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Publication : SUMO1 modification of PKD2 channels regulates arterial contractility.

First Author  Hasan R Year  2019
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A PubMed ID  31822608
Mgi Jnum  J:285899 Mgi Id  MGI:6387710
Doi  10.1073/pnas.1917264116 Citation  Hasan R, et al. (2019) SUMO1 modification of PKD2 channels regulates arterial contractility. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
abstractText  PKD2 (polycystin-2, TRPP1) channels are expressed in a wide variety of cell types and can regulate functions, including cell division and contraction. Whether posttranslational modification of PKD2 modifies channel properties is unclear. Similarly uncertain are signaling mechanisms that regulate PKD2 channels in arterial smooth muscle cells (myocytes). Here, by studying inducible, cell-specific Pkd2 knockout mice, we discovered that PKD2 channels are modified by SUMO1 (small ubiquitin-like modifier 1) protein in myocytes of resistance-size arteries. At physiological intravascular pressures, PKD2 exists in approximately equal proportions as either nonsumoylated (PKD2) or triple SUMO1-modifed (SUMO-PKD2) proteins. SUMO-PKD2 recycles, whereas unmodified PKD2 is surface-resident. Intravascular pressure activates voltage-dependent Ca(2+) influx that stimulates the return of internalized SUMO-PKD2 channels to the plasma membrane. In contrast, a reduction in intravascular pressure, membrane hyperpolarization, or inhibition of Ca(2+) influx leads to lysosomal degradation of internalized SUMO-PKD2 protein, which reduces surface channel abundance. Through this sumoylation-dependent mechanism, intravascular pressure regulates the surface density of SUMO-PKD2-mediated Na(+) currents (INa) in myocytes to control arterial contractility. We also demonstrate that intravascular pressure activates SUMO-PKD2, not PKD2, channels, as desumoylation leads to loss of INa activation in myocytes and vasodilation. In summary, this study reveals that PKD2 channels undergo posttranslational modification by SUMO1, which enables physiological regulation of their surface abundance and pressure-mediated activation in myocytes and thus control of arterial contractility.
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