首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) plays important roles in vascular physiology and homeostasis. Whether eNOS catalyzes nitric oxide biosynthesis or the synthesis of reactive oxygen species such as superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and peroxynitrite is dictated by the bioavailability of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) and L-arginine during eNOS catalysis. The effect of BH(4) and L-arginine on oxygen-induced radical intermediates has been investigated by single turnover rapid-freeze quench and EPR spectroscopy using the isolated eNOS oxygenase domain (eNOS(ox)). Three distinct radical intermediates corresponding to >50% of the heme were observed during the reaction between ferrous eNOS(ox) and oxygen. BH(4)-free eNOS(ox) produced the superoxide radical very efficiently in the absence of L-arginine. L-Arginine decreased the formation rate of superoxide by an order of magnitude but not its final level or EPR line shape. For BH(4)-containing eNOS(ox), only a stoichiometric amount of BH(4) radical was produced in the presence of L-arginine, but in its absence a new radical was obtained. This new radical could be either a peroxyl radical of BH(4) or an amino acid radical was in the vicinity of the heme. Formation of this new radical is very rapid, >150 s(-1), and it was subsequently converted to a BH(4) radical. The trapping of the superoxide radical by cytochrome c in the reaction of BH(4)(-) eNOS(ox) exhibited a limiting rate of approximately 15 s(-1), the time for the superoxide radical to leave the heme pocket and reach the protein surface; this reveals a general problem of the regular spin-trapping method in determining radical formation kinetics. Cytochrome c failed to trap the new radical species. Together with other EPR characteristics, our data strongly support the conclusion that this new radical is not a superoxide radical or a mixture of superoxide and biopterin radicals. Our study points out distinct roles of BH(4) and L-arginine in regulating eNOS radical intermediates. BH(4) prevented superoxide formation by chemical conversions of the Fe(II)O(2) intermediate, and l-arginine delayed superoxide formation by electronic interaction with the heme-bound oxygen.  相似文献   

2.
Luminol-dependent chemiluminescence of normal human monocytes activated by zymosan is demonstrated to be inhibited by tetrahydrobiopterin in a concentration-dependent manner. The reduced pterins tetrahydrobiopterin, dihydrobiopterin, and dihydroneopterin are all shown to be readily oxidized by the hydroxyl radical. The susceptibility of reduced pterins to free radical attack may explain the inhibition of chemiluminescence observed and an additional role of reduced pterins as free radical scavengers in tissues is considered.  相似文献   

3.
The oxygenase domain of the inducible nitric oxide synthase, Δ65 iNOSox is a dimer that binds heme, L-Arginine (L-Arg), and tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) and is the site for NO synthesis. The role of H4B in iNOS structure-function is complex and its exact structural role is presently unknown. The present paper provides a simple mechanistic account of interaction of the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) with the bacterially expressed Δ65 iNOSox protein. Transverse urea gradient gel electrophoresis studies indicated the presence of different conformers in the cofactor-incubated and cofactor-free Δ65 iNOSox protein. Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) studies of cofactor-incubated and cofactor-free Δ65 iNOSox protein also showed two distinct populations of two different diameter ranges. Cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) shifted one population, with higher diameter, to the lower diameter ranges indicating conformational changes. The additional role played by the cofactor is to elevate the heme retaining capacity even in presence of denaturing stress. Together, these findings confirm that the H4B is essential in modulating the iNOS heme environment and the protein environment in the dimeric iNOS oxygenase domain. (Mol Cell Boichem xxx: 1–10, 2005) Supported by Calcutta University Research Grants.  相似文献   

4.
In addition to its catalytic roles, the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) is required for substrate binding and for stabilization of the dimeric structure. We expressed and purified the core of the iNOS oxygenase domain consisting of residues 75-500 (CODiNOS) in the presence (H4B+) and absence (H4B-) of this cofactor. Both forms bound stoichiometric amounts of heme (>0.9 heme per protein subunit). H4B- CODiNOS was unable to bind arginine, gave an unstable ferrous carbonyl adduct, and was a mixture of monomer and dimer. H4B+ CODiNOS bound arginine, gave a stable ferrous carbonyl adduct, and was exclusively dimeric. The H4B cofactor content of this species was only one per dimer yet this was sufficient to form two competent arginine binding sites as determined by optical stoichiometric titrations.  相似文献   

5.
Jung C  Stuehr DJ  Ghosh DK 《Biochemistry》2000,39(33):10163-10171
The iron ligand CO stretch vibration mode of the inducible nitric oxide synthase oxygenase domain (iNOSox) has been studied from 20 to 298 K. iNOSox in the absence of arginine reveals a temperature-dependent equilibrium of two major conformational substates with CO stretch bands centered at about 1945 and 1954 cm(-)(1). This behavior is not qualitatively changed when tetrahydrobiopterin (H(4)B) is bound. Arginine binding changes significantly the spectrum by formation of a sharp CO stretch mode band at about 1905 cm(-)(1) and indicates the formation of a hydrogen bond to the CO ligand. For temperatures lower than 250 K, the stretch vibration frequency decreases almost linearly with decreasing temperature and indicates that the coupling between the CO ligand and the arginine/protein in the active site via the hydrogen bond is very strong. Flashphotolysis of the CO ligand carried out at 25 K revealed the CO stretch mode of the photodissociated CO ligand trapped in the heme pocket. There is a negative linear relation between the stretch vibration frequencies of the photodissociated and the iron-bound CO indicating that the photodissociated ligand stays near the heme.  相似文献   

6.
One-electron oxidation of (6R)-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (H(4)B) by the azide radical generates the radical cation (H(4)B(*)(+)) which rapidly deprotonates at physiological pH to give the neutral trihydrobiopterin radical (H(3)B(*)); pK(a) (H(4)B(*)(+) <==> H(3)B(*) + H(+)) = (5.2 +/- 0.1). In the absence of ascorbate both the H(4)B(*)(+) and H(3)B(*) radicals undergo disproportionation to form quinonoid dihydrobiopterin (qH(2)B) and the parent H(4)B with rate constants k(H(4)B(*)(+) + H(4)B(*)(+)) = 6.5 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1) and k(H(3)B(*) + H(3)B(*)) = 9.3 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The H(3)B(*) radical is scavenged by ascorbate (AscH(-)) with an estimated rate constant of k(H(3)B(*) + AscH(-)) similar 1.7 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1). At physiological pH the pterin rapidly scavenges a range of biological oxidants often associated with cellular oxidative stress and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) dysfunction including hydroxyl ((*)OH), nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)(*)), glutathione thiyl (GS(*)), and carbonate (CO(3)(*-)) radicals. Without exception these radicals react appreciably faster with H(4)B than with AscH(-) with k(*OH + H(4)B) = 8.8 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1), k(NO(2)(*) + H(4)B) = 9.4 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1), k(CO(3)(*-) + H(4)B) = 4.6 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1), and k(GS(*) + H(4)B) = 1.1 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The glutathione disulfide radical anion (GSSG(*-)) rapidly reduces the pterin to the tetrahydrobiopterin radical anion (H(4)B(*-)) with a rate constant of k(GSSG(*-) + H(4)B) similar 4.5 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1). The results are discussed in the context of the general antioxidant properties of the pterin and the redox role played by H(4)B in NOS catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
The biosynthesis of two tetrahydropterin intermediates (H4pterin-1 and H4pterin-2), their conversion to tetrahydrobiopterin, and their overall chemical structures are described. A new high performance liquid chromatographic separation of these and other tetrahydropterins is also described. The biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin from dihydroneopterin triphosphate proceeds in the presence of the bovine adrenal medullary biosynthetic enzymes, Mg2+, NADPH. The biosynthesis of H4pterin-2 occurs under identical conditions, and the compound accumulates in the presence of 1 to 10 microM of N-acetylserotonin, an inhibitor of sepiapterin reductase. At higher concentrations of the inhibitor, the synthesis of H4pterin-2 is also inhibited, and H4pterin-1 accumulates. H4pterin-1 also accumulates in the absence of NADPH. In the presence of NADPH the biosynthetic enzymes convert both intermediates to tetrahydrobiopterin at rates which are greater than the rate of conversion of dihydroneopterin triphosphate to tetrahydrobiopterin. Electrochemical, UV/VIS, oxidation, and ionization properties identify the compounds as tetrahydropterins. The side chain structures of the compounds were determined by a combination of chemical means. The structures of the compounds are 6R-(1',2'-dioxopropyl)-tetrahydropterin (H4pterin-1) and 6R-(L-1'-hydroxy-2'-oxopropyl)-tetrahydropterin (H4pterin-2). The data indicate that the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin from dihydroneopterin triphosphate proceeds in three steps: 1) formation of H4pterin-1 in the presence of Mg2+, 2) NADPH-dependent conversion of H4pterin-1 to H4pterin-2, and 3) NADPH-dependent conversion of H4pterin-2 to tetrahydrobiopterin.  相似文献   

8.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a co-factor that enhances the activity of other enzymes, and this co-factor level is found to be affected in phenylketonuria (PKU), an amino acid metabolism disorder. The present study was aimed at understanding the effect of BH4 on mutations in the regulatory domain of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH). Among 14 patients, 5 patients were classical PKU, 3 were atypical PKU, and 6 were mild PKU. All of these patients had at least one mutation in the regulatory domain. Patients were given 10 mg/kg BH4, and the response of blood phenylalanine (Phe) levels was monitored following treatment. The level of blood Phe decreased after BH4 treatment in all of the patients. These studies suggest that mutations in the regulatory domain also responded to BH4 even if the patient had classical PKU.  相似文献   

9.
Activated macrophages have been demonstrated to metabolize the amino acid L-arginine by the oxidative pathway to produce nitric oxide, citrulline, and NO2-/NO3-. Nitric oxide has been shown to be cytostatic for tumor targets and to inhibit the mitochondrial respiration and other functions of the macrophages that produce it. Addition of NG monomethyl-L-arginine (NMA), a competitive inhibitor of oxidative L-arginine metabolism, to rat splenocyte (SPL) MLC results in allospecific lymphocyte proliferation and CTL induction. In the absence of NMA, neither proliferation nor CTL induction is observed. Citrulline and NO2-/NO3- levels in the supernatants of rat SPL MLC are decreased in the presence of NMA compared with cultures without NMA. NMA also augments the proliferation and CTL induction in mouse SPL MLC. Detectable levels of cytokines able to induce T cell proliferation were present in supernatants of rat SPL MLC without NMA on days 1 to 5 of culture. Supernatants of cultures with NMA contained detectable levels of cytokines on days 1 to 3 and undetectable levels by days 4 and 5 of culture, concomitant with the observed lymphocyte proliferation and presumed depletion of cytokines. Thus, inhibition of rat SPL proliferation to alloantigen seems not to be caused by the lack of production of cytokines able to induce T cell proliferation. The inhibition of proliferation and CTL induction in rat SPL cultures may be caused by a direct effect of the cytostatic products of oxidative L-arginine metabolism on lymphocyte proliferation, or by an indirect deleterious effect on the mitochondrial respiration and viability of macrophages that oxidatively metabolize L-arginine. Alternatively, diversion of L-arginine to the oxidative pathway may affect production of polyamines that are necessary for cell growth and proliferation.  相似文献   

10.
Reconstitution of the endothelial nitric oxide synthase heme domain (NOS) with the catalytically noncompetent 4-aminotetrahydrobiopterin has allowed us to prepare at -40 degrees C the oxyferrous-NOS-substrate complexes of both L-arginine (Arg) and N(G)-hydroxyarginine (NOHA). We have radiolytically cryoreduced these complexes at 77 K and used EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies to characterize the initial products of reduction, as well as intermediates that arise during stepwise annealing to higher temperatures. Peroxo-ferri-NOS is the primary product of 77 K cryoreduction when either Arg or NOHA is the substrate. Proton ENDOR spectra of this state suggest that the peroxo group is H-bonded to a [guanidinium-water] network that forms because the binding of O2 to the ferroheme of NOS recruits H2O. At no stage of reaction/annealing does one observe an EPR signal from a hydroperoxo-ferri state with either substrate. Instead, peroxo-ferri-NOS-substrate complexes convert to a product-state intermediate at the extremely low temperature of 165-170 K. EPR and proton ENDOR spectra of the intermediate formed with Arg as substrate support the suggestion that the reaction involves the formation and attack of Compound I. Within the time/temperature resolution of the present experiments, samples with Arg and NOHA as substrate behave the same in the initial steps of cryoreduction/annealing, despite the different acid/base characteristics of the two substrates. This leads us to discuss the possibility that ambient-temperature catalytic conversion of both substrates is initiated by reduction of the oxy-ferroheme to the hydroperoxo-ferriheme through a coupled proton-electron transfer from a heme-pocket reductant, and that Arg may provide the stoichiometrically second proton of catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Reaction of peroxynitrite with the biological ubiquitous CO(2) produces about 35% yields of two relatively strong one-electron oxidants, CO(3) and ( small middle dot)NO(2), but the remaining of peroxynitrite is isomerized to the innocuous nitrate. Partial oxidant deactivation may confound interpretation of the effects of HCO3-/CO(2) on the oxidation of targets that react with peroxynitrite by both one- and two-electron mechanisms. Thiols are example of such targets, and previous studies have reported that HCO3-/CO(2) partially inhibits GSH oxidation by peroxynitrite at pH 7.4. To differentiate the effects of HCO3-/CO(2) on two- and one-electron thiol oxidation, we monitored GSH, cysteine, and albumin oxidation by peroxynitrite at pH 5.4 and 7.4 by thiol disappearance, oxygen consumption, fast flow EPR, and EPR spin trapping. Our results demonstrate that HCO3-/CO(2) diverts thiol oxidation by peroxynitrite from two- to one-electron mechanisms particularly at neutral pH. At acid pH values, thiol oxidation to free radicals predominates even in the absence of HCO3-/CO(2). In addition to the previously characterized thiyl radicals (RS.), we also characterized radicals derived from them such as the corresponding sulfinyl (RSO.) and disulfide anion radical (RSSR.-) of both GSH and cysteine. Thiyl, RSO. and RSSR.- are reactive radicals that may contribute to the biodamaging and bioregulatory actions of peroxynitrite.  相似文献   

12.
Nitric-oxide synthases are flavoheme enzymes that catalyze two sequential monooxygenase reactions to generate nitric oxide (NO) from l-arginine. We investigated a possible redox role for the enzyme-bound cofactor 6R-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) in the second reaction of NO synthesis, which is conversion of N-hydroxy-l-arginine (NOHA) to NO plus citrulline. We used stopped-flow spectroscopy and rapid-freeze EPR spectroscopy to follow heme and biopterin transformations during single-turnover NOHA oxidation reactions catalyzed by the oxygenase domain of inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOSoxy). Significant biopterin radical (>0.5 per heme) formed during reactions catalyzed by iNOSoxy that contained either H4B or 5-methyl-H4B. Biopterin radical formation was kinetically linked to conversion of a heme-dioxy intermediate to a heme-NO product complex. The biopterin radical then decayed within a 200-300-ms time period just prior to dissociation of NO from a ferric heme-NO product complex. Measures of final biopterin redox status showed that biopterin radical decay occurred via an enzymatic one-electron reduction process that regenerated H4B (or 5MeH4B). These results provide evidence of a dual redox function for biopterin during the NOHA oxidation reaction. The data suggest that H4B first provides an electron to a heme-dioxy intermediate, and then the H4B radical receives an electron from a downstream reaction intermediate to regenerate H4B. The first one-electron transition enables formation of the heme-based oxidant that reacts with NOHA, while the second one-electron transition is linked to formation of a ferric heme-NO product complex that can release NO from the enzyme. These redox roles are novel and expand our understanding of biopterin function in biology.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Berka V  Yeh HC  Gao D  Kiran F  Tsai AL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(41):13137-13148
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)), not dihydrobiopterin or biopterin, is a critical element required for NO formation by nitric oxide synthase (NOS). To elucidate how BH(4) affects eNOS activity, we have investigated BH(4) redox functions in the endothelial NOS (eNOS). Redox-state changes of BH(4) in eNOS were examined by chemical quench/HPLC analysis during the autoinactivation of eNOS using oxyhemoglobin oxidation assay for NO formation at room temperature. Loss of NO formation activity linearly correlated with BH(4) oxidation, and was recovered by overnight incubation with fresh BH(4). Thus, thiol reagents commonly added to NOS enzyme preparations, such as dithiothreitol and beta-mercaptoethanol, probably preserve enzyme activity by preventing BH(4) oxidation. It has been shown that conversion of L-arginine to N-hydroxy-L-arginine in the first step of NOS catalysis requires two reducing equivalents. The first electron that reduces ferric to the ferrous heme is derived from flavin oxidation. The issue of whether BH(4) supplies the second reducing equivalent in the monooxygenation of eNOS was investigated by rapid-scan stopped-flow and rapid-freeze-quench EPR kinetic measurements. In the presence of L-arginine, oxygen binding kinetics to ferrous eNOS or to the ferrous eNOS oxygenase domain (eNOS(ox)) followed a sequential mechanism: Fe(II) <--> Fe(II)O(2) --> Fe(III) + O(2)(-). Without L-arginine, little accumulation of the Fe(II)O(2) intermediate occurred and essentially a direct optical transition from the Fe(II) form to the Fe(III) form was observed. Stabilization of the Fe(II)O(2) intermediate by L-arginine has been established convincingly. On the other hand, BH(4) did not have significant effects on the oxygen binding and decay of the oxyferrous intermediate of the eNOS or eNOS oxygenase domain. Rapid-freeze-quench EPR kinetic measurements in the presence of L-arginine showed a direct correlation between BH(4) radical formation and decay of the Fe(II)O(2) intermediate, indicating that BH(4) indeed supplies the second electron for L-arginine monooxygenation in eNOS.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a possible agent, which induces crosslinking among molecules containing sulfhydryl groups. However, the S-thiolation is essentially accompanied by S-nitrosylation. In the present study, we evaluated radical scavengers as a regulator for S-thiolation and S-nitrosylation by NO released from NO-generator, 1-hydroxy-2-oxo-3-(N-methyl-3-aminopropyl)-3-methyl-1-triazene (P-NONOate). When glutathione was incubated with P-NONOate in 4% (vol/vol) O(2)-saturated buffer solution (pH 7.4) in the presence of nitrone spin-trapping agent, 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyroline-N-oxide (DMPO), the prevention of S-thiolation and the promotion of S-nitrosylation were observed. The DMPO adduct was identified to be thiyl radical-DMPO adduct via ESR study. In contrast, nitroxyl radical, radical scavenger against oxygen-centered radicals, promoted the S-thiolation but prevented S-nitrosylation. Nitronyl nitroxide, radical scavenger against nitric oxide, can convert nitric oxide into nitrogen dioxide in the O(2)-independent manner. In the presence of nitronyl nitroxide in the thiol/P-NONOate system, S-thiolation was remarkably enhanced up to 60% (mol/mol) of sulfhydryl groups. However, nitronyl nitroxide at enough content (>or=1.0 mM) almost completely prevented S-nitrosylation, whereas nitronyl nitroxide at comparatively lower content (0.5 mM) contrarily enhanced the S-nitrosylation. Based on these facts, it appeared to be possible to consequently regulate S-thiolation and S-nitrosylation through controlling the thiyl radical chain reaction by radical scavengers.  相似文献   

16.
S-Adenosylmethionine serves as the methyl donor for many biological methylation reactions and provides the propylamine group for the synthesis of polyamines. S-Adenosylmethionine is synthesized from methionine and ATP by the enzyme methionine adenosyltransferase. The cellular factors regulating S-adenosylmethionine synthesis have not been well defined. Here we show that in rat hepatocytes S-nitrosoglutathione monoethyl ester, a cell-permeable nitric oxide donor, markedly reduces cellular S-adenosylmethionine content via inactivation of methionine adenosyltransferase by S-nitrosylation. Removal of the nitric oxide donor from the incubation medium leads to the denitrosylation and reactivation of methionine adenosyltransferase and to the rapid recovery of cellular S-adenosylmethionine levels. Nitric oxide inactivates methionine adenosyltransferase via S-nitrosylation of cysteine 121. Replacement of the acidic (aspartate 355) or basic (arginine 357 and arginine 363) amino acids located in the vicinity of cysteine 121 by serine leads to a marked reduction in the ability of nitric oxide to S-nitrosylate and inactivate hepatic methionine adenosyltransferase. These results indicate that protein S-nitrosylation is regulated by the basic and acidic amino acids surrounding the target cysteine.  相似文献   

17.
Berka V  Tsai AL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(31):9373-9383
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is a self-sufficient P450-like enzyme. A P450 reductase domain is tethered to an oxygenase domain containing the heme, the substrate (L-arginine) binding site, and a cofactor, tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)). This "triad", located at the distal heme pocket, is the center of oxygen activation and enzyme catalysis. To probe the relationships among these three components, we examined the binding kinetics of three different small heme ligands in the presence and absence of either L-arginine, BH(4), or both. Imidazole binding was strictly competitive with L-arginine, indicating a domain overlap. BH(4) had no obvious effect on imidazole binding but slightly increased the k(on) for L-arginine. L-Arginine decreased the k(on) and k(off) for cyanide by two orders, indicating a "kinetic obstruction" mechanism. BH(4) slightly enhanced cyanide binding. Nitric oxide (NO) binding kinetics were more complex. Increasing the L-arginine concentration decreased the NO binding affinity at equilibrium. In both BH(4)-abundant and BH(4)-deficient eNOS, half of the NO binding sites showed a sizable decrease of the binding rate by L-arginine, with the rate of NO binding at the other half of the sites remaining essentially unaltered by L-arginine, implying that the two heme centers in the eNOS dimer are functionally distinct.  相似文献   

18.
(6R)-L-erythro-5,6,7,8-Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is an essential cofactor for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), tryptophan hydroxylase, phenylalanine hydroxylase, and nitric-oxide synthase. These enzymes synthesize neurotransmitters, e.g. catecholamines, serotonin, and nitric oxide (NO). We established mice unable to synthesize BH4 by disruption of the 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase gene, the encoded protein of which catalyzes the second step of BH4 biosynthesis. Homozygous mice were born at the almost expected Mendelian ratio, but died within 48 h after birth. In the brain of homozygous mutant neonates, levels of biopterin, catecholamines, and serotonin were extremely low. The number of TH molecules was highly dependent on the intracellular concentration of BH4 at nerve terminals. Alteration of the TH protein level by modulation of the BH4 content is a novel regulatory mechanism. Our data showing that catecholaminergic, serotonergic, and NO systems were differently affected by BH4 starvation suggest the possible involvement of BH4 synthesis in the etiology of monoamine-based neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders.  相似文献   

19.
The nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) make nitric oxide and citrulline from l-arginine. How the bound cofactor (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) participates in Arg hydroxylation is a topic of interest. We demonstrated previously that H4B radical formation in the inducible NOS oxygenase domain (iNOSoxy) is kinetically coupled to the disappearance of a heme-dioxy intermediate and to Arg hydroxylation. Here we report single turnover studies that determine and compare the kinetics of these transitions in Arg hydroxylation reactions catalyzed by the oxygenase domains of endothelial and neuronal NOSs (eNOSoxy and nNOSoxy). There was a buildup of a heme-dioxy intermediate in eNOSoxy and nNOSoxy followed by a monophasic transition to ferric enzyme during the reaction. The rate of heme-dioxy decay matched the rates of H4B radical formation and Arg hydroxylation in both enzymes. The rates of H4B radical formation differed such that nNOSoxy (18 s(-1)) > iNOSoxy (11 s(-1)) > eNOSoxy (6 s(-1)), whereas the lifetimes of the resulting H4B radical followed an opposite rank order. 5MeH4B supported a three-fold faster radical formation and greater radical stability relative to H4B in both eNOSoxy and nNOSoxy. Our results indicate the following: (i) the three NOSs share a common mechanism, whereby H4B transfers an electron to the heme-dioxy intermediate. This step enables Arg hydroxylation and is rate-limiting for all subsequent steps in the hydroxylation reaction. (ii) A direct correlation exists between pterin radical stability and the speed of its formation in the three NOSs. (iii) Uncoupled NO synthesis often seen for eNOS at low H4B concentrations may be caused by the slow formation and poor stability of its H4B radical.  相似文献   

20.
JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry - [FeFe]-hydrogenase catalyzes the reversible reduction of protons to H2 at a complex metallocofactor site, the H-cluster. Biosynthesis of this...  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号