethal, which is associated with an induced dilated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. However, the functional role of BIN1 in cardiomyocytes is not known. An important function of cardiac T-tubules is to allow L-type calcium channels (Cav1.2) to be in close proximity to sarcoplasmic reticulum-based ryanodine receptors to initiate the intracellular calcium transient. Efficient excitation-contraction (EC) coupling and normal cardiac contractility depend upon Cav1.2 localization to T-tubules. We hypothesized that BIN1 not only exists at cardiac T-tubules, but it also localizes Cav1.2 to these membrane structures. We report that BIN1 localizes to cardiac T-tubules and clusters there with Cav1.2. Studies involve freshly acquired human and mouse adult cardiomyocytes using complementary immunocytochemistry, electron microscopy with dual immunogold labeling, and co-immunoprecipitation. Furthermore, we use surface biotinylation and live cell confocal and total internal fluorescence microscopy imaging in cardiomyocytes and cell lines to explore delivery of Cav1.2 to BIN1 structures. We find visually and quantitatively that dynamic microtubules are tethered to membrane scaffolded by BIN1, allowing targeted delivery of Cav1.2 from the microtubules to the associated membrane. Since Cav1.2 delivery to BIN1 occurs in reductionist non-myocyte cell lines, we find that other myocyte-specific structures are not essential and there is an intrinsic relationship between microtubule-based Cav1.2 delivery and its BIN1 scaffold. In differentiated mouse cardiomyocytes, knockdown of BIN1 reduces surface Cav1.2 and delays development of the calcium transient, indicating that Cav1.2 targeting to BIN1 is functionally important to cardiac calcium signaling. We have identified that membrane-associated BIN1 not only induces membrane curvature but can direct specific antegrade delivery of microtubule-transported membrane proteins. Furthermore, this paradigm provides a microtubule and BIN1-dependent mechanism of Cav1.2 delivery to T-tubules. This novel Cav1.2 trafficking pathway should serve as an important regulatory aspect of EC coupling, affecting cardiac contractility in mammalian hearts. Public Library of Science 2010-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2821894/ /pubmed/20169111 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000312 Text en Hong et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hong, Ting-Ting
Smyth, James W.
Gao, Danchen
Chu, Kevin Y.
Vogan, Jacob M.
Fong, Tina S.
Jensen, Brian C.
Colecraft, Henry M.
Shaw, Robin M.
BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title_full BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title_fullStr BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title_full_unstemmed BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title_short BIN1 Localizes the L-Type Calcium Channel to Cardiac T-Tubules
title_sort bin1 localizes the l-type calcium channel to cardiac t-tubules
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2821894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20169111
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000312
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