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1.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS or NOS I) and endothelial NOS (eNOS or NOS III) differ widely in their reductase and nitric oxide (NO) synthesis activities, electron transfer rates, and propensities to form a heme-NO complex during catalysis. We generated chimeras by swapping eNOS and nNOS oxygenase domains to understand the basis for these differences and to identify structural elements that determine their catalytic behaviors. Swapping oxygenase domains did not alter domain-specific catalytic functions (cytochrome c reduction or H(2)O(2)-supported N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine oxidation) but markedly affected steady-state NO synthesis and NADPH oxidation compared with native eNOS and nNOS. Stopped-flow analysis showed that reductase domains either maintained (nNOS) or slightly exceeded (eNOS) their native rates of heme reduction in each chimera. Heme reduction rates were found to correlate with the initial rates of NADPH oxidation and heme-NO complex formation, with the percentage of heme-NO complex attained during the steady state, and with NO synthesis activity. Oxygenase domain identity influenced these parameters to a lesser degree. We conclude: 1) Heme reduction rates in nNOS and eNOS are controlled primarily by their reductase domains and are almost independent of oxygenase domain identity. 2) Heme reduction rate is the dominant parameter controlling the kinetics and extent of heme-NO complex formation in both eNOS and nNOS, and thus it determines to what degree heme-NO complex formation influences their steady-state NO synthesis, whereas oxygenase domains provide minor but important influences. 3) General principles that relate heme reduction rate, heme-NO complex formation, and NO synthesis are not specific for nNOS but apply to eNOS as well.  相似文献   

2.
The neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) flavoprotein domain (nNOSr) contains regulatory elements that repress its electron flux in the absence of bound calmodulin (CaM). The repression also requires bound NADP(H), but the mechanism is unclear. The crystal structure of a CaM-free nNOSr revealed an ionic interaction between Arg(1400) in the C-terminal tail regulatory element and the 2'-phosphate group of bound NADP(H). We tested the role of this interaction by substituting Ser and Glu for Arg(1400) in nNOSr and in the full-length nNOS enzyme. The CaM-free nNOSr mutants had cytochrome c reductase activities that were less repressed than in wild-type, and this effect could be mimicked in wild-type by using NADH instead of NADPH. The nNOSr mutants also had faster flavin reduction rates, greater apparent K(m) for NADPH, and greater rates of flavin auto-oxidation. Single-turnover cytochrome c reduction data linked these properties to an inability of NADP(H) to cause shielding of the FMN module in the CaM-free nNOSr mutants. The full-length nNOS mutants had no NO synthesis in the CaM-free state and had lower steady-state NO synthesis activities in the CaM-bound state compared with wild-type. However, the mutants had faster rates of ferric heme reduction and ferrous heme-NO complex formation. Slowing down heme reduction in R1400E nNOS with CaM analogues brought its NO synthesis activity back up to normal level. Our studies indicate that the Arg(1400)-2'-phosphate interaction is a means by which bound NADP(H) represses electron transfer into and out of CaM-free nNOSr. This interaction enables the C-terminal tail to regulate a conformational equilibrium of the FMN module that controls its electron transfer reactions in both the CaM-free and CaM-bound forms of nNOS.  相似文献   

3.
After initiating NO synthesis a majority of neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) quickly partitions into a ferrous heme-NO complex. This down-regulates activity and increases enzyme K(m,O(2)). To understand this process, we developed a 10-step kinetic model in which the ferric heme-NO enzyme forms as the immediate product of catalysis, and then partitions between NO dissociation versus reduction to a ferrous heme-NO complex. Rate constants used for the model were derived from recent literature or were determined here. Computer simulations of the model precisely described both pre-steady and steady-state features of nNOS catalysis, including NADPH consumption and NO production, buildup of a heme-NO complex, changes between pre-steady and steady-state rates, and the change in enzyme K(m,O(2)) in the presence or absence of NO synthesis. The model also correctly simulated the catalytic features of nNOS mutants W409F and W409Y, which are hyperactive and display less heme-NO complex formation in the steady state. Model simulations showed how the rate of heme reduction influences several features of nNOS catalysis, including populations of NO-bound versus NO-free enzyme in the steady state and the rate of NO synthesis. The simulation predicts that there is an optimum rate of heme reduction that is close to the measured rate in nNOS. Ratio between NADPH consumption and NO synthesis is also predicted to increase with faster heme reduction. Our kinetic model is an accurate and versatile tool for understanding catalytic behavior and will provide new perspectives on NOS regulation.  相似文献   

4.
Tiso M  Tejero J  Panda K  Aulak KS  Stuehr DJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(50):14418-14428
The C-terminal tail (CT) of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is a regulatory element that suppresses nNOS activities in the absence of bound calmodulin (CaM). A crystal structure of the nNOS reductase domain (nNOSr) (Garcin, E. D., Bruns, C. M., Lloyd, S. J., Hosfield, D. J., Tiso, M., Gachhui, R., Stuehr, D. J., Tainer, J. A., and Getzoff, E. D. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 37918-37927) revealed how the first half of the CT interacts with nNOSr and thus provided a template for detailed studies. We generated truncation mutants in nNOS and nNOSr to test the importance of 3 different regions of the CT. Eliminating the terminal half of the CT (all residues from Ile1413 to Ser1429), which is invisible in the crystal structure, had almost no impact on NADP+ release, flavin reduction, flavin autoxidation, heme reduction, reductase activity, or NO synthesis activity, but did prevent an increase in FMN shielding that normally occurs in response to NADPH binding. Additional removal of the CT alpha-helix (residues 1401 to 1412) significantly increased the NADP+ release rate, flavin autoxidation, and NADPH oxidase activity, and caused hyper-deshielding of the FMN cofactor. These effects were associated with increased reductase activity and slightly diminished heme reduction and NO synthesis. Further removal of residues downstream from Gly1396 (a full CT truncation) amplified the aforementioned effects and in addition altered NADP+ interaction with FAD, relieved the kinetic suppression on flavin reduction, and further diminished heme reduction and NO synthesis. Our results reveal that the CT exerts both multifaceted and regiospecific effects on catalytic activities and related behaviors, and thus provide new insights into mechanisms that regulate nNOS catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
A ferrous heme-NO complex builds up in rat neuronal NO synthase during catalysis and lowers its activity. Mutation of a tryptophan located directly below the heme (Trp(409)) to Phe or Tyr causes hyperactive NO synthesis and less heme-NO complex buildup in the steady state (Adak, S., Crooks, C., Wang, Q., Crane, B. R., Tainer, J. A., Getzoff, E. D., and Stuehr, D. J. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 26907-26911). To understand the mechanism, we used conventional and stopped flow spectroscopy to compare kinetics of heme-NO complex formation, enzyme activity prior to and after complex formation, NO binding affinity, NO complex stability, and its reaction with O(2) in mutants and wild type nNOS. During the initial phase of NO synthesis, heme-NO complex formation was 3 and 5 times slower in W409F and W409Y, and their rates of NADPH oxidation were 50 and 30% that of wild type, probably due to slower heme reduction. NO complex formation slowed NADPH oxidation in the wild type by 7-fold but reduced mutant activities less than 2-fold, giving mutants higher final activities. NO binding kinetics were similar among mutants and wild type, although in ferrous W409Y (and to a lesser extent W409F) the 436-nm NO complex converted to a 417-nm NO complex with time. Oxidation of the ferrous heme-NO complex to ferric enzyme was 7 times faster in Trp(409) mutants than in wild type. Thus, mutant hyperactivity derives from slower formation and faster decay of the heme-NO complex. Together, these minimize partitioning into the NO-bound form.  相似文献   

6.
The heme of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) participates in O2 activation but also binds self-generated NO, resulting in reversible feedback inhibition. We utilized mutagenesis to investigate if a conserved tryptophan residue (Trp409), which engages in pi-stacking with the heme and hydrogen bonds to its axial cysteine ligand, helps control catalysis and regulation by NO. Mutants W409F and W409Y were hyperactive regarding NO synthesis without affecting cytochrome c reduction, reductase-independent N-hydroxyarginine oxidation, or Arg and tetrahydrobiopterin binding. In the absence of Arg electron flux through the heme was slower in the W409 mutants than in wild-type. However, less NO complex accumulated during NO synthesis by the mutants. To understand the mechanism, we compared the kinetics of heme-NO complex formation, rate of heme reduction, kcat prior to and after NO complex formation, NO binding affinity, NO complex stability, and its reaction with O2. During the initial phase of NO synthesis, heme-NO complex formation was three and five times slower in W409F and W409Y, which corresponded to a slower heme reduction. NO complex formation inhibited wild-type turnover 7-fold but reduced mutant turnover less than 2-fold, giving mutants higher steady-state activities. NO binding kinetics were similar among mutants and wild type, although mutants also formed a 417 nm ferrous-NO complex. Oxidation of ferrous-NO complex was seven times faster in mutants than in wild type. We conclude that mutant hyperactivity primarily derives from slower heme reduction and faster oxidation of the heme-NO complex by O2. In this way Trp409 mutations minimize NO feedback inhibition by limiting buildup of the ferrous-NO complex during the steady state. Conservation of W409 among NOS suggests that this proximal Trp may regulate NO feedback inhibition and is important for enzyme physiologic function.  相似文献   

7.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) contains a unique autoinhibitory insert (AI) in its FMN subdomain that represses nNOS reductase activities and controls the calcium sensitivity of calmodulin (CaM) binding to nNOS. How the AI does this is unclear. A conserved charged residue (Lys842) lies within a putative CaM binding helix in the middle of the AI. We investigated its role by substituting residues that neutralize (Ala) or reverse (Glu) the charge at Lys842. Compared with wild type nNOS, the mutant enzymes had greater cytochrome c reductase and NADPH oxidase activities in the CaM-free state, were able to bind CaM at lower calcium concentration, and had lower rates of heme reduction and NO synthesis in one case (K842A). Moreover, stopped-flow spectrophotometric experiments with the nNOS reductase domain indicate that the CaM-free mutants had faster flavin reduction kinetics and had less shielding of their FMN subdomains compared with wild type and no longer increased their level of FMN shielding in response to NADPH binding. Thus, Lys842 is critical for the known functions of the AI and also enables two additional functions of the AI as newly identified here: suppression of electron transfer to FMN and control of the conformational equilibrium of the nNOS reductase domain. Its effect on the conformational equilibrium probably explains suppression of catalysis by the AI.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) are flavo-heme enzymes whose electron transfer reactions are controlled by calmodulin (CaM). The NOS flavoprotein domain includes a ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase (FNR)-like module that contains NADPH- and FAD-binding sites. FNR-like modules in related flavoproteins have three conserved residues that regulate electron transfer between bound NAD(P)H and FAD. To investigate the function of one of these residues in neuronal NOS (nNOS), we generated and characterized mutants that had Val, Glu, or Asn substituted for the conserved Asp-1393. All three mutants exhibited normal composition, spectral properties, and binding of cofactors, substrates, and CaM. All had slower NADPH-dependent cytochrome c and ferricyanide reductase activities, which were associated with proportionally slower rates of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction in the CaM-free and CaM-bound states. Rates of NO synthesis were also proportionally slower in the mutants and were associated with slower rates of CaM-dependent ferric heme reduction. However, a D1393V mutant whose flavins had been prereduced with NADPH had a normal rate of heme reduction. This indicated that the kinetic defect was restricted to flavin reduction step(s) in the mutants and suggested that this limited their catalytic activities. Together, our results show the following. 1) The presence and positioning of the Asp-1393 carboxylate side chain are critical to enable NADPH-dependent reduction of the nNOS flavoprotein. 2) Control of flavin reduction is important because it ensures that the rate of heme reduction is sufficiently fast to enable NO synthesis by nNOS.  相似文献   

9.
Intersubunit intraprotein electron transfer (IET) from flavin mononucleotide (FMN) to heme is essential in nitric oxide (NO) synthesis by NO synthase (NOS). Previous crystal structures and functional studies primarily concerned an enzyme conformation, which serves as the input state for reduction of FMN by electrons from NADPH and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) in the reductase domain. To favor the formation of the output state for the subsequent IET from FMN to heme in the oxygenase domain, a novel truncated two-domain oxyFMN construct of rat neuronal NOS (nNOS), in which only the FMN and heme domains were present, was designed and expressed. The kinetics of IET between the FMN and heme domains in the nNOS oxyFMN construct in the presence and absence of added calmodulin (CaM) were directly determined using laser flash photolysis of CO dissociation in comparative studies on partially reduced oxyFMN and single-domain heme oxygenase constructs. The IET rate constant in the presence of CaM (262 s(-)(1)) was increased approximately 10-fold compared to that in the absence of CaM (22 s(-)(1)). The effect of CaM on interdomain interactions was further evidenced by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra. This work provides the first direct evidence of the CaM control of electron transfer (ET) between FMN and heme domains through facilitation of the FMN/heme interactions in the output state. Therefore, CaM controls IET between heme and FMN domains by a conformational gated mechanism. This is essential in coupling ET in the reductase domain in NOS with NO synthesis in the oxygenase domain.  相似文献   

10.
We studied steps that make up the initial and steady-state phases of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis to understand how activity of bovine endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) is regulated. Stopped-flow analysis of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction showed the rate increased from 0. 13 to 86 s(-1) upon calmodulin binding, but this supported slow heme reduction in the presence of either Arg or N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine (0.005 and 0.014 s(-1), respectively, at 10 degrees C). O(2) binding to ferrous eNOS generated a transient ferrous dioxy species (Soret peak at 427 nm) whose formation and decay kinetics indicate it can participate in NO synthesis. The kinetics of heme-NO complex formation were characterized under anaerobic conditions and during the initial phase of NO synthesis. During catalysis heme-NO complex formation required buildup of relatively high solution NO concentrations (>50 nm), which were easily achieved with N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine but not with Arg as substrate. Heme-NO complex formation caused eNOS NADPH oxidation and citrulline synthesis to decrease 3-fold and the apparent K(m) for O(2) to increase 6-fold. Our main conclusions are: 1) The slow steady-state rate of NO synthesis by eNOS is primarily because of slow electron transfer from its reductase domain to the heme, rather than heme-NO complex formation or other aspects of catalysis. 2) eNOS forms relatively little heme-NO complex during NO synthesis from Arg, implying NO feedback inhibition has a minimal role. These properties distinguish eNOS from the other NOS isoforms and provide a foundation to better understand its role in physiology and pathology.  相似文献   

11.
Phe(1395) stacks parallel to the FAD isoalloxazine ring in neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) and is representative of conserved aromatic amino acids found in structurally related flavoproteins. This laboratory previously showed that Phe(1395) was required to obtain the electron transfer properties and calmodulin (CaM) response normally observed in wild-type nNOS. Here we characterized the F1395S mutant of the nNOS flavoprotein domain (nNOSr) regarding its physical properties, NADP(+) binding characteristics, flavin reduction kinetics, steady-state and pre-steady-state cytochrome c reduction kinetics, and ability to shield its FMN cofactor in response to CaM or NADP(H) binding. F1395S nNOSr bound NADP(+) with 65% more of the nicotinamide ring in a productive conformation with FAD for hydride transfer and had an 8-fold slower rate of NADP(+) dissociation. CaM stimulated the rates of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction in wild-type nNOSr but not in the F1395S mutant, which had flavin reduction kinetics similar to those of CaM-free wild-type nNOSr. CaM-free F1395S nNOSr lacked repression of cytochrome c reductase activity that is typically observed in nNOSr. The combined results from pre-steady-state and EPR experiments revealed that this was associated with a lesser degree of FMN shielding in the NADP(+)-bound state as compared with wild type. We conclude that Phe(1395) regulates nNOSr catalysis in two ways. It facilitates NADP(+) release to prevent this step from being rate-limiting, and it enables NADP(H) to properly regulate a conformational equilibrium involving the FMN subdomain that controls reactivity of the FMN cofactor in electron transfer.  相似文献   

12.
Konas DW  Takaya N  Sharma M  Stuehr DJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12596-12609
Nitric oxide synthases (NOS) are flavoheme enzymes with important roles in biology. The reductase domain of neuronal NOS (nNOSr) contains a widely conserved acidic residue (Asp(1393)) that is thought to facilitate hydride transfer between NADPH and FAD. Previously we found that the D1393V and D1393N mutations lowered the NO synthesis activity and the rates of heme and flavin reduction in full-length nNOS. To examine the mechanisms for these results in greater detail, we incorporated D1393V and D1393N substitutions into nNOSr along with a truncated NADPH-FAD domain construct (FNR) and characterized the mutants. D1393V nNOSr had markedly lower (相似文献   

13.
Electron transfer within rat neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) was investigated by pulse radiolysis. Radiolytically generated 1-methyl-3-carbamoyl pyridinium (MCP) radical was found to react predominantly with the heme of the enzyme with a second-order rate constant for heme reduction of 3 x 10(8) m(-1) s(-1). In the calmodulin (CaM)-bound enzyme a subsequent first-order phase was observed which had a rate constant of 1.2 x 10(3) s(-1). In the absence of CaM, this phase was absent. Kinetic difference spectra for nNOS reduction indicated that the second phase consisted of heme reoxidation accompanied by formation of a neutral flavin semiquinone, suggesting that it is heme to flavin electron transfer. Experiments with the heme proximal surface mutant, K423E, had no second phase, confirming that the mutation blocks interdomain electron transfer. With the autoinhibitory loop deletion mutant, Delta40, the slow phase was observed even in the absence of CaM consistent with the role of the loop in impeding interdomain electron transfer. The rate of heme to FMN electron transfer observed in the wild-type enzyme is approximately 1000 times faster than the FMN to heme electron transfer rate predicted during catalysis from kinetic modeling, suggesting that the catalytic process is slowed by kinetic gating.  相似文献   

14.
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain that binds heme, (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin, and Arg, coupled to a reductase domain that binds FAD, FMN, and NADPH. Activity requires dimeric interaction between two oxygenase domains and calmodulin binding between the reductase and oxygenase domains, which triggers electron transfer between flavin and heme groups. We constructed four different nNOS heterodimers to determine the path of calmodulin-induced electron transfer in a nNOS dimer. A predominantly monomeric mutant of rat nNOS (G671A) and its Arg binding mutant (G671A/E592A) were used as full-length subunits, along with oxygenase domain partners that either did or did not contain the E592A mutation. The E592A mutation prevented Arg binding to the oxygenase domain in which it was present. It also prevented NO synthesis when it was located in the oxygenase domain adjacent to the full-length subunit. However, it had no effect when present in the full-length subunit (i.e. the subunit containing the reductase domain). The active heterodimer (G671A/E592A full-length subunit plus wild type oxygenase domain subunit) showed remarkable similarity with wild type homodimeric nNOS in its catalytic responses to five different forms and chimeras of calmodulin. This reveals an active involvement of calmodulin in supporting transelectron transfer between flavin and heme groups on adjacent subunits in nNOS. In summary, we propose that calmodulin functions to properly align adjacent reductase and the oxygenase domains in a nNOS dimer for electron transfer between them, leading to NO synthesis by the heme.  相似文献   

15.
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase μ (nNOSμ) contains 34 additional residues in an autoregulatory element compared to nNOSα. Cytochrome c and flavin reductions in the absence of calmodulin (CaM) were faster in nNOSμ than nNOSα, while rates in the presence of CaM were smaller. The magnitude of stimulation by CaM is thus notably lower in nNOSμ. No difference in NO production was observed, while electron transfer between the FMN and heme moieties and formation of an inhibitory ferrous-nitrosyl complex were slower in nNOSμ. Thus, the insert affects electron transfer rates, modulation of electron flow by CaM, and heme–nitrosyl complex formation.  相似文献   

16.
The nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) are comprised of an oxygenase domain and a reductase domain bisected by a calmodulin (CaM) binding region. The NOS reductase domains share approximately 60% sequence similarity with the cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR), which transfers electrons to microsomal cytochromes P450. The crystal structure of the neuronal NOS (nNOS) connecting/FAD binding subdomains reveals that the structure of the nNOS-connecting subdomain diverges from that of CYPOR, implying different alignments of the flavins in the two enzymes. We created a series of chimeric enzymes between nNOS and CYPOR in which the FMN binding and the connecting/FAD binding subdomains are swapped. A chimera consisting of the nNOS heme domain and FMN binding subdomain and the CYPOR FAD binding subdomain catalyzed significantly increased rates of cytochrome c reduction in the absence of CaM and of NO synthesis in its presence. Cytochrome c reduction by this chimera was inhibited by CaM. Other chimeras consisting of the nNOS heme domain, the CYPOR FMN binding subdomain, and the nNOS FAD binding subdomain with or without the tail region also catalyzed cytochrome c reduction, were not modulated by CaM, and could not transfer electrons into the heme domain. A chimera consisting of the heme domain of nNOS and the reductase domain of CYPOR reduced cytochrome c and ferricyanide at rates 2-fold higher than that of native CYPOR, suggesting that the presence of the heme domain affected electron transfer through the reductase domain. These data demonstrate that the FMN subdomain of CYPOR cannot effectively substitute for that of nNOS, whereas the FAD subdomains are interchangeable. The differences among these chimeras most likely result from alterations in the alignment of the flavins within each enzyme construct.  相似文献   

17.
In neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS), calmodulin (CaM) binding is thought to trigger electron transfer from the reductase domain to the heme domain, which is essential for O(2) activation and NO formation. To elucidate the electron-transfer mechanism, we characterized a series of heterodimers consisting of one full-length nNOS subunit and one oxygenase-domain subunit. The results support an inter-subunit electron-transfer mechanism for the wild type nNOS, in that electrons for catalysis transfer in a Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent way from the reductase domain of one subunit to the heme of the other subunit, as proposed for inducible NOS. This suggests that the two different isoforms form similar dimeric complexes. In a series of heterodimers containing a Ca(2+)/CaM-insensitive mutant (delta40), electrons transferred from the reductase domain to both hemes in a Ca(2+)/CaM-independent way. Thus, in the delta40 mutant electron transfer from the reductase domains to the heme domains can occur via both inter-subunit and intra-subunit mechanisms. However, NO formation activity was exclusively linked to inter-subunit electron transfer and was observed only in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. This suggests that the mechanism of activation of nNOS by CaM is not solely dependent on the activation of electron transfer to the nNOS hemes but may involve additional structural factors linked to the catalytic action of the heme domain.  相似文献   

18.
The nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) are modular, cofactor-containing enzymes, divided into a heme-containing oxygenase domain and an FMN- and FAD-containing reductase domain. The domains are connected by a calmodulin (CaM)-binding sequence, occupancy of which is required for nitric oxide (NO) production. Two additional CaM-modulated regulatory elements are present in the reductase domains of the constitutive isoforms, the autoregulatory region (AR) and the C-terminal tail region. Deletion of the AR reduces CaM stimulation of electron flow through the reductase domain from 10-fold in wild-type nNOS to 2-fold in the mutant. Deletion of the C terminus yields an enzyme with greatly enhanced reductase activity in the absence of CaM but with activity equivalent to that of wild-type enzyme in its presence. A mutant in which both the AR and C terminus were deleted completely loses CaM modulation through the reductase domain. Thus, transduction of the CaM effect through the reductase domain of nNOS is dependent on these elements. Formation of nitric oxide is, however, still stimulated by CaM in all three mutants. A CaM molecule in which the N-terminal lobe was replaced by the C-terminal lobe (CaM-CC) supported NO synthesis by the deletion mutants but not by wild-type nNOS. We propose a model in which the AR, the C-terminal tail, and CaM interact directly to regulate the conformational state of the reductase domain of nNOS.  相似文献   

19.
Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain and a reductase domain. The reductase domain has NADPH, FAD, and FMN binding sites. Wild-type nNOS reduced the azo bond of methyl red with a turnover number of approximately 130 min(-1) in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM) and NADPH under anaerobic conditions. Diphenyleneiodonium chloride (DPI), a flavin/NADPH binding inhibitor, completely inhibited azo reduction. The omission of Ca(2+)/CaM from the reaction system decreased the activity to 5%. The rate of the azo reduction with an FMN-deficient mutant was also 5% that of the wild type. NADPH oxidation rates for the wild-type and mutant enzymes were well coupled with azo reduction. Thus, we suggest that electrons delivered from the FMN of the nNOS enzyme reduce the azo bond of methyl red and that this reductase activity is controlled by Ca(2+)/CaM.  相似文献   

20.
The interactions of neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) with calmodulin (CaM) and mutant forms of CaM, including CaM-troponin C chimeras, have been previously reported, but there has been no comparable investigation of CaM interactions with the other constitutively expressed NOS (cNOS), endothelial NOS (eNOS), or the inducible isoform (iNOS). The present study was designed to evaluate the role of the four CaM EF hands in the activation of eNOS and iNOS. To assess the role of CaM regions on aspects of enzymatic function, three distinct activities associated with NOS were measured: NADPH oxidation, cytochrome c reduction, and nitric oxide (*NO) generation as assessed by the oxyhemoglobin capture assay. CaM activates the cNOS enzymes by a mechanism other than stimulating electron transfer into the oxygenase domain. Interactions with the reductase moiety are dominant in cNOS activation, and EF hand 1 is critical for activation of both nNOS and eNOS. Although the activation patterns for nNOS and eNOS are clearly related, effects of the chimeras on all the reactions are not equivalent. We propose that cytochrome c reduction is a measure of the release of the FMN domain from the reductase complex. In contrast, cytochrome c reduction by iNOS is readily activated by each of the chimeras examined here and may be constitutive. Each of the chimeras were co-expressed with the human iNOS enzyme in Escherichia coli and subsequently purified. Domains 2 and 3 of CaM contain important elements required for the Ca2+/CaM independence of *NO production by the iNOS enzyme. The disparity between cytochrome c reduction and *NO production at low calcium can be attributed to poor association of heme and FMN domains when the bound CaM constructs are depleted of Ca2+. In general cNOSs are much more difficult to activate than iNOS, which can be attributed to their extra sequence elements, which are adjacent to the CaM-binding site and associated with CaM control.  相似文献   

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