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1 Case Western Reserve University
2 University of Wurzburg
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robert.harvey{at}case.edu.
In cardiac myocytes there is evidence that activation of some receptors can regulate protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent responses by stimulating cAMP production that is limited to discrete intracellular domains. We previously developed a computational model of compartmentalized cAMP signaling to investigate the feasibility of this idea. The model was able to reproduce experimental results demonstrating that both
1-adrenergic and M2 muscarinic receptor mediated cAMP changes occur in microdomains associated with PKA-signaling. However, the model also suggested that the cAMP concentration throughout most of the cell could be significantly higher than that found in PKA-signaling domains. The present study tested this counterintuitive hypothesis using a freely diffusible FRET-based biosensor constructed from the type 2 exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac2-camps). It was determined that in adult ventricular myocytes the basal cAMP concentration detected by the probe is ~1.2 µM, which is high enough to maximally activate PKA. Furthermore, the probe detected responses produced by both
1 and M2 receptor activation. Modeling suggests that responses detected by Epac2-camps mainly reflect what is happening in a bulk cytosolic compartment with little contribution from microdomains where PKA signaling occurs. These results support the conclusion that even though
1 and M2 receptor activation can produce global changes in cAMP, compartmentation plays an important role by maintaining microdomains where cAMP levels are significantly below that found throughout most of the cell. This allows receptor stimulation to regulate cAMP activity over concentration ranges appropriate for modulating both higher affinity (PKA) and lower affinity (Epac) effectors.
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