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Serine/threonine kinase 3 promotes oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage in septic cardiomyopathy through inducing Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 phosphorylation and nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 degradation

Hang Zhu, Zhe Dai, Xiaoman Liu, Hao Zhou, Yijin Wang

2023International Journal of Biological Sciences24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) mice were treated with LPS. LPS treatment upregulated cardiac STK3 expression. STK3 deletion attenuated myocardial inflammation and cardiomyocyte death, and improved myocardial structure and function. In LPS-challenged HL-1 cardiomyocytes, shRNA-mediated STK3 knockdown normalized mitochondrial membrane potential and ATP production, attenuated apoptosis, and rescued antioxidant gene expression by preventing Nrf2 downregulation. Co-IP, docking analysis, western blotting, and immunofluorescence assays further showed that STK3 binds and phosphorylates KEAP1, promoting Nrf2 downregulation. Accordingly, transfection of phosphodefective KEAP1 mutant protein in cardiomyocyte restored Nrf2 expression and mitochondrial performance upon LPS, while expression of a phosphomimetic KEAP1 mutant abolished the mitochondria-protective and pro-survival effects of STK3 deletion. These findings suggest that STK3 upregulation contributes to septic cardiomyopathy by phosphorylating KEAP1 to promote Nrf2 degradation and suppression of the antioxidant response.

Topics & Concepts

KEAP1Downregulation and upregulationPhosphorylationGene knockdownKinaseOxidative stressTranscription factorBiologyMitochondrionSerineCell biologyMolecular biologyApoptosisBiochemistryGeneMitochondrial Function and PathologyATP Synthase and ATPases ResearchCardiovascular Function and Risk Factors