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Vol. 12, Issue 8, 2290-2307, August 2001
i
-Milivojevi
,*


ko
Ili
*Metabolic Research Unit and Departments of §Medicine
and
Stomatology, University of California San Francisco,
San Francisco, California 94143-0540
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ABSTRACT |
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Hypertrophic terminally differentiated cardiac myocytes show increased sarcomeric organization and altered gene expression. Previously, we established a role for the nonreceptor tyrosine kinase Src in signaling cardiac myocyte hypertrophy. Here we report evidence that p130Cas (Cas) and focal adhesion kinase (FAK) regulate this process. In neonatal cardiac myocytes, tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas and FAK increased upon endothelin (ET) stimulation. FAK, Cas, and paxillin were localized in sarcomeric Z-lines, suggesting that the Z-line is an important signaling locus in these cells. Cas, alone or in cooperation with Src, modulated basal and ET-stimulated atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) gene promoter activity, a marker of cardiac hypertrophy. Expression of the C-terminal focal adhesion-targeting domain of FAK interfered with localization of endogenous FAK to Z-lines. Expression of the Cas-binding proline-rich region 1 of FAK hindered association of Cas with FAK and impaired the structural stability of sarcomeres. Collectively, these results suggest that interaction of Cas with FAK, together with their localization to Z-lines, is critical to assembly of sarcomeric units in cardiac myocytes in culture. Moreover, expression of the focal adhesion-targeting and/or the Cas-binding proline-rich regions of FAK inhibited ANP promoter activity and suppressed ET-induced ANP and brain natriuretic peptide gene expression. In summary, assembly of signaling complexes that include the focal adhesion proteins Cas, FAK, and paxillin at Z-lines in the cardiac myocyte may regulate, either directly or indirectly, both cytoskeletal organization and gene expression associated with cardiac myocyte hypertrophy.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Cardiac hypertrophy is an adaptive response of the heart to a
variety of intrinsic and extrinsic stimuli, including hypertension, myocardial infarction, and contractile abnormalities resulting from
mutant sarcomeric proteins (Hunter and Chien, 1999
). Because cardiac
myocytes lose the ability to divide soon after birth, the increase in
cardiac mass results from an increase in size of individual myocytes
without an increase in cell number (i.e., hypertrophy rather than
hyperplasia). Although initially beneficial, prolonged hypertrophy can
become deleterious, resulting in cardiomyopathy, heart failure, and
sudden death (Hunter and Chien, 1999
).
At the cellular level, hypertrophy is thought to develop in response to
a combination of mechanical (e.g., strain) and neurohormonal (e.g.,
endothelin [ET], angiotensin II [Ang II], or
-adrenergic agonist
phenylephrine) stimuli. In cultured neonatal cardiac myocytes these
stimuli effect a series of changes that closely resemble those seen
with hypertrophy in vivo (Schaub et al., 1997
). These include activation of the immediate early gene family
(c-jun, c-fos and egr), followed by
up-regulation of the so-called fetal gene atrial natriuretic peptide
(ANP),
-myosin heavy chain (
-MHC), and
-skeletal actin. These
changes in turn are followed by enhanced expression of the sarcomeric
contractile proteins (e.g., myosin light chain and cardiac actin) that
leads to the assembly of highly organized myofibrils (Chien et
al., 1993
). The development of hypertrophy in cultured myocytes is
usually monitored experimentally by following reactivation of fetal
gene expression (e.g., ANP) and by analyzing cell morphology for
increased cell size and increased sarcomeric density and organization.
From a biological standpoint, the accumulation of sarcomeres is perhaps
the most important feature of hypertrophy because it addresses the
myocyte's need to increase contractile force. More than 50 different
proteins, ordered in near crystalline array, are found in the sarcomere
(Vigoreaux, 1994
). Z-line-associated structures are responsible for
alignment of myofibrils and lateral anchorage at N-cadherin-
and vinculin-containing costamers (Simpson et al., 1993
).
The formation of perfectly aligned myofibrils, a prerequisite for
productive contraction in cardiac muscle, represents an extreme example
of supramolecular assembly in eukaryotic cells. Although the molecular
mechanisms underlying immediate early gene induction and reactivation
of fetal genes have been studied extensively
(Kova
i
-Milivojevi
and Gardner, 1992
; Chien
et al., 1993
; Sadoshima and Izumo, 1997
), the mechanisms underlying increased myofibrillogenesis are understood only to a
limited degree. Furthermore, little is known about how these two
processes (gene transcription and sarcomeric assembly) are coordinated
in the cardiac myocyte. For example, are there common receptor-proximal
control points that synchronize the changes in gene expression with the
changes in organization of sarcomeric structure that characterize hypertrophy?
ET is one of the most potent hypertrophic stimuli in the neonatal
myocyte system (Shubeita et al., 1990
; Chien et
al., 1991
). ET-1 binds to a specific heterotrimeric G
protein-coupled receptor that is linked to a number of well-defined
intracellular signaling pathways (Chien et al., 1993
;
Bogoyevitch et al., 1994
). ET has been shown to stimulate
tyrosine kinase activity in several systems (Zachary et al.,
1993
; Cazaubon et al., 1997
) and, more recently, has been
linked directly to activation of c-Src in neonatal ventricular myocytes
(Fuller et al., 1998
; Kova
i
et al.,
1998
). ET is closely tied to activation of ANP gene expression
(Kova
i
et al., 1998
) and, by inference, to the
development of myocyte hypertrophy in this system. These effects appear
to be Src dependent. ET also promotes phosphorylation of Src
substrates, including the adaptor protein p130Cas (Cas), in Swiss 3T3
cells (Casamassima and Rozengurt, 1997
), and focal adhesion kinase
(FAK) in cardiac myocytes (Eble et al., 2000
), mesangial
cells (Haneda et al., 1995
), and primary astrocytes
(Cazaubon et al., 1997
).
Both Cas and FAK are localized at sites of integrin-receptor
clustering. The localization of FAK is dependent on its C-terminal focal adhesion-targeting domain (FAT; Hildebrand et al.,
1993
). The FAT region of FAK interacts with integrin-associated
proteins such as paxillin (Bellis et al., 1995
; Schaller and
Parsons, 1995
) and talin (Chen et al., 1995
). After
integrin receptor ligation, or stimulation by growth factors or
G protein-linked receptors, FAK undergoes (auto)phosphorylation at
Tyr397, creating a binding site for Src-family kinases and other
proteins, as described in the review by Schlaepfer et al.
(1999)
. The proline-rich region 1 (PR-1) of FAK (residues 712-718)
provides a binding site for the SH3 domain of Cas (Harte et
al., 1996
; Polte and Hanks, 1997
). This interaction leads to
localization of Cas in focal contacts and phosphorylation by either FAK
or Src (Nakamoto et al., 1997
; Polte and Hanks, 1997
;
Nakamura et al., 1998
). Whereas the phosphorylated protein
is found tightly associated with the cytoskeleton (Polte and Hanks,
1997
), nonphosphorylated Cas localizes mainly to the cytoplasm (Sakai
et al., 1994
). The FAK-Cas complex provides the backbone for
many of the multimolecular complexes that form around integrin
cytoplasmic tails at focal adhesion sites. These complexes may include
a number of proteins that, in combination, transduce signals leading to
the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase effector cascades
(Schlaepfer et al., 1999
). These effects, in turn, regulate
basic cellular processes such as growth, differentiation, migration,
and survival. Although tyrosine phosphorylation of FAK and Cas appears
to be linked to G protein-coupled receptor stimulation in cardiac
myocytes, the biological role(s) for these phosphorylation events
remains unclear (Sadoshima et al., 1996
; Taylor et
al., 2000
). The current study focuses on the potential link
between ET-dependent phosphorylation of the FAK-Cas complex in cardiac
myocytes and the relationship of this signaling pathway to the
cytoskeletal changes and alterations in gene expression that accompany
myocyte hypertrophy.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmids and Adenovirus Production
The
1150hANP chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter
(LaPointe et al., 1988
) and expression vector for c-Src
(Kova
i
et al., 1998
) have been described
previously. Construction of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-FAT has
been described (Ili
et al., 1998
), as has
construction of GFP-paxillin (Turner et al., 1999
). To
construct a fragment containing only the major Cas-binding region of
FAK, bound to GFP (GFP-hunter), the SnaBI-XhoI fragment from a GFP-FRNK expression vector (Ili
et
al., 1998
) was isolated and subcloned into the new pEGFP C1
plasmid (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) opened with
SnaBI-XhoI. Hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged wild-type
and mutant Cas, cloned in the mammalian expression vector pSSR
, were
provided by T. Nakamoto and H. Hirai, Tokyo University, Tokyo, Japan
(Nakamoto et al., 1997
). For adenovirus production, an
NdeI-BamHI fragment from pEGFP C1 or pEGFP-FAT
(Ili
et al., 1998
) containing GFP- or GFP-FAT-coding
sequences, respectively, were inserted into the pAdlox adenoviral
shuttle vector (Hardy et al., 1997
). The viruses were
established by transfecting the ligated adenoviral genome constructs
with replication-defective
5 virus into CRE 8 cells that stably
express Cre-recombinase. Positive clones were expanded in HEK293 cells.
After recombination, plaque-purified virus (1010
plaque-forming units [pfu]/ml) was isolated and purified as described elsewhere (Hardy et al., 1997
).
Cell Culture, Transfection, Viral Infection, and CAT Assay
Primary cultures of rat ventricular cardiac myocytes from 1- to
2-d-old rats were prepared as described before
(Kova
i
-Milivojevi
et al., 1997
) and
plated on fibronectin-coated plates (10 µg/ml) in DME-H21/10% fetal
calf serum (FCS). Cells were cultured under conditions that promote a
high level of sarcomeric organization. After cells attached (~18 h),
they were rinsed twice in serum-free DME-H21 and placed in fresh
DME-H21/10% FCS. All experiments were performed 48 h postplating
unless otherwise stated. For transient transfections,
107 cells/group were resuspended in 400 µl of
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)/0.1% glucose containing 25 µg of
reporter plasmid together with varying concentrations of individual
expression vectors, as described in the figure legends. The DNA
concentration for all samples was adjusted to 40 µg with pUC18. Cells
were electroporated with the use of the Gene Pulsar (Bio-Rad, Hercules,
CA) at 280 V/250 µF. Independent measurements of transfection
efficiency, with the use of pRSV
-galactosidase, typically showed
<15% variation within a given experiment. After transfection each
group was plated onto 6-cm dishes (15 × 104
cells/cm2) in DME-H21/10% FCS. The cells were
harvested at 48 h posttransfection and the cell lysates were
assayed for CAT activity as described previously
(Kova
i
-Milivojevi
et al., 1996
). For
adenoviral infection, cells were infected with wild-type
replication-defective
5 adenovirus or with adenovirus
encoding either GFP or GFP-FAT. Infection was carried out with
~10-20 pfu/cell, either at the time of plating or after 72 h of
culture with DME-H21 containing 10% FCS. Three hours later cells were
washed with PBS and cultured in DME-H21 supplemented with 10% FCS,
glutamine, sodium pyruvate, nonessential amino acids,
10
4 M
-mercaptoethanol, and
penicillin/streptomycin for the times indicated.
Isolation of RNA and Northern Blot Analysis
Total RNA was isolated from ventricular cardiocytes with the use
of RNAzol B (Tel-Test, Friendswood, TX). Eight micrograms of
ventricular RNA was size fractionated on 1% agarose containing 2.2 M
formaldehyde, transferred by capillary action to GeneScreen Plus
Hybridization Transfer Membrane (NEN Research Products, Boston, MA) in
10× standard saline citrate (1.5 M sodium chloride and 0.15 M sodium
citrate) for 8-16 h, and fixed to the membrane by UV irradiation (DNA
transfer lamp; Fotodyne, New Berlin, WI). An 840-bp
EcoRI/HindIII fragment of rat ANP cDNA or a
640-bp EcoRI fragment of rat brain natriuretic peptide (BNP)
cDNA was labeled with [
-32P]dCTP with the
use of the random primer technique. Hybridizations were performed in
Rapid-Hyb buffer (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) according to
instructions provided by the manufacturer. Blots were later stripped
and reprobed with a radiolabeled glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase
(GAPDH) cDNA to control for differences in RNA loading and transfer
among samples.
Antibodies
To detect full-length FAK, but not FAT, we used mouse monoclonal
anti-FAK antibodies (Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY) and
rabbit or goat polyclonal A-17 antibodies (Santa Cruz Biotechnology,
Santa Cruz, CA). Full-length FAK and FAT were detected at the same time
by rabbit polyclonal JF1 antibody increased against the C-terminal part
of FAK (Ili
et al., 1995
). FAK phosphorylation on
Tyr397 was assessed with rabbit anti-phosphoY397FAK antibody (BioSource International, Camarillo, CA). Where indicated, polyclonal anti-FAK antibodies against C-terminal FAK (C-20) were also used (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology). GFP and GFP fusion proteins were detected with
monoclonal C163 anti-GFP antibody (Zymed, San Francisco, CA).
Monoclonal anti-HA (HA.11) antibody was purchased from BAbCo (Richmond,
CA), anti-paxillin was purchased from Zymed, anti-tensin was purchased
from Transduction Laboratories, anti-sarcomeric
-actinin was
purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO), anti-phosphotyrosine (4G10) was
purchased from UBI (Lake Placid, NY), and anti-
-MHC was
purchased from Chemicon International (Temecula, CA). Polyclonal anti-Src was from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. Polyclonal anti-Cas antibodies N-17 and C-20 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) were used
for immunoprecipitations and monoclonal anti-Cas (Transduction Laboratories) was used for Western blots except where indicated. All
secondary antibodies were purchased from Jackson ImmunoResearch (West
Grove, PA).
Immunoprecipitation and Western Blot Analysis
Cardiac myocytes were lysed in modified radioimmunoprecipitation
assay lysis buffer containing freshly added protease and phosphatase
inhibitors (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA, 1% Triton X-100, 1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 0.25 mM
Na3VO4, 10 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 100 mM NaF, 10 µg/ml each of leupeptin and aprotinin,
and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride). After insoluble material was
removed by centrifugation for 15 min at 15,000 × g,
lysates were precleared with 20 µl of protein G-Sepharose (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) for 30 min. For immunoprecipitation,
normalized samples (1 mg protein/0.5 ml) were incubated on a rotating
platform for 2 h at 4°C with 2-4 µg of appropriate antibodies
per sample. Immune complexes were collected after addition of 25 µl
of protein G-Sepharose beads and incubation for 45-60 min at 4°C.
The pellets were washed once with lysis buffer and three times with
buffer A (20 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% Nonidet P-40, 10%
glycerol, and 5 mM
-mercaptoethanol) before separation on 8%
SDS-PAGE gels. Precleared whole lysates were separated on 4-20%
SDS-PAGE gradient gels. Proteins were transferred from the gels to a
nitrocellulose membrane (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH). Membranes
were blocked for 2 h at room temperature with either 5% skim
milk/TBST buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween 20)
or, for anti-phosphotyrosine blots, with 5% bovine serum albumin/TBST. Membranes were exposed to primary antibodies overnight at 4°C, washed
in TBST, and exposed to horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary
antibodies in 0.5% skim milk/TBST for 1 h at room temperature. Immunoreactive bands were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). When necessary, membranes were stripped with 2% SDS in 62.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.7, in the presence of 200 mM
-mercaptoethanol (freshly added) for 60 min at 50-60°C. After overnight blockade in 1% skim milk/TBST, membranes were reblotted with
appropriate antibodies. Signals were identified and quantified with the
use of NIH Image (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD).
Immunocytochemistry
Cells were plated in DME-H21 supplemented with 10% FCS on
fibronectin-coated coverslips and, at the indicated time, fixed as
described in the figure legends. Immunocytochemistry was carried out
essentially as described by Kova
i
et al.
(1998)
. Streptavidin conjugates with fluorescein isothiocyanate and
rhodamine were purchased from Vector Laboratories (Burlingame, CA)
and Hoechst 33342 was purchased from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR).
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RESULTS |
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Cas Is Colocalized with FAK and Paxillin at Z-Lines in Cardiac Myocytes
Cas is part of the supramolecular complex that links extracellular
matrix, through integrins, to the cytoskeleton at focal adhesion sites (Polte and Hanks, 1997
; Almeida et al., 2000
;
O'Neill et al., 2000
). It has been shown that Cas plays an
important role in cardiac development and growth during embryogenesis.
Honda et al. (1998)
showed that deletion of Cas by
homologous recombination resulted in abnormal heart development and
embryonic lethality. Cas colocalizes with Z-lines in wild-type cardiac
muscle, whereas Cas-deficient cardiac muscle displays a perturbed
sarcomeric organization with severely disrupted Z-lines (Honda et
al., 1998
). In several cell types Cas is found diffusely spread
throughout the cytoplasm with only a fraction concentrated in focal
contacts (Sakai et al., 1994
; Nakamoto et al.,
1997
; Polte and Hanks, 1997
). The intracellular distribution of Cas in
primary cardiac myocytes is not known. We therefore examined the
subcellular localization of endogenous Cas in cardiac myocytes grown on
fibronectin-coated coverslips (48 h in DME-H21/10% FCS) by
immunostaining with several commercially available anti-Cas antibodies.
All showed similar highly repetitive striations resembling well-defined
structural components of the sarcomeres. Accumulations of Cas were also
detected at intercalated disks, structures involved in cell-cell
contact and organization of actin filaments in myofibrils of adjacent cells (Figure 1A, left). We used an
antibody against sarcomeric
-actinin, a protein found in the Z-lines
of the sarcomere, as well as an antibody against
-MHC, a component
of the sarcomeric A-band, to define the precise localization of Cas.
Immunostaining with these antibodies revealed a well-organized pattern
of repetitive striations for both
-MHC and
-actinin (Figure 1A,
right). Overlaying images of cells stained for Cas with those for
-MHC or
-actinin suggested that Cas is located at or very near to
the Z-line.
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Because the SH3 domain of Cas forms a high-affinity interaction with
the PR-1 domain of FAK and colocalizes with FAK at focal adhesions
(Nakamoto et al., 1997
), we asked whether Cas and FAK are
colocalized in cardiac myocytes. As expected, FAK was found in classic
focal adhesion sites at the edges of myocytes and nonmyocytes present
in the cultures (Figure 1B). FAK, like Cas, was also detected in
Z-lines and intercalated discs. Paxillin, a third component of focal
adhesion sites, was also detected in Z-lines of the myocytes (Figure
1C). Collectively, these data suggest that Z-lines may be important
signaling centers for regulating and/or coordinating the changes in
sarcomeric organization in these cells that occur during myocyte hypertrophy.
Src Substrates, Cas and FAK, Are Part of the ET- and Src-dependent Signaling Pathway That Promotes Cardiac Myocyte Hypertrophy
Tyrosine phosphorylation is a critical covalent modification
driving protein-protein interactions required for cytoskeletal reorganization and focal-adhesion assembly (Clark and Brugge, 1995
;
Giancotti and Ruoslahti, 1999
). We reported previously that ET
stimulation of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes results in increased
Src activity (Kova
i
et al., 1998
). To
determine whether the Src substrates, Cas and FAK, are part of the
ET-dependent signaling pathway, we examined tyrosine phosphorylation
levels of Cas and FAK immunoprecipitated from cardiac myocytes after stimulation with 100 nM ET. Enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas
was observed within 5 min, with increased phosphorylation (3.15-fold ± 0.95 [mean ± SD], n = 3) detected
15-30 min after addition of ET (Figure
2A). The time course of ET-induced FAK phosphorylation (2.9-fold ± 0.87, n = 3) was similar to that
of Cas phosphorylation (Figure 2B). The amount of Src present in Cas
immunoprecipitates increased after ET treatment (Figure 2A, bottom),
paralleling the increase in Cas phosphorylation levels. This
observation suggests that Src might be responsible for the increase in
Cas phosphorylation. We tested this possibility by exposing cells for
30 min to increasing concentrations of the Src-tyrosine kinase family
inhibitor PP2 (Hanke et al., 1996
). Cells were then
stimulated with ET for 15 min. Tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas
decreased in a dose-dependent manner, with substantial inhibition at 10 µM and nearly complete inhibition at 50 µM PP2. Subsequent blotting
with anti-Cas antibody demonstrated that Cas protein precipitated
equally across all lanes (Figure 2C).
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Given the evidence linking ET to activation of Src and
phosphorylation of Cas and FAK (Figure 2), we sought to determine
whether Cas is linked mechanistically to downstream markers of
hypertrophy in cardiac myocytes. To address this issue, we transiently
transfected cardiac myocytes with ANP promoter-driven CAT reporter
(
1150hANP CAT), a marker that has been shown to respond to a number
of different hypertrophic stimuli, including ET, in this in vitro model
(Shubeita et al., 1990
; Knowlton et al., 1991
).
Overexpression of Cas led to a twofold increase in
1150hANP CAT
activity, whereas overexpression of Src increased promoter activity
3.4-fold. Coexpression of Src and Cas together resulted in a sevenfold
increase in reporter activity, implying a cooperative interaction of
these two proteins in regulation of the ANP promoter (Figure
3C). To identify Cas domain(s) required
for induction of ANP promoter activity, we carried out studies with
several Cas deletion constructs. These included Cas lacking the SH3
domain (Cas
SH3), substrate domain (Cas
SD), or Src-binding domain
(Cas
Src-BD) (Figure 3, A and B). Cotransfection with Cas
SH3
resulted in a modest increase in basal
1150hANP CAT activity but had
no significant effect on Src-activated ANP promoter activity. This
suggests that endogenous Cas interacts with transfected Src in the
presence or absence of Cas
SH3. Inability of Cas
SH3 to compete
with endogenous Cas for binding to the PR-1 region of FAK suggests that
Cas
SH3 is functionally neutral in this context, neither amplifying
nor inhibiting Src-dependent activity. Expression of either Cas
SD or
Cas
Src-BD resulted in minor repression of basal ANP CAT activity and
complete inhibition of the Src-dependent induction. These results imply that both these mutants interfere with endogenous Cas, perhaps by
functioning as dominant negative mutants (e.g., by competing with
endogenous Cas for binding to the PR-1 region of FAK; Figure 3C). All
constructs were expressed at similar levels in transfected myocytes
(Figure 3B). These results support the conclusion that full Cas
function in promoting Src-stimulated activity of the ANP promoter
involves a combination of distinct interactions mediated by all three
of its major domains: the SH3-, substrate-, and Src-binding domains.
Cas deletion constructs also exhibited the same effect on ET-stimulated
reporter activity. ET treatment resulted in an approximately threefold
increase in reporter activity that was significantly reduced
(~40-50%) in the presence of Cas
SH3 or Cas
SD and completely
inhibited by cotransfection with Cas
Src-BD (Figure 3D). Furthermore,
ET treatment promoted a modest (~30%), but statistically
significant, increase in Cas-dependent activation of ANP gene promoter
activity. Taken together, these findings suggest that Cas plays an
active role in Src- and ET-dependent activation of the ANP gene
promoter. Preservation of the multiple protein interaction motifs of
Cas is required for maximal Src-dependent activity.
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Undermining FAK Function by Expressing GFP-FAT Disrupts the Changes in Cytoskeletal Architecture Associated with Myocyte Hypertrophy in Culture without Affecting Myocyte Survival
Next, we investigated whether disruption of FAK
localization and function impairs the cytoarchitecture of cardiac
myocytes undergoing hypertrophy in culture. We expressed a GFP-linked
FAT (GFP-FAT; Figure 4A)
that has been shown in several systems to displace
endogenous FAK from focal adhesion sites and to act as a
dominant-negative inhibitor of FAK function by impairing assembly of
FAK-containing molecular complexes at focal adhesion sites (Gervais
et al., 1998
; Ili
et al., 1998
; Xu
et al., 1998
; Shen and Schaller, 1999
; Almeida et
al., 2000
). Because this dominant-negative strategy requires a
high percentage of FAT-expressing cells to observe changes in FAK
signaling at a biochemical level, we generated replication-defective
adenovirus encoding GFP-FAT or GFP alone. GFP and GFP-FAT were
efficiently expressed in ~90% of cardiac myocytes <12 h after
infection. At that time, GFP was uniformly distributed
throughout the cytoplasm and nucleus, whereas GFP-FAT distribution,
like that of endogenous FAK, was detected primarily at Z-lines,
colocalizing with
-actinin immunoreactivity (Figure 4B). GFP-FAT was
also found in granular material that was rich in
-actinin. Because
physical interactions between the C-terminal domain of FAK and proteins
such as paxillin promote the targeting of FAK to focal contact sites
(Tachibana et al., 1995
; Brown et al., 1996
;
Turner, 1998
), we assessed the association of endogenous FAK with
paxillin to determine whether expression of GFP-FAT had disrupted
endogenous FAK function. Extracts from uninfected cells or
GFP-FAT-infected cells were immunoprecipitated with antibody against
paxillin and examined for the presence of FAK. Paxillin-FAK complex
formation was completely inhibited in GFP-FAT-expressing cells (Figure
4C).
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We then determined how expression of GFP-FAT affected the development of the hypertrophic phenotype in cultured cardiac myocytes. Uninfected (control), GFP-, and GFP-FAT-infected cardiac myocytes were examined over a period spanning 24-72 h after plating (Figure 4D). At 24 h, cells in all three cultures displayed a similar spindle or triangular shape, without obvious differences in size (Figure 4D, left). After 48 h (Figure 4D, middle), uninfected and GFP-infected cells were larger and fully spread on the culture surface and had started grouping together. At the same time, GFP-FAT-infected cardiac myocytes were much smaller than the uninfected cells. Cell aggregates were also smaller and sparser, consisting of only two to four cells/group. This difference was particularly striking 72 h after infection (Figure 4D, right). Uninfected and GFP-infected cardiac myocytes appeared similar and formed an almost continuous layer of myocytes with myofibrils of adjacent spindle-shaped cells aligned across cell boundaries. In contrast, almost all GFP-FAT-infected cells remained triangular in shape and small, and they formed only poorly organized cell aggregates. The GFP-FAT construct was expressed at similar or lower levels than GFP in infected myocyte cultures, indicating that the process of infection or production of protein per se did not trigger the suppression of the hypertrophic response observed in the GFP-FAT-infected cells (Figure 4E). Furthermore, expression of GFP or GFP-FAT appeared to have no significant effect on endogenous FAK levels (Figure 4E).
Disruption of cytoskeletal structure may promote cell death in
anchorage-dependent cells. Moreover, GFP-FAT expression reportedly leads to a high level of apoptosis in cultures of adhesion-dependent cells when serum is withdrawn (Ili
et al., 1998
;
Almeida et al., 2000
). Therefore, it was important to assess
whether expression of GFP-FAT in cardiac myocytes affected their
survival, even though serum as well as fibronectin was always present.
First, we assessed the integrity of nuclear structure after staining
with Hoechst 33342. The percentage of cells that contained
condensed/fragmented nuclei was determined as the apoptotic index for
each culture. By 48 h after plating on fibronectin in the presence
of serum, uninfected, GFP- and GFP-FAT-infected cultures of cardiac
myocytes all displayed a similar 10-20% level of apoptotic cells
(Figure 4F). Next, we assessed the ability of unfixed GFP and
GFP-FAT-infected cardiac myocytes to bind biotinylated annexin
(annexin v-biotin) (Martin et al., 1995
). The level of
apoptosis was 10-20% in this assay as well, thereby confirming
by a different method that expression of GFP and displacement of FAK by
GFP-FAT do not influence survival of cardiac myocytes in these
serum-containing cultures. However, when cells were plated on
fibronectin in the absence of serum, ~85% of the cardiac myocytes
expressing GFP-FAT displayed signs of apoptosis only 16 h after
plating. At later times GFP-FAT expression led to cell rounding and
detachment. Under the same serum-free conditions, uninfected and
GFP-infected cells showed a low level of apoptosis (~15-25%)
similar to the levels found for cultures grown on fibronectin in the
presence of serum (Figure 4F).
FAK Plays a Key Role in the Assembly of Sarcomeric Structures in Cardiac Myocytes
To understand the effects of GFP-FAT on cytoskeletal and
sarcomeric architecture at the subcellular level, we examined Z-lines, sarcomeres, and focal adhesions of GFP-FAT-infected cells at higher magnification over the same 24- to 72-h time period (Figure
5). Because there was no obvious
difference between uninfected and GFP-infected cardiac myocytes (Figure
4C), we present comparisons only between uninfected and
GFP-FAT-infected cells (Figure 5). By 24 h the Z-line marker
-actinin was found in Z-lines, as well as in numerous granular
structures, in both uninfected and GFP-FAT-infected cells. At 48 h Z-lines were still detectable by anti-
-actinin staining in
GFP-FAT-infected cells, but by 72 h most
-actinin was
diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm or concentrated in dense
granules. Immunostaining for cardiac-specific
-MHC revealed well-organized repetitive A-bands in uninfected cells. In
GFP-FAT-infected cells, myofibrils and A-bands became disordered with
kinetics similar to those observed for the disappearance of Z-lines. We also used tensin as a marker for focal adhesions (Lo et al.,
1994
). In uninfected cardiac myocytes, tensin staining was detected not only in "classic" focal adhesions and fibrillar adhesions at the periphery of myocytes but also at Z-lines in a pattern that resembled the distribution of FAK and Cas. Between 24 and 48 h,
GFP-FAT-infected cells began to show less pronounced tensin staining
in focal adhesions, and myocytes lost the Z-line-like tensin staining
pattern. Collectively, these observations strongly support the idea
that correct localization of FAK in Z-lines and in focal adhesions is
required for proper sarcomeric organization in myocytes undergoing
hypertrophy.
|
FAK-mediated Signaling Is Involved in ET-dependent Tyrosine Phosphorylation of Cas
Having shown that GFP-FAT both undermined endogenous FAK
function, as assessed by FAK's ability to bind paxillin (Figure 4C), and interfered with sarcomeric assembly associated with hypertrophy (Figure 5), we investigated the effect of disrupting FAK function on
ET-dependent phosphorylation of FAK and Cas. Cardiac myocytes were
infected with GFP or GFP-FAT and treated with 100 nM ET (15 min)
48 h postinfection. GFP-FAT inhibited both basal and ET-stimulated phosphorylation of endogenous FAK at Tyr397, as compared with uninfected and GFP-infected cells (Figure
6A). Subsequent blotting with anti-FAK
antibody demonstrated that FAK was present at similar levels in all
samples. Similar immunoprecipitation experiments were then performed to
examine the effect of FAT overexpression on ET-dependent Cas
phosphorylation. GFP-FAT almost completely inhibited basal and
ET-dependent phosphorylation of Cas compared with uninfected or
GFP-infected myocytes. Again, Cas levels were similar in all
immunoprecipitates (Figure 6B). Both GFP and GFP-FAT were expressed at
similar levels and did not alter the expression of endogenous FAK
(Figure 6C). Taken together, these results indicate that disruption of
FAK function in cardiac myocytes interferes effectively with
phosphorylation of Cas.
|
FAK Plays a Key Role in Regulation of ANP Gene Expression
To further define the role that FAK plays in the hypertrophic
response, we examined the effect of overexpressing either full-length FAK or the dominant-negative FAK construct GFP-FAT on expression of
genes associated with hypertrophy. Myocytes were infected with GFP- or
GFP-FAT-expressing adenovirus for 24 h and then treated with 100 nM ET for an additional 24 h. RNA was isolated and analyzed by
Northern blot hybridization for expression of the hypertrophic marker
genes ANP and BNP. As expected, ET promoted a strong increase in ANP
and BNP mRNA levels in control cells. Infection of myocytes with
GFP-FAT resulted in significant inhibition of both basal and
ET-stimulated expression of ANP and BNP mRNA (Figure
7A). To confirm that the inhibition of
ANP and BNP gene expression was not a consequence of adenoviral
infection or expression of GFP, we examined expression of the ANP
transcript in the presence of an increasing number of GFP-expressing
adenovirus pfu per cell. Results presented in Figure 7B indicate that
infection with adenovirus encoding GFP did not interfere with the
expression of the ANP gene or that of a housekeeping gene encoding
GAPDH. Taken together, these data implicate FAK in the regulation of
these hypertrophic marker genes. To extrapolate this finding to the
level of transcription, we examined the effect of GFP-FAT
overexpression on hANP gene promoter activity in a transient
transfection assay. Cotransfection of
1150hANP CAT with increasing
concentrations (0.1-20 µg) of expression vector encoding wild-type
FAK did not significantly alter basal activity of the reporter
(1.6 ± 0.38; Figure 7C). However, expression of FAT resulted in
almost complete inhibition of promoter activity, implying that the
effects on steady state transcript levels noted above are derived, at
least in part, from reduced transcriptional activity.
|
Interaction Between Cas and FAK Plays a Critical Role in Sarcomeric Assembly in Cardiac Myocytes
To perturb the function of FAK in a different way and to determine
whether association of Cas with FAK is critical for proper Z-line
formation and sarcomeric organization in cardiac myocytes, we expressed
the small fragment of FAK (residues 638-841), C-terminal to the kinase
domain and N-terminal to the FAT domain, that contains PR-1. This
PR-1-containing FAK fragment, which we named hunter, for hunting Cas
protein, was expressed as a GFP-tagged protein (Figure
8A). It has been clearly shown that the
SH3 domain of Cas binds preferentially and with high affinity to the
PR-1 region of FAK (Polte and Hanks, 1995
). Therefore, the hunter
fragment of FAK should act as a sink for Cas and other proteins that
would ordinarily bind to the PR-1 region of endogenous FAK.
|
GFP-hunter was introduced into cardiac myocytes either by
adenovirus infection or by transient transfection. First, we examined the effect of GFP-hunter overexpression on cardiac myocyte
cytoarchitecture. Cardiac myocytes were plated on fibronectin in the
presence of serum and at high density, conditions that promote rapid
myofibrillar organization. GFP-hunter expression was easily detected as
early as 12 h postplating. At 24 h the distribution of
the GFP-hunter fusion protein resembled that of endogenous Cas and FAK
(Figure 1, A and B). Thus, it was detected primarily at Z-lines,
colocalizing with
-actinin immunoreactivity (Figure 8B)
To investigate the effects of GFP-hunter expression on sarcomeric
cytoarchitecture at the subcellular level, we examined Z-lines in
GFP-hunter-infected cells over a 24- to 72-h period. By 24 h, the
Z-line marker
-actinin was found in organized repetitive Z-lines in
both uninfected and GFP-hunter-infected cells (Figure 8C, left). At
48 h, Z-lines were still detectable by
-actinin staining in the
GFP-hunter-infected cells (arrowheads in Figure 8C, middle), but by
72 h most of the
-actinin staining was diffusely distributed in
the cytoplasm or in numerous cable-like structures (arrowheads in
Figure 8C, right). At the same time, staining of uninfected cells in
the same culture revealed a high content of well-organized sarcomeric
units. In a series of three experiments >1000 cells were examined over
the period spanning 24-72 h to quantify the effects of GFP-hunter
expression. Infected cells displayed three distinct phenotypic patterns
with regard to the organization of their sarcomeric units (Figure 8D).
At 24 h postplating, ~ 45% of cells displayed typical
sarcomeric organization throughout the entire cellular compartment;
~25% of hunter-positive cells showed partial and discontinuous
staining pattern of
-actinin; the remaining GFP-hunter-infected
cells showed very limited staining for
-actinin. By 48 h, the
population of cells that displayed highly organized myofibrils with
well-organized sarcomeres dropped to 10%, whereas the percentage of
cells containing low-level sarcomeric organization increased to 60%.
The remainder (~30%) displayed a nearly complete loss of sarcomeric
organization. By 72 h, ~90% of the cells infected with
GFP-hunter displayed severely defective sarcomeric organization. About
half of these cells showed complete loss of sarcomeres in the cytosolic
compartment, whereas the other half displayed only a very low number of
sarcomeric units still present in the cell. The remaining 10% of the
GFP-hunter-infected cells displayed well-organized myofibrils. These
observations strongly support the idea that the interaction of the SH3
domain of Cas with PR-1 of FAK plays a critical role in the formation of Z-lines and assembly of sarcomeric units in the cardiac myocytes.
Expression of GFP-Hunter Inhibits ET- and Cas-stimulated ANP Gene Expression
Next, we examined the effect of GFP-hunter on regulation of ANP
gene expression in cardiac myocytes undergoing hypertrophy. Uninfected
and GFP-hunter-infected cardiac myocytes were plated for 24 h and
then treated with ET for an additional 24 h. RNA was isolated and
analyzed by Northern blot hybridization. As expected, ET stimulation
resulted in a strong increase in ANP mRNA levels in uninfected cells.
Expression of GFP-hunter resulted in almost complete inhibition of
basal as well as ET-stimulated expression of ANP mRNA (Figure
8E). To extrapolate this finding to the level of transcription, we
examined the effect of GFP-hunter expression on hANP gene promoter
activity. Cotransfection of
1150hANP CAT with 1 or 5 µg of a
full-length Cas-containing expression vector led to an approximately
twofold increase when compared with the basal activity of the
1150hANP CAT promoter (Figure 8F). Addition of increasing
concentrations (0.5-10 µg) of the GFP-hunter expression vector
resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of both basal and Cas-stimulated CAT activity, implying that the observed reduction in
ANP transcript levels is derived, at least in part, from suppressed transcriptional activity.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Protein phosphorylation plays a central role in the regulation of
many cellular events, including growth and cell division, and it is
widely believed that these processes participate in myocyte hypertrophy
(Sugden and Clerk, 1998
; Clerk and Sugden, 1999
). Previously we
demonstrated that ET-dependent activation of Src kinase leads to
initiation of the hypertrophic program in cardiac myocytes
(Kova
i
et al., 1998
). The present study shows
that FAK and Cas play an important role in integrating the cellular
signaling machinery that controls the enhanced sarcomeric organization
and gene expression program associated with hypertrophy. Our data
suggest several conclusions: 1) stimulation of cardiac myocytes with
the hypertrophic agonist ET results in increased tyrosine
phosphorylation of Cas and FAK; 2) Cas, FAK, paxillin, and tensin all
localize to sarcomeric Z-lines, implying that these structures
represent important sites of biochemical signal transduction in the
cardiac myocyte; 3) introduction into cultured myocytes of GFP-FAT, a
dominant-negative C-terminal fragment of FAK required for the proper
targeting of FAK, inhibits ET-dependent phosphorylation of Cas and FAK.
Furthermore, expression of either GFP-FAT or GFP-hunter fragment, which
encodes the isolated Cas-binding region of FAK, promotes
disorganization of sarcomeres and disruption of sarcomeric Z-lines; 4)
both Cas and FAK are also involved, directly or indirectly, in
promoting expression of the hypertrophic response genes, ANP and BNP.
Thus, ectopic expression of wild-type but not mutant Cas amplified the
ET- and Src-dependent stimulation of ANP promoter activity, whereas
expression of dominant-negative FAT or the GFP-hunter construct almost
completely abrogated ANP gene promoter activity and expression of the
endogenous ANP gene. Collectively, these findings implicate Cas and FAK
as key players in regulating both the increased sarcomeric organization
and the gene expression program associated with cardiac myocyte hypertrophy.
Functional and Structural Similarities of Focal Adhesions and Cardiac Myocyte Z-Lines
One of the hallmarks of myocyte hypertrophy is an increase in
sarcomeric organization (Hunter and Chien, 1999
). Previous studies have
shown that phenylephrine, ET, and AngII each induce sarcomeric assembly in cultured cardiac myocytes within 0.5-4 h after agonist stimulation (Aoki et al., 1998
, 2000
; Clerk et
al., 1998
). Thus, the rapid (2-5 min) ET-induced phosphorylation
of Cas, FAK, and Src (Kova
i
et al., 1998
) must
precede sarcomeric assembly and may represent the primary stimulus for
Z-line organization. Recruitment of three important components of the
focal adhesion assembly (i.e., Cas, FAK, and paxillin), and possibly
Src as well (Kova
i
et al., 1998
), to the
Z-line complex in cardiac myocytes highlights an unexpected functional
similarity between these two structures, as proposed first by Brugge
(1998)
. This conclusion has intriguing implications. It implies that
the Z-line represents a site of signal transduction involving
Cas-FAK-paxillin-containing complexes that may participate in the
control of contractile and/or hypertrophic responses of the myocyte. It
is important to recall that tubular invaginations of sarcolemmal
membranes (i.e., costameres) are located at the level of the Z-lines
(Terracio et al., 1989
). These inward extensions of
extracellular space couple cellular excitation to contraction and may
provide a venue for FAK-Cas-paxillin activation by signaling molecules
present in the extracellular space. The Z-line-associated complexes
are also ideally positioned for regulation of sarcomeric contractile
force, cytoskeletal organization, and transduction of signals from
extracellular matrix to the cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments,
functions that are analogous to those largely subserved by focal
adhesion sites in other cell types. This raises the intriguing
possibility that these complexes may serve as regulatory control
centers in the myocytes, sensing and integrating biochemical and
mechanical signals that ultimately lead to downstream changes in gene
expression and sarcomeric organization.
What Role Does the FAK-Cas-Src Complex Play in Sarcomeric Organization?
Our studies of myocytes infected with the dominant-negative mutant
GFP-FAT indicate that FAK plays a critical role in the regulation of
myocyte growth and sarcomeric assembly. Sarcomeric disorder in
FAT-expressing myocytes may result from blockade of nascent myofilament
assembly. Alternatively, it could arise from disruption of preexisting
sarcomeric units. Neonatal cardiac myocytes adhere within 3 h to
the surface of a fibronectin matrix. In the presence of 10%
FCS, cells maintain morphological features characteristic of intact
myocytes. They resume spontaneous rhythmic beating within 12-18 h and
enlarge to two to three times the original cell volume within 72 h
of culture. The enlarging cells seek contact with one another and
eventually form a confluent two-dimensional layer that beats
spontaneously and in a synchronous manner. By comparison, GFP-FAT-infected cells, although able to attach to the matrix, preserve none of the properties mentioned above. Immunocytochemical analysis demonstrated that the earliest detectable structural response
to GFP-FAT expression was seen within the
-actinin component of the
Z-lines. Loss of
-actinin from Z-lines was observed as early as
24 h after infection. At that point sarcomeric proteins such as
MHC were still retained in an organized array. After longer periods of
GFP-FAT expression, we observed the dissociation of
-MHC from
sarcomeres together with a general deterioration of Z-lines and
sarcomeric structure. We propose that targeting FAT to the site of the
FAK/Cas-containing Z-line-signaling complex triggers conformational
changes, which, in turn, perturbs sarcomeric assembly in the myocyte.
Because focal adhesion sites also appear to be altered in cells
expressing GFP-FAT (see especially the loss of tensin in Figure 5), it
is possible that disruption of signals from focal adhesions also
contributes to the disassembly of cytoarchitecture and the gene
expression program. Further studies will be needed to clarify their
particular contribution.
We have shown here that FAK plays an important role in linking
hypertrophic stimuli to the cellular machinery that promotes sarcomeric
assembly in cardiac myocytes undergoing hypertrophy. Codistribution of
FAK with several important signaling molecules (e.g., Cas, paxillin,
and tensin) at sarcomeric Z-lines suggests that these proteins form
physical and/or functional associations during Z-line assembly. This is
further supported by the observed disruption of the interaction of FAK
with paxillin by GFP-FAT. In addition, changes in phosphorylation
status of Cas and FAK that are consistently seen after ET stimulation
were abolished after infection with GFP-FAT (Figure 6). Finally,
titration of Cas with GFP-hunter resulted in significant disruption of
sarcomeric organization, implying that Cas itself plays a key role in
supporting this process. Progressive assembly of paxillin, Cas, FAK,
and other proteins, possibly including a newly described focal contact and Z-line-associated protein, paladin (Parasat and Otey, 2000
), in
the Z-line complex appears to be required to establish both functional
and structural competence in this subcellular structure.
Several intracellular signaling molecules have been proposed to mediate
sarcomeric organization. These include the small G-proteins Ras
(Thorburn et al., 1993
), Rac (Pracyk et al.,
1998
; Sussman et al., 2000
), and Rho (Hoshijima et
al., 1998
), members of the extended MAP kinase family (Clerk
et al., 1998
; Clerk and Sugden, 1999
), as well as myosin
light chain kinase (Aoki et al., 2000
). Overexpression of
constitutively active forms of Ras, Rho, and Rac has been shown to
mediate both increased sarcomeric organization and increased gene
expression after exposure to hypertrophic stimuli (Pracyk et
al., 1998
). Studies in other systems have documented functional
interactions of a number of these signaling molecules with FAK and/or
Cas (Schlaepfer et al., 1999
, and references therein; O'Neill et al., 2000
). Dissection of these functional
interactions should now be feasible with the use of Cas or FAK mutant
constructs that are selectively impaired in each of these signal
transduction pathways
Does FAK or Cas Play a Critical Role in Sarcomeric Assembly and Activation of Hypertrophy-dependent Gene Expression In Vivo?
A conditional knock-out of cardiac FAK or Cas in adult heart
would be required to address the in vivo relevance of our findings. However, several pieces of data are consistent with our in vitro conclusions. Deletion of Cas by homologous recombination results in
embryonic lethality, with Cas-deficient embryos showing marked systemic
congestion and growth retardation (Honda et al., 1998
). Histological examination of hearts from these embryos revealed poorly
developed myocardia accompanied by disorganized myofibrils and
disrupted Z-lines, a phenotype similar to that seen after FAT or hunter
expression in our in vitro system.
Activation of FAK and its association with Cas and Src appears to be
necessary for the generation of ET-dependent hypertrophy in vitro. ET
increases phosphorylation of FAK and Cas in cultured myocytes (see
Figures 1 and 3). AngII (Eble et al., 1999
), phenylephrine (Taylor et al., 2000
), hypoxia (Seko et al.,
1999a
), and mechanical stretch (Seko et al., 1999b
) also
enhance tyrosine phosphorylation of FAK in cardiac myocytes.
Collectively, these data suggest that activation of FAK and its
assembly into a complex with Cas may be a shared requirement for
activation of the hypertrophy program. In vivo support for this model
comes from the studies of Kuppuswamy et al. (1997)
who
demonstrated association of tyrosine-phosphorylated Src, FAK, and
3-integrin with cytoskeletal
structures in a pressure overload model of right ventricular
hypertrophy. More recently they extended these studies by demonstrating
association of the adapter proteins Cas, Shc, and Nck with cytoskeletal
structures in the same animal model of hypertrophy (Laser et
al., 2000
). Additional studies are needed to characterize the
intermediate signaling pathways positioned downstream of the
FAK-Cas-paxillin complex. Their identification should be of assistance
in establishing the molecular mechanisms that promote individual
components of the hypertrophic phenotype.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Drs. Hisamaru Hirai, Tetsuya Nakamoto, and Christopher Turner for providing useful plasmids. We also thank Evangeline Leash for expert editorial assistance. This work was supported in part by HL 35753 and American Heart Association grant-in-aid 9950062N to D.G.G. and American Heart Association grant-in-aid 9650083N to C.H.D. D.I. was supported by a National Cancer Institute Howard Temin Award (KO1 CA87652-01), and E.A.C.A. was supported by National Institutes of Health grant T32-DE07204.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
branka{at}itsa.ucsf.edu.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used:
Ang II, angiotensin II;
ANP, atrial
natriuretic peptide;
BNP, brain natriuretic peptide;
-MHC,
-myosin heavy chain;
CAT, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase;
Cas, p130Cas;
ET, endothelin;
FAK, focal adhesion kinase;
FAT, focal
adhesion targeting domain;
FCS, fetal calf serum;
GAPDH, glyceraldehyde
phosphate dehydrogenase;
GFP, green fluorescent protein;
HA, hemagglutinin;
MAP, mitogen-activated protein;
PBS, phosphate-buffered
saline;
PR-1, proline rich region-1;
Pfu, plaque-forming units.