Fall Research Expo 2021

Identifying client proteins of the HSP70 co-chaperone network

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetically inherited cardiovascular disease that affects one in 500 of the general population.1* HCM is marked by left ventricle muscle thickening, or hypertrophy, and it is a cause of heart failure and sudden cardiac death.2 Among the roughly 900 pathogenic HCM variants,3 variants in MYBPC3–which encodes for the sarcomere protein myosin binding protein-C (MyBP-C)–are present in 50% of familial HCM cases.4 In hearts from patients with a MYBPC3 truncating allele, levels of MyBP-C are reduced, suggesting haploinsufficiency as the pathogenic mechanism.6 The 70-kDa heat shock protein (HSP70) co-chaperone network directs truncated MyBP-C towards degradation mediated by the ubiquitin proteasome system,5 making HSP70 a potential therapeutic target to restore levels of WT MyBP-C.

This research used a chemical probe called JG-231 in vitro and in vivo to allosterically inhibit a protein-protein interaction (PPI) between HSP70 and the co-chaperone bcl-2 associated athanogene (BAG) proteins.9Through this inhibition, JG-231 results in a marked decrease in MyBP-C levels, which provides valuable insight into the mechanisms of the HSP70 co-chaperone network. After applying JG-231 to wild-type (WT) human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CM), I measured levels of sarcomere proteins at varying concentrations of JG-231. Proteins that were significantly increased or decreased were considered as additional client proteins of HSP70. I also assessed the efficacy of JG-231 in vivo by injecting it into WT and MYBPC3 truncating heterozygous mice and measuring MyBP-C levels, which are known to be decreased by JG-231 in vitro but have never been tested before in vivo.

Before testing JG-231, I identified certain antibodies that yielded a strong concentration-dependent signal to quantify proteins of interest via the AlphaLISA immunoassay in untreated WT iPSC-CMs. I then measured the levels of those proteins with JG-231 on WT iPSC-CMs, and found that cardiac troponin T (TNNT2) displayed a JG-231 concentration-dependent reduction, suggesting that TNNT2 may be an additional client of HSP70. However, filamin-C and myosin levels increased with increasing concentrations of JG-231, suggesting that they may be clients of HSP70 that were stabilized by JG-231 instead of being degraded. To test the efficacy of JG-231 in vivo, I injected 12 MYBPC3 WT and heterozygous truncating mice with the same dosage of JG-231 or a vehicle control (4 mg/kg 3 days a week) over four weeks and found that there was no significant difference in MyBP-C levels between the JG-231-treated and the vehicle-treated mice, indicating a need for further testing of alternative JG-231 dosages in vivo.

These findings provide valuable insight into the HSP70 co-chaperone network, guiding future research into restoring MyBP-C levels in HCM patients.

As my first research experience, PURM has given me valuable experience in both wet lab techniques, data analysis and visualization, and communicating my research to a variety of audiences. PURM also sparked my newfound curiosity in research, which I plan on continuing throughout my academic career.

Lastly, I would like to thank my faculty mentor, Dr. Sharlene Day and lab manager Jaime Yob for their continued support throughout my PURM research fellowship this summer.

*See references in poster.

PRESENTED BY
PURM - Penn Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program
College of Arts & Sciences 2024
Advised By
Sharlene M. Day, MD
Director, Translational Research, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and Cardiovascular Institute
Join Graham for a virtual discussion
PRESENTED BY
PURM - Penn Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program
College of Arts & Sciences 2024
Advised By
Sharlene M. Day, MD
Director, Translational Research, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and Cardiovascular Institute

Comments

Great poster! What are some ways in which you envision the project advancing in the future?

What is the mechanism that stabilizes or destabilizes MYBCP?

What is the mechanism that stabilizes or destabilizes MYBCP?

Thank you! In the future, I plan on testing a wider variety of sarcomere protein antibodies both in vitro and in vivo, along with first finding the best concentrations of mouse heart lysate to use in vivo!

Thank you for the comment! MyBP-C homeostasis is directed by the heat shock protein 70-kDa (HSP70) system, which can either increase or decrease the amount of MyBP-C depending on the presence of certain co-chaperone proteins such as BAG3.