Alpha kinase 3 signaling at the M-band maintains sarcomere integrity and proteostasis in striated muscle

NATURE CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH(2023)

引用 1|浏览28
暂无评分
摘要
Muscle contraction is driven by the molecular machinery of the sarcomere. As phosphorylation is a critical regulator of muscle function, the identification of regulatory kinases is important for understanding sarcomere biology. Pathogenic variants in alpha kinase 3 (ALPK3) cause cardiomyopathy and musculoskeletal disease, but little is known about this atypical kinase. Here we show that ALPK3 is an essential component of the M-band of the sarcomere and define the ALPK3-dependent phosphoproteome. ALPK3 deficiency impaired contractility both in human cardiac organoids and in the hearts of mice harboring a pathogenic truncating Alpk3 variant. ALPK3-dependent phosphopeptides were enriched for sarcomeric components of the M-band and the ubiquitin-binding protein sequestosome-1 (SQSTM1) (also known as p62). Analysis of the ALPK3 interactome confirmed binding to M-band proteins including SQSTM1. In human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes modeling cardiomyopathic ALPK3 mutations, sarcomeric organization and M-band localization of SQSTM1 were abnormal suggesting that this mechanism may underly disease pathogenesis. McNamara et al. show that ALPK3 is an M-band protein required for phosphorylation of sarcomeric proteins and components of the protein quality control apparatus. Further, the autophagy receptor sequestosome-1 requires ALPK3 activity for sarcomeric localization.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Cardiovascular biology,Cell biology,Cell signalling,Phosphorylation,Stem-cell differentiation,Cardiovascular Biology
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要