First Author | Navedo MF | Year | 2008 |
Journal | Circ Res | Volume | 102 |
Issue | 2 | Pages | e1-e11 |
PubMed ID | 18174462 | Mgi Jnum | J:145591 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3835263 | Doi | 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.107.167809 |
Citation | Navedo MF, et al. (2008) AKAP150 is required for stuttering persistent Ca2+ sparklets and angiotensin II-induced hypertension. Circ Res 102(2):e1-e11 |
abstractText | Hypertension is a perplexing multiorgan disease involving renal primary pathology and enhanced angiotensin II vascular reactivity. Here, we report that a novel form of a local Ca2+ signaling in arterial smooth muscle is linked to the development of angiotensin II-induced hypertension. Long openings and reopenings of L-type Ca2+ channels in arterial myocytes produce stuttering persistent Ca2+ sparklets that increase Ca2+ influx and vascular tone. These stuttering persistent Ca2+ sparklets arise from the molecular interactions between the L-type Ca2+ channel and protein kinase Calpha at only a few subsarcolemmal regions in resistance arteries. We have identified AKAP150 as the key protein, which targets protein kinase Calpha to the L-type Ca2+ channels and thereby enables its regulatory function. Accordingly, AKAP150 knockout mice (AKAP150-/-) were found to lack persistent Ca2+ sparklets and have lower arterial wall intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) and decreased myogenic tone. Furthermore, AKAP150-/- mice were hypotensive and did not develop angiotensin II-induced hypertension. We conclude that local control of L-type Ca2+ channel function is regulated by AKAP150-targeted protein kinase C signaling, which controls stuttering persistent Ca2+ influx, vascular tone, and blood pressure under physiological conditions and underlies angiotensin II-dependent hypertension. |