Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) isozymes isolated by DEAE-Sephacel or Mono-Q High Performance Liquid Chromatography from cardiac left ventricular tissue of normal subjects and patients with end-stage heart failure have been compared. With both separation techniques, four major peaks of PDE activity were evident in the soluble fractions; only one peak of activity was present in particulate fractions. The specific activity of the particulate PDE from myopathics was approximately 30-50% of that of normals while the specific activity of a soluble form of this PDE (peak IIIa) was reduced by 30% in myopathics. No differences in comparison of the other peaks of PDE activity were evident. The particulate PDE isozyme has a low Km for cAMP (0.27-0.29 microM), is inhibited by cGMP (60-80% at 1 microM), is sensitive to inhibition by submicromolar concentrations of CI-930 but not rolipram, and is competitively inhibited by milrinone (Kj = 0.3 microM). The first soluble peak of PDE activity hydrolyzes both cAMP and cGMP and is stimulated by calmodulin while cyclic AMP hydrolysis by peak II PDE is stimulated by cGMP. The other soluble peak III fractions (IIIa and IIIb) hydrolyze cAMP; peak IIIa is inhibited by cGMP or by CI-930 and milrinone, whereas peak IIIb is also inhibited by rolipram when the cardiotonic sensitive PDE is inhibited by CI-930. Thus, cardiotonic-sensitive, cGMP-inhibitable, low Km cAMP PDE is present in both the soluble and particulate fractions of human cardiac left ventricular muscle of hearts from normal and cardiomyopathic subjects while the rolipram-sensitive PDE is present in the soluble fraction. The major differences in PDE activity of myopathic relative to normal left ventricular tissue are a reduced specific activity and Vmax of particulate PDE and one of the soluble peak III PDEs.
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PMID:Cellular distribution and pharmacological sensitivity of low Km cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase isozymes in human cardiac muscle from normal and cardiomyopathic subjects. 228 32

Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase 3A (PDE3) regulates cAMP-mediated signaling in the heart, and PDE3 inhibitors augment contractility in patients with heart failure. Studies in mice showed that PDE3A, not PDE3B, is the subfamily responsible for these inotropic effects and that murine PDE3A1 associates with sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) ATPase 2 (SERCA2), phospholamban (PLB), and AKAP18 in a multiprotein signalosome in human sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated that PDE3A co-localizes in Z-bands of human cardiac myocytes with desmin, SERCA2, PLB, and AKAP18. In human SR fractions, cAMP increased PLB phosphorylation and SERCA2 activity; this was potentiated by PDE3 inhibition but not by PDE4 inhibition. During gel filtration chromatography of solubilized SR membranes, PDE3 activity was recovered in distinct high molecular weight (HMW) and low molecular weight (LMW) peaks. HMW peaks contained PDE3A1 and PDE3A2, whereas LMW peaks contained PDE3A1, PDE3A2, and PDE3A3. Western blotting showed that endogenous HMW PDE3A1 was the principal PKA-phosphorylated isoform. Phosphorylation of endogenous PDE3A by rPKAc increased cAMP-hydrolytic activity, correlated with shift of PDE3A from LMW to HMW peaks, and increased co-immunoprecipitation of SERCA2, cav3, PKA regulatory subunit (PKARII), PP2A, and AKAP18 with PDE3A. In experiments with recombinant proteins, phosphorylation of recombinant human PDE3A isoforms by recombinant PKA catalytic subunit increased co-immunoprecipitation with rSERCA2 and rat rAKAP18 (recombinant AKAP18). Deletion of the recombinant human PDE3A1/PDE3A2 N terminus blocked interactions with recombinant SERCA2. Serine-to-alanine substitutions identified Ser-292/Ser-293, a site unique to human PDE3A1, as the principal site regulating its interaction with SERCA2. These results indicate that phosphorylation of human PDE3A1 at a PKA site in its unique N-terminal extension promotes its incorporation into SERCA2/AKAP18 signalosomes, where it regulates a discrete cAMP pool that controls contractility by modulating phosphorylation-dependent protein-protein interactions, PLB phosphorylation, and SERCA2 activity.
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PMID:Regulation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase 2 (SERCA2) activity by phosphodiesterase 3A (PDE3A) in human myocardium: phosphorylation-dependent interaction of PDE3A1 with SERCA2. 2559 22