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Cardiovascular Research Advance Access first published online on June 28, 2009
This version [Corrected Proof] published online on July 31, 2009

Cardiovascular Research, doi:10.1093/cvr/cvp217
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Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2009. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Multiple cardiac proteasome subtypes differ in their susceptibility to proteasome inhibitors

Alexander Kloß1, Silke Meiners2, Antje Ludwig2 and Burkhardt Dahlmann1,*

1 Institut für Biochemie/CCM, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Monbijoustr. 2, Berlin 10117, Germany
2 Medizinische Klinik für Kardiologie und Angiologie, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

* Corresponding author. Tel: +49 30 4505 28309, Fax: +49 30 4505 28916, Email: burkhardt.dahlmann{at}charite.de

Aims: The proteasome is the proteolytically active core of the ubiquitin–proteasome system, which regulates vital processes and which can cause various diseases when it malfunctions. Therefore, the proteasome has become an attractive target for pharmaceutical interventions. Inhibition of the cardiac proteasome by specific proteasome inhibitors has been shown to attenuate cardiac hypertrophy and ischaemia reperfusion injury of the heart. We have resolved the cardiac proteasome into its subtypes and have addressed the key question of how proteasome inhibitors affect single cardiac proteasomal subtypes.

Methods and results: The 20S proteasome from rat heart was dissected into three different subpopulations (groups I–III), each comprising 4–7 different subtypes. The major group (group II) comprises standard proteasome subtypes; the two minor subpopulations (groups I and III) contain intermediate proteasome subtypes. All subtypes exhibit chymotrypsin-, trypsin-, and caspase-like activity but to different degrees. We have tested the effect of two common proteasome inhibitors on the chymotrypsin-like activity of all subtypes: 20–30 nmol/L MG132 caused 50% inhibition of all subtypes from groups I and II, whereas 100 nmol/L was necessary to affect group III subtypes to the same extent. However, another inhibitor, bortezomib (VELCADETM), already used clinically, inhibited 50% of the activity of group III proteasome subtypes even below 20 nmol/L, a concentration showing almost no effect on group I and II proteasome subtypes. The caspase-like activity of group II proteasome subtypes was not affected by MG132 and was inhibited by bortezomib only at concentrations above 100 nmol/L.

Conclusion: These data show that different inhibitors have differential inhibitory effects on the various cardiac proteasome subtypes. Different cardiac subtypes are inhibited by the same dose of proteasome inhibitor to a different extent.

KEYWORDS Proteasome; Subtype; Activity; Inhibition; Heart


Time for primary review: 24 days


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