TY - JOUR T1 - Cyclic AMP-dependent phosphodiesterase isozyme-specific potentiation by protein kinase C in hypertrophic cardiomyopathic hamster hearts. JF - Molecular Pharmacology JO - Mol Pharmacol SP - 549 LP - 555 VL - 50 IS - 3 AU - H Yu AU - J J Cai AU - H C Lee Y1 - 1996/09/01 UR - http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/50/3/549.abstract N2 - We recently reported that protein kinase C (PKC) potentiates cAMP-dependent phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity in Syrian hamster hearts with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) but not in control hamster hearts. In this study, we examined the mechanism of this PKC/PDE interaction by identifying the PDE isozyme that is the target of PKC modulation. Using Mono-Q high performance liquid chromatography, both control and HCM hamster cardiac PDE could be partially purified into the calcium/calmodulin-dependent (I), the cGMP-stimulated (II), and the low KM (III) isozyme fractions. The elution profiles of PDE isozyme fractions were similar to those in isolated hamster cardiac myocytes. The percentages of PDE isozymes activities (I/II/III) were 68.8:22.4:8.8% and 51.1:38.4:10.5% for HCM and control hearts, respectively (n = 4), suggesting a change in the quantitative expression of isozymes activities in HCM hearts with a significant increase in the calcium/calmodulin-dependent PDE isozyme activities (p < 0.05 compared with control). The addition of exogenous PKC (100 munits of rat brain) produced a 60% stimulation in the calcium/calmodulin-dependent PDE isozyme fraction but not in other PDE isozymes of HCM and in none of the isozymes in control hearts. This PKC-mediated potentiation of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent PDE activity was completely blocked by the PKC-specific peptide inhibitor PKC(19-31). Analysis of enzymatic kinetics showed that PKC enhanced the calcium/calmodulin-dependent PDE isozyme activity in HCM by increasing its Vmax (from 350 pmol/mg/min at baseline to 758 pmol/min/mg with PKC) without changing its KM (0.69 microM at baseline versus 0.89 microM with PKC). These results suggest that there are both quantitative and qualitative abnormalities in the expression of the calcium/ calmodulin-dependent PDE isozyme in HCM hearts and that the PKC modulation of PDE activity in the HCM heart is isozyme specific. ER -