Connexin 43 (Cx43)-associated gap junctions form electrical and mechanical conduits between adjacent ventricular cardiomyocytes, ensuring coordinate electrical excitation and synchronic contraction for each heartbeat. Cx43 dephosphorylation is a characteristic of… Click to show full abstract
Connexin 43 (Cx43)-associated gap junctions form electrical and mechanical conduits between adjacent ventricular cardiomyocytes, ensuring coordinate electrical excitation and synchronic contraction for each heartbeat. Cx43 dephosphorylation is a characteristic of ischemia, arrhythmia, and a failing and aging myocardium, but the exact phosphosite(s) triggering myocardial apoptosis and electrical disturbance and its underlying mechanisms are unclear. We previously found that Cx43-serine 282 phosphorylation (pS282) can regulate cardiomyocyte survival and electrical stability. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that S282 dephosphorylation occurs in and contributes to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R)-induced cardiac injury. We found enhanced Cx43-pS262 and Cx43-pS368 but decreased Cx43-pS282 in rat hearts subjected to I/R (30 min/2 h). I/R rats had ventricular arrhythmias and myocardial apoptosis with activation of the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38)/factor-associated suicide (Fas)/Fas-associating protein with a novel death domain (FADD) pathway. Similarly, S282 dephosphorylation, abnormal Ca2+ transients, cell apoptosis and p38/Fas/FADD activation also occurred in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes exposed to anoxia/reoxygenation (12/6 h). To confirm the causative role of S282 dephosphorylation in cardiac injury, rat hearts were intramyocardially injected with a virus carrying the S282 mutant substituted with alanine (S282A), thus causing arrhythmias and reducing cardiac output and myocardial apoptosis with p38/Fas/FADD pathway activation. Moreover, Cx43-S282A+/− mice displayed arrhythmias and impaired cardiac output with global myocardial apoptosis. Our findings revealed that Cx43 dephosphorylation at S282 triggers arrhythmias and, at least partly, contributes to cardiomyocyte death upon I/R by activating the p38/Fas/FADD pathway, providing a novel molecular mechanism and potential target for protecting against cardiac I/R injury.
               
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