Cardiac BIN1 folds T-tubule membrane, controlling ion flux and limiting arrhythmia

TT Hong, H Yang, SS Zhang, HC Cho… - Nature medicine, 2014 - nature.com
TT Hong, H Yang, SS Zhang, HC Cho, M Kalashnikova, B Sun, H Zhang, A Bhargava
Nature medicine, 2014nature.com
Cardiomyocyte T tubules are important for regulating ion flux. Bridging integrator 1 (BIN1) is
a T-tubule protein associated with calcium channel trafficking that is downregulated in failing
hearts. Here we find that cardiac T tubules normally contain dense protective inner
membrane folds that are formed by a cardiac isoform of BIN1. In mice with cardiac Bin1
deletion, T-tubule folding is decreased, which does not change overall cardiomyocyte
morphology but leads to free diffusion of local extracellular calcium and potassium ions …
Abstract
Cardiomyocyte T tubules are important for regulating ion flux. Bridging integrator 1 (BIN1) is a T-tubule protein associated with calcium channel trafficking that is downregulated in failing hearts. Here we find that cardiac T tubules normally contain dense protective inner membrane folds that are formed by a cardiac isoform of BIN1. In mice with cardiac Bin1 deletion, T-tubule folding is decreased, which does not change overall cardiomyocyte morphology but leads to free diffusion of local extracellular calcium and potassium ions, prolonging action-potential duration and increasing susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmias. We also found that T-tubule inner folds are rescued by expression of the BIN1 isoform BIN1+13+17, which promotes N-WASP–dependent actin polymerization to stabilize the T-tubule membrane at cardiac Z discs. BIN1+13+17 recruits actin to fold the T-tubule membrane, creating a 'fuzzy space' that protectively restricts ion flux. When the amount of the BIN1+13+17 isoform is decreased, as occurs in acquired cardiomyopathy, T-tubule morphology is altered, and arrhythmia can result.
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