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Publication : Phosphorylation of Piezo1 at a single residue, serine-1612, regulates its mechanosensitivity and in vivo mechanotransduction function.

First Author  Zhang T Year  2024
Journal  Neuron Volume  112
Issue  21 Pages  3618-3633.e6
PubMed ID  39270653 Mgi Jnum  J:360618
Mgi Id  MGI:7779518 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2024.08.009
Citation  Zhang T, et al. (2024) Phosphorylation of Piezo1 at a single residue, serine-1612, regulates its mechanosensitivity and in vivo mechanotransduction function. Neuron
abstractText  Piezo1 is a mechanically activated cation channel that converts mechanical force into diverse physiological processes. Owing to its large protein size of more than 2,500 amino acids and complex 38-transmembrane helix topology, how Piezo1 is post-translationally modified for regulating its in vivo mechanotransduction functions remains largely unexplored. Here, we show that PKA activation potentiates the mechanosensitivity and slows the inactivation kinetics of mouse Piezo1 and identify the major phosphorylation site, serine-1612 (S1612), that also responds to PKC activation and shear stress. Mutating S1612 abolishes PKA and PKC regulation of Piezo1 activities. Primary endothelial cells derived from the Piezo1-S1612A knockin mice lost PKA- and PKC-dependent phosphorylation and functional potentiation of Piezo1. The mutant mice show activity-dependent elevation of blood pressure and compromised exercise endurance, resembling endothelial-specific Piezo1 knockout mice. Taken together, we identify the major PKA and PKC phosphorylation site in Piezo1 and demonstrate its contribution to Piezo1-mediated physiological functions.
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