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Dive into the research topics where Michael S. Kapiloff is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael S. Kapiloff.


Nature | 2005

The protein kinase A anchoring protein mAKAP coordinates two integrated cAMP effector pathways.

Kimberly L. Dodge-Kafka; Joseph Soughayer; Genevieve C. Pare; Jennifer J. Carlisle Michel; Lorene K. Langeberg; Michael S. Kapiloff; John D. Scott

Cyclic adenosine 3′, 5′-monophosphate (cAMP) is a ubiquitous mediator of intracellular signalling events. It acts principally through stimulation of cAMP-dependent protein kinases (PKAs) but also activates certain ion channels and guanine nucleotide exchange factors (Epacs). Metabolism of cAMP is catalysed by phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Here we identify a cAMP-responsive signalling complex maintained by the muscle-specific A-kinase anchoring protein (mAKAP) that includes PKA, PDE4D3 and Epac1. These intermolecular interactions facilitate the dissemination of distinct cAMP signals through each effector protein. Anchored PKA stimulates PDE4D3 to reduce local cAMP concentrations, whereas an mAKAP-associated ERK5 kinase module suppresses PDE4D3. PDE4D3 also functions as an adaptor protein that recruits Epac1, an exchange factor for the small GTPase Rap1, to enable cAMP-dependent attenuation of ERK5. Pharmacological and molecular manipulations of the mAKAP complex show that anchored ERK5 can induce cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Thus, two coupled cAMP-dependent feedback loops are coordinated within the context of the mAKAP complex, suggesting that local control of cAMP signalling by AKAP proteins is more intricate than previously appreciated.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

mAKAP assembles a protein kinase A/PDE4 phosphodiesterase cAMP signaling module

Kimberly L. Dodge; Samone Khouangsathiene; Michael S. Kapiloff; Robert Mouton; Elaine V. Hill; Miles D. Houslay; Lorene K. Langeberg; John D. Scott

Spatiotemporal regulation of protein kinase A (PKA) activity involves the manipulation of compartmentalized cAMP pools. Now we demonstrate that the muscle‐selective A‐kinase anchoring protein, mAKAP, maintains a cAMP signaling module, including PKA and the rolipram‐inhibited cAMP‐specific phosphodiesterase (PDE4D3) in heart tissues. Functional analyses indicate that tonic PDE4D3 activity reduces the activity of the anchored PKA holoenzyme, whereas kinase activation stimulates mAKAP‐associated phosphodiesterase activity. Disruption of PKA–mAKAP interaction prevents this enhancement of PDE4D3 activity, suggesting that the proximity of both enzymes in the mAKAP signaling complex forms a negative feedback loop to restore basal cAMP levels.


Cell | 1990

The POU-specific domain of Pit-1 is essential for sequence-specific, high affinity DNA binding and DNA-dependent Pit-1-Pit-1 interactions.

Holly A. Ingraham; Sarah E. Flynn; Jeffrey W. Voss; Vivian R. Albert; Michael S. Kapiloff; Laura Wilson; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Pit-1 is a member of a family of transcription factors sharing two regions of homology: a highly conserved POU-specific (POUS) domain and a more divergent homeodomain (POUHD). Analysis of mutant Pit-1 proteins suggests that, while the POUHD is required and sufficient for low affinity DNA binding, the POUS domain is necessary for high affinity binding and accurate recognition of natural Pit-1 response elements. Pit-1 is monomeric in solution but associates as a dimer on its DNA response element, exhibiting DNA-dependent protein-protein interactions requiring the POUS domain. Analysis of alpha-helical domains and conserved structures in Pit-1 suggests that POU domain proteins interact with their DNA recognition sites differently than classic homeodomain proteins, with both the POUHD and the POUS domain contacting DNA. Transcriptional activity of Pit-1 on enhancer elements is conferred primarily by a Ser- and Thr-rich N-terminal region unrelated to other known transcription-activating motifs.


Neuron | 1989

Expression of a multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and mutational analysis of its autoregulation

Phyllis I. Hanson; Michael S. Kapiloff; Lillian L. Lou; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Howard Schulman

Autophosphorylation of multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase converts it from a Ca2(+)-dependent to a Ca2(+)-independent or autonomous kinase, a process that may underlie some long-term enhancement of transient Ca2+ signals. We demonstrate that the neuronal alpha subunit clone expressed in COS-7 cells (alpha-CaM kinase) is sufficient to encode the regulatory phenomena characteristic of the multisubunit kinase isolated from brain. Activity of alpha-CaM kinase is highly dependent on Ca2+/calmodulin. It is converted by autophosphorylation to an enzyme capable of Ca2(+)-independent (autonomous) substrate phosphorylation and autophosphorylation. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we separately eliminate five putative autophosphorylation sites within the regulatory domain and directly examine their individual roles. Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase activity is fully retained by each mutant, but Thr286 is unique among the sites in being indispensable for generation of an autonomous kinase.


Journal of Cell Science | 2005

The mAKAP complex participates in the induction of cardiac myocyte hypertrophy by adrenergic receptor signaling.

Genevieve C. Pare; Andrea L. Bauman; Molly McHenry; Jennifer J. Carlisle Michel; Kimberly L. Dodge-Kafka; Michael S. Kapiloff

Maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy can progress to congestive heart failure, a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. A better understanding of the intracellular signal transduction network that controls myocyte cell growth may suggest new therapeutic directions. mAKAP is a scaffold protein that has recently been shown to coordinate signal transduction enzymes important for cytokine-induced cardiac hypertrophy. We now extend this observation and show mAKAP is important for adrenergic-mediated hypertrophy. One function of the mAKAP complex is to facilitate cAMP-dependent protein kinase A-catalyzed phosphorylation of the ryanodine receptor Ca2+-release channel. Experiments utilizing inhibition of the ryanodine receptor, RNA interference of mAKAP expression and replacement of endogenous mAKAP with a mutant form that does not bind to protein kinase A demonstrate that the mAKAP complex contributes to pro-hypertrophic signaling. Further, we show that calcineurin Aβ associates with mAKAP and that the formation of the mAKAP complex is required for the full activation of the pro-hypertrophic transcription factor NFATc. These data reveal a novel function of the mAKAP complex involving the integration of cAMP and Ca2+ signals that promote myocyte hypertrophy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

An adenylyl cyclase-mAKAPβ signaling complex regulates cAMP levels in cardiac myocytes

Michael S. Kapiloff; Leslie A. Piggott; Rachna Sadana; Jinliang Li; Lorena Heredia; Edward Henson; Riad Efendiev; Carmen W. Dessauer

Protein kinase A-anchoring proteins (AKAPs) play important roles in the compartmentation of cAMP signaling, anchoring protein kinase A (PKA) to specific cellular organelles and serving as scaffolds that assemble localized signaling cascades. Although AKAPs have been recently shown to bind adenylyl cyclase (AC), the functional significance of this association has not been studied. In cardiac myocytes, the muscle protein kinase A-anchoring protein β (mAKAPβ) coordinates cAMP-dependent, calcium, and MAP kinase pathways and is important for cellular hypertrophy. We now show that mAKAPβ selectively binds type 5 AC in the heart and that mAKAPβ-associated AC activity is absent in AC5 knock-out hearts. Consistent with its known inhibition by PKA phosphorylation, AC5 is inhibited by association with mAKAPβ-PKA complexes. AC5 binds to a unique N-terminal site on mAKAP-(245–340), and expression of this peptide disrupts endogenous mAKAPβ-AC association. Accordingly, disruption of mAKAPβ-AC5 complexes in neonatal cardiac myocytes results in increased cAMP and hypertrophy in the absence of agonist stimulation. Taken together, these results show that the association of AC5 with the mAKAPβ complex is required for the regulation of cAMP second messenger controlling cardiac myocyte hypertrophy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

cAMP-stimulated Protein Phosphatase 2A Activity Associated with Muscle A Kinase-anchoring Protein (mAKAP) Signaling Complexes Inhibits the Phosphorylation and Activity of the cAMP-specific Phosphodiesterase PDE4D3

Kimberly L. Dodge-Kafka; Andrea L. Bauman; Nicole Mayer; Edward Henson; Lorena Heredia; Jung Ahn; Thomas McAvoy; Angus C. Nairn; Michael S. Kapiloff

The concentration of the second messenger cAMP is tightly controlled in cells by the activity of phosphodiesterases. We have previously described how the protein kinase A-anchoring protein mAKAP serves as a scaffold for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase PKA and the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase PDE4D3 in cardiac myocytes. PKA and PDE4D3 constitute a negative feedback loop whereby PKA-catalyzed phosphorylation and activation of PDE4D3 attenuate local cAMP levels. We now show that protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) associated with mAKAP complexes is responsible for reversing the activation of PDE4D3 by catalyzing the dephosphorylation of PDE4D3 serine residue 54. Mapping studies reveal that a C-terminal mAKAP domain (residues 2085–2319) binds PP2A. Binding to mAKAP is required for PP2A function, such that deletion of the C-terminal domain enhances both base-line and forskolin-stimulated PDE4D3 activity. Interestingly, PP2A holoenzyme associated with mAKAP complexes in the heart contains the PP2A targeting subunit B56δ. Like PDE4D3, B56δ is a PKA substrate, and PKA phosphorylation of mAKAP-bound B56δ enhances phosphatase activity 2-fold in the complex. Accordingly, expression of a B56δ mutant that cannot be phosphorylated by PKA results in increased PDE4D3 phosphorylation. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that PP2A associated with mAKAP complexes promotes PDE4D3 dephosphorylation, serving both to inhibit PDE4D3 in unstimulated cells and also to mediate a cAMP-induced positive feedback loop following adenylyl cyclase activation and B56δ phosphorylation. In general, PKA·PP2A·mAKAP complexes exemplify how protein kinases and phosphatases may participate in molecular signaling complexes to dynamically regulate localized intracellular signaling.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Phospholipase Cϵ Scaffolds to Muscle-specific A Kinase Anchoring Protein (mAKAPβ) and Integrates Multiple Hypertrophic Stimuli in Cardiac Myocytes

Lianghui Zhang; Sundeep Malik; Grant G. Kelley; Michael S. Kapiloff; Alan V. Smrcka

To define a role for phospholipase Cϵ (PLCϵ) signaling in cardiac myocyte hypertrophic growth, PLCϵ protein was depleted from neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs) using siRNA. NRVMs with PLCϵ depletion were stimulated with endothelin (ET-1), norepinephrine, insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), or isoproterenol and assessed for development of hypertrophy. PLCϵ depletion dramatically reduced hypertrophic growth and gene expression induced by all agonists tested. PLCϵ catalytic activity was required for hypertrophy development, yet PLCϵ depletion did not reduce global agonist-stimulated inositol phosphate production, suggesting a requirement for localized PLC activity. PLCϵ was found to be scaffolded to a muscle-specific A kinase anchoring protein (mAKAPβ) in heart and NRVMs, and mAKAPβ localizes to the nuclear envelope in NRVMs. PLCϵ-mAKAP interaction domains were defined and overexpressed to disrupt endogenous mAKAPβ-PLCϵ complexes in NRVMs, resulting in significantly reduced ET-1-dependent NRVM hypertrophy. We propose that PLCϵ integrates multiple upstream signaling pathways to generate local signals at the nucleus that regulate hypertrophy.


Science Signaling | 2008

mAKAP Compartmentalizes Oxygen-Dependent Control of HIF-1α

Wei Wong; April Goehring; Michael S. Kapiloff; Lorene K. Langeberg; John D. Scott

The scaffold protein muscle A kinase–anchoring protein (mAKAP) regulates the stability and localization of the transcription factor HIF-1α. Anchor’s a Way to Regulate HIF-1α Under conditions in which oxygen concentrations are normal (normoxia), the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) is ubiquitinated and undergoes proteasome-dependent degradation. When oxygen becomes scarce (hypoxia), such as occurs in tumors and during myocardial infarction, HIF-1α is no longer degraded; it forms a heterodimer with the constitutively expressed HIF-1β subunit and induces the expression of hypoxia-associated genes. The products of these genes, including proteins such as vascular endothelial growth factor and glucose transporter 1, help the cell to adapt to conditions of low oxygen concentration. Wong et al. now provide evidence that the scaffolding protein muscle A kinase–anchoring protein (mAKAP), best known for its role in organizing protein kinase A and other signaling molecules, binds to HIF-1α and components of the ubiquitin machinery to regulate the stability of HIF-1α in a bidirectional fashion. Under normoxia, components of the mAKAP complex target HIF-1α for degradation; under hypoxia, however, mAKAP organizes factors that stabilize HIF-1α. In addition, the perinuclear localization of mAKAP is required to position HIF-1α close to its target genes. Together, these results suggest that mAKAP functions as an important regulatory component of the hypoxic response in cardiomyocytes. The activity of the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) is increased in response to reduced intracellular oxygen. Enzymes of the protein ubiquitin machinery that signal the destruction or stabilization of HIF-1α tightly control this transcriptional response. Here, we show that muscle A kinase–anchoring protein (mAKAP) organized ubiquitin E3 ligases that managed the stability of HIF-1α and optimally positioned it close to its site of action inside the nucleus. Functional experiments in cardiomyocytes showed that depletion of mAKAP or disruption of its targeting to the perinuclear region altered the stability of HIF-1α and transcriptional activation of genes associated with hypoxia. Thus, we propose that compartmentalization of oxygen-sensitive signaling components may influence the fidelity and magnitude of the hypoxic response.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2010

The mAKAPβ Scaffold Regulates Cardiac Myocyte Hypertrophy via Recruitment of Activated Calcineurin

Jinliang Li; Alejandra Negro; Johanna Lopez; Andrea L. Bauman; Edward Henson; Kimberly L. Dodge-Kafka; Michael S. Kapiloff

mAKAPbeta is the scaffold for a multimolecular signaling complex in cardiac myocytes that is required for the induction of neonatal myocyte hypertrophy. We now show that the pro-hypertrophic phosphatase calcineurin binds directly to a single site on mAKAPbeta that does not conform to any of the previously reported consensus binding sites. Calcineurin-mAKAPbeta complex formation is increased in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin and in norepinephrine-stimulated primary cardiac myocytes. This binding is of functional significance because myocytes exhibit diminished norepinephrine-stimulated hypertrophy when expressing a mAKAPbeta mutant incapable of binding calcineurin. In addition to calcineurin, the transcription factor NFATc3 also associates with the mAKAPbeta scaffold in myocytes. Calcineurin bound to mAKAPbeta can dephosphorylate NFATc3 in myocytes, and expression of mAKAPbeta is required for NFAT transcriptional activity. Taken together, our results reveal the importance of regulated calcineurin binding to mAKAPbeta for the induction of cardiac myocyte hypertrophy. Furthermore, these data illustrate how scaffold proteins organizing localized signaling complexes provide the molecular architecture for signal transduction networks regulating key cellular processes.

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Kimberly L. Dodge-Kafka

University of Connecticut Health Center

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