Regulation of SGK1-mediated Pathological Cardiac Hypertrophy by Non-Canonical ERAD

NIH RePORTER · HL · F31 · $41,731 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary: Heart disease is the leading cause of mortality and is often preceded by pathological cardiac hypertrophy due to chronic hypertension and sustained increases in cardiac afterload. While initially an adaptive response to maintain cardiac output and systemic blood supply, pathological cardiac hypertrophy eventually leads to a decompensated state of heart failure (HF). The initial adaptive aspect of hypertrophic growth requires increases in protein synthesis, which must be balanced by adequate protein folding, and degradation of misfolded, potentially toxic proteins. Without this balance, cardiac myocytes cannot maintain protein homeostasis, or proteostasis, which threatens functional cellular integrity and viability. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a central node in proteostasis, with ~40% of proteins trafficked through this organelle, underscoring the importance of ER proteostasis in the heart. An important feature of ER proteostasis is recognition and degradation of terminally misfolded proteins through ER associated degradation (ERAD). While ERAD canonically recognizes misfolded ER proteins, we have recently identified the first and only described non-ER substrate for ERAD, serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 1 (SGK1), a pro-growth, cytosolic (non-ER) kinase. Intriguingly, SGK1 is not misfolded, yet is targeted to the cytosolic face of the ER for proteasome- mediated degradation via ERAD and requires the ER E3 ubiquitin ligase, HRD1. Further, we have found that SGK1 degradation by ERAD is impaired in human hypertrophic heart failure and in a mouse model of pressure overload-induced heart failure. SGK1 promotes growth in cancer cells, and our work and others’ have demonstrated relevance for SGK1 in cardiac pathology, but none have investigated whether SGK1 is required for the development of pathological cardiac hypertrophy and if this is mediated by impairing its degradation at the ER via ERAD. Our hypothesis is that the cytosolic kinase, SGK1,

Key facts

NIH application ID
11260216
Project number
5F31HL172675-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
Principal Investigator
Sukriti Bagchi
Activity code
F31
Funding institute
HL
Fiscal year
2026
Award amount
$41,731
Award type
5
Project period
2024-12-01T00:00:00 → 2029-06-30T00:00:00