학술논문

Regulation of cardiac excitation-contraction coupling by sorcin, a novel modulator of ryanodine receptors
Document Type
article
Source
Biological Research, Vol 37, Iss 4, Pp 609-612 (2004)
Subject
Sorcin
ryanodine receptors
CICR
dihydropyridine receptor
sarcoplasmic reticulum
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Language
English
ISSN
0716-9760
0717-6287
Abstract
Activation of Ca2+ release channels/ryanodine receptors (RyR) by the inward Ca2+ current (I Ca) gives rise to Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR), the amplifying Ca2+ signaling mechanism that triggers contraction of the heart. CICR, in theory, is a high-gain, self-regenerating process, but an unidentified mechanism stabilizes it in vivo. Sorcin, a 21.6 kDa Ca2+-binding protein, binds to cardiac RyRs with high affinity and completely inhibits channel activity. Sorcin significantly inhibits both the spontaneous activity of RyRs in quiescent cells (visualized as Ca2+ sparks) and the I Ca-triggered activity of RyRs that gives rise to [Ca2+]i transients. Since sorcin decreases the amplitude of the [Ca2+]i transient without affecting the amplitude of I Ca, the overall effect of sorcin is to reduce the "gain" of excitation-contraction coupling. Immunocytochemical staining shows that sorcin localizes to the dyadic space of ventricular cardiac myocytes. Ca2+ induces conformational changes and promotes translocation of sorcin between soluble and membranous compartments, but the [Ca2+] required for the latter process (ED50 = ~200 mM) appears to be reached only within the dyadic space. Thus, sorcin is a potent inhibitor of both spontaneous and I Ca-triggered RyR activity and may play a role in helping terminate the positive feedback loop of CICR.