Inhibitory and stimulatory micropeptides preferentially bind to different conformations of the cardiac calcium pump.

TitleInhibitory and stimulatory micropeptides preferentially bind to different conformations of the cardiac calcium pump.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
JournalThe Journal of biological chemistry
Volume298
Issue7
Pagination102060
ISSN0021-9258
Abstract

The ATP-dependent ion pump sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) sequesters Ca in the endoplasmic reticulum to establish a reservoir for cell signaling. Because of its central importance in physiology, the activity of this transporter is tightly controlled via direct interactions with tissue-specific regulatory micropeptides that tune SERCA function to match changing physiological conditions. In the heart, the micropeptide phospholamban (PLB) inhibits SERCA, while dwarf open reading frame (DWORF) stimulates SERCA. These competing interactions determine cardiac performance by modulating the amplitude of Ca signals that drive the contraction/relaxation cycle. We hypothesized that the functions of these peptides may relate to their reciprocal preferences for SERCA binding; SERCA binds PLB more avidly at low cytoplasmic [Ca] but binds DWORF better when [Ca] is high. In the present study, we demonstrated this opposing Ca sensitivity is due to preferential binding of DWORF and PLB to different intermediate states that SERCA samples during the Ca transport cycle. We show PLB binds best to the SERCA E1-ATP state, which prevails at low [Ca]. In contrast, DWORF binds most avidly to E1P and E2P states that are more populated when Ca is elevated. Moreover, FRET microscopy revealed dynamic shifts in SERCA-micropeptide binding equilibria during cellular Ca elevations. A computational model showed that DWORF exaggerates changes in PLB-SERCA binding during the cardiac cycle. These results suggest a mechanistic basis for inhibitory versus stimulatory micropeptide function, as well as a new role for DWORF as a modulator of dynamic oscillations of PLB-SERCA regulatory interactions.

URLhttps://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0021-9258(22)00500-2
DOI10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102060
Short TitleJ Biol Chem