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Circulation Research. 2003;93:998-1005
Published online before print October 23, 2003, doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000102401.77712.ED
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(Circulation Research. 2003;93:998.)
© 2003 American Heart Association, Inc.


Integrative Physiology

{alpha}B-Crystallin Modulates Protein Aggregation of Abnormal Desmin

Xuejun Wang, Raisa Klevitsky, Wei Huang, Joseph Glasford, Faqian Li, Jeffrey Robbins

From the Division of Molecular Cardiovascular Biology (X.W., R.K., J.R.), Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Cardiovascular Research Institute and Division of Basic Biomedical Sciences (X.W., W.H., J.G., F.L.), University of South Dakota School of Medicine, Sioux Falls, SD.

Correspondence to Xuejun Wang, MD, PhD, Cardiovascular Research Institute/Division of Basic Medical Sciences, University of South Dakota School of Medicine, 1400 W. 22nd St, Sioux Falls, SD 57105. E-mail xwang{at}usd.edu

{alpha}B-crystallin (CryAB) is the most abundant small heat shock protein in the heart. Upregulation of CryAB in desmin-related myopathy and its downregulation in end-stage congestive heart failure have both been reported. We previously demonstrated via cardiac-specific transgenesis that modest increases in normal CryAB are not detrimental to the heart, whereas expression of the R120G mutation of CryAB caused a desminopathy. It is generally believed that CryAB plays an important role in protecting the intermediate filaments, but the underlying mechanism is unclear. We hypothesized that CryAB protects the desmin filaments via preventing abnormal desmin protein from aggregating adversely. To test this hypothesis in vivo, mice expressing a desmin mutation that causes a desmin-related cardiomyopathy (D7) were bred into the R120G-CryAB transgenic (TG) background to examine the accumulation and aberrant aggregation of desmin protein. Despite lower mRNA expression of D7-des than in the D7-des TG hearts, the double-TG myocardium exhibited significantly higher desmin protein levels and dramatically more aberrant desmin aggregates than the D7-des TG hearts. The double-TG mice displayed a significantly stronger cardiac hypertrophic response, with the mice dying of congestive heart failure before 7 weeks. To explore the ability of wild-type (WT) CryAB to protect against mutant desmin, a desmin mutant was expressed in both the conventional and WT-CryAB stably transfected HEK cells. Significantly less aberrant desmin aggregation was observed in the WT-CryAB–overexpressing cells than in the HEK cells. The results suggest that CryAB modulates abnormal desmin aggregation and can serve a cardioprotective role.


Key Words: small heat shock protein • protein aggregation • protein degradation • molecular chaperone • transgenic mice




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