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Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin

Parvalbumin (PV), an EF-hand protein family member, is a delayed calcium buffer that exchanges magnesium for calcium to facilitate fast skeletal muscle relaxation. Genetic approaches that express parvalbumin in the heart also enhance relaxation and show promise of being therapeutic against various c...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Jianchao, Shettigar, Vikram, Zhang, George C., Kindell, Daniel G., Liu, Xiaotong, López, Joseph J., Yerrimuni, Vinatham, Davis, Grace A., Davis, Jonathan P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3204457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22059076
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2011.00077
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author Zhang, Jianchao
Shettigar, Vikram
Zhang, George C.
Kindell, Daniel G.
Liu, Xiaotong
López, Joseph J.
Yerrimuni, Vinatham
Davis, Grace A.
Davis, Jonathan P.
author_facet Zhang, Jianchao
Shettigar, Vikram
Zhang, George C.
Kindell, Daniel G.
Liu, Xiaotong
López, Joseph J.
Yerrimuni, Vinatham
Davis, Grace A.
Davis, Jonathan P.
author_sort Zhang, Jianchao
collection PubMed
description Parvalbumin (PV), an EF-hand protein family member, is a delayed calcium buffer that exchanges magnesium for calcium to facilitate fast skeletal muscle relaxation. Genetic approaches that express parvalbumin in the heart also enhance relaxation and show promise of being therapeutic against various cardiac diseases where relaxation is compromised. Unfortunately, skeletal muscle PVs have very slow rates of Ca(2+) dissociation and are prone to becoming saturated with Ca(2+), eventually losing their buffering capability within the constantly beating heart. In order for PV to have a more therapeutic potential in the heart, a PV with faster rates of calcium dissociation and high Mg(2+) affinity is needed. We demonstrate that at 35°C, rat β-PV has an ~30-fold faster rate of Ca(2+) dissociation compared to rat skeletal muscle α-PV, and still possesses a physiologically relevant Ca(2+) affinity (~100 nM). However, rat β-PV will not be a delayed Ca(2+) buffer since its Mg(2+) affinity is too low (~1 mM). We have engineered two mutations into rat β-PV, S55D and E62D, when observed alone increase Mg(2+) affinity up to fivefold, but when combined increase Mg(2+) affinity ~13-fold, well within a physiologically relevant affinity. Furthermore, the Mg(2+) dissociation rate (172/s) from the engineered S55D, E62D PV is slow enough for delayed Ca(2+) buffering. Additionally, the engineered PV retains a high Ca(2+) affinity (132 nM) and fast rate of Ca(2+) dissociation (64/s). These PV design strategies hold promise for the development of new therapies to remediate relaxation abnormalities in different heart diseases and heart failure.
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spelling pubmed-32044572011-11-04 Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin Zhang, Jianchao Shettigar, Vikram Zhang, George C. Kindell, Daniel G. Liu, Xiaotong López, Joseph J. Yerrimuni, Vinatham Davis, Grace A. Davis, Jonathan P. Front Physiol Physiology Parvalbumin (PV), an EF-hand protein family member, is a delayed calcium buffer that exchanges magnesium for calcium to facilitate fast skeletal muscle relaxation. Genetic approaches that express parvalbumin in the heart also enhance relaxation and show promise of being therapeutic against various cardiac diseases where relaxation is compromised. Unfortunately, skeletal muscle PVs have very slow rates of Ca(2+) dissociation and are prone to becoming saturated with Ca(2+), eventually losing their buffering capability within the constantly beating heart. In order for PV to have a more therapeutic potential in the heart, a PV with faster rates of calcium dissociation and high Mg(2+) affinity is needed. We demonstrate that at 35°C, rat β-PV has an ~30-fold faster rate of Ca(2+) dissociation compared to rat skeletal muscle α-PV, and still possesses a physiologically relevant Ca(2+) affinity (~100 nM). However, rat β-PV will not be a delayed Ca(2+) buffer since its Mg(2+) affinity is too low (~1 mM). We have engineered two mutations into rat β-PV, S55D and E62D, when observed alone increase Mg(2+) affinity up to fivefold, but when combined increase Mg(2+) affinity ~13-fold, well within a physiologically relevant affinity. Furthermore, the Mg(2+) dissociation rate (172/s) from the engineered S55D, E62D PV is slow enough for delayed Ca(2+) buffering. Additionally, the engineered PV retains a high Ca(2+) affinity (132 nM) and fast rate of Ca(2+) dissociation (64/s). These PV design strategies hold promise for the development of new therapies to remediate relaxation abnormalities in different heart diseases and heart failure. Frontiers Research Foundation 2011-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3204457/ /pubmed/22059076 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2011.00077 Text en Copyright © 2011 Zhang, Shettigar, Zhang, Kindell, Liu, López, Yerrimuni, Davis and Davis. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to a non-exclusive license between the authors and Frontiers Media SA, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and other Frontiers conditions are complied with.
spellingShingle Physiology
Zhang, Jianchao
Shettigar, Vikram
Zhang, George C.
Kindell, Daniel G.
Liu, Xiaotong
López, Joseph J.
Yerrimuni, Vinatham
Davis, Grace A.
Davis, Jonathan P.
Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title_full Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title_fullStr Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title_full_unstemmed Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title_short Engineering Parvalbumin for the Heart: Optimizing the Mg(2+) Binding Properties of Rat β-Parvalbumin
title_sort engineering parvalbumin for the heart: optimizing the mg(2+) binding properties of rat β-parvalbumin
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3204457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22059076
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2011.00077
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