Rationale: The L-type calcium channels (LTCC) are critical for maintaining Ca(2+)-homeostasis. In heterologous expression studies, the RGK-class of Ras-related G-proteins regulates LTCC function; however, the physiological relevance of RGK-LTCC interactions is untested.
Objective: In this report we test the hypothesis that the RGK protein, Rem, modulates native Ca(2+) current (I(Ca,L)) via LTCC in murine cardiomyocytes.
Methods and results: Rem knockout mice (Rem(-/-)) were engineered, and I(Ca,L) and Ca(2+) -handling properties were assessed. Rem(-/-) ventricular cardiomyocytes displayed increased I(Ca,L) density. I(Ca,L) activation was shifted positive on the voltage axis, and β-adrenergic stimulation normalized this shift compared with wild-type I(Ca,L). Current kinetics, steady-state inactivation, and facilitation was unaffected by Rem(-/-) . Cell shortening was not significantly different. Increased I(Ca,L) density in the absence of frank phenotypic differences motivated us to explore putative compensatory mechanisms. Despite the larger I(Ca,L) density, Rem(-/-) cardiomyocyte Ca(2+) twitch transient amplitude was significantly less than that compared with wild type. Computer simulations and immunoblot analysis suggests that relative dephosphorylation of Rem(-/-) LTCC can account for the paradoxical decrease of Ca(2+) transients.
Conclusions: This is the first demonstration that loss of an RGK protein influences I(Ca,L) in vivo in cardiac myocytes.