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1.
Abstract: Tryptophan hydroxylase, the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter serotonin, is inactivated by the nitric oxide generators sodium nitroprusside, diethylamine/nitric oxide complex, and S -nitroso- N -acetylpenicillamine. Physiological concentrations of tetrahydrobiopterin, the natural and endogenous cofactor for the hydroxylase, significantly enhance the inactivation of the enzyme caused by each of these nitric oxide generators. The substrate tryptophan does not have this effect. The chemically reduced (tetrahydro-) form of the pterin is required for the enhancement, because neither biopterin nor dihydrobiopterin is effective. The 6 S -isomer of tetrahydrobiopterin, which has little cofactor efficacy for tryptophan hydroxylase, does not enhance enzyme inactivation as does the natural 6 R -isomer. A number of synthetic, reduced pterins share with tetrahydrobiopterin the ability to enhance nitric oxide-induced inactivation of tryptophan hydroxylase. The tetrahydrobiopterin effect is not prevented by agents known to scavenge hydrogen peroxide, superoxide radicals, peroxynitrite anions, hydroxyl radicals, or singlet oxygen. On the other hand, cysteine partially protects the enzyme from both the nitric oxide-induced inactivation and the combined pterin/nitric oxide-induced inactivation. These results suggest that the tetrahydrobiopterin cofactor enhances the nitric oxide-induced inactivation of tryptophan hydroxylase via a mechanism that involves attack on free protein sulfhydryls. Potential in vivo correlates of a tetrahydrobiopterin participation in the inactivation of tryptophan hydroxylase can be drawn to the neurotoxic amphetamines.  相似文献   

2.
Tryptophan hydroxylase, the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in serotonin biosynthesis, is inactivated by peroxynitrite in a concentration-dependent manner. This effect is prevented by molecules that react directly with peroxynitrite such as dithiothreitol, cysteine, glutathione, methionine, tryptophan, and uric acid but not by scavengers of superoxide (superoxide dismutase), hydroxyl radical (Me(2)SO, mannitol), and hydrogen peroxide (catalase). Assuming simple competition kinetics between peroxynitrite scavengers and the enzyme, a second-order rate constant of 3.4 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) at 25 degrees C and pH 7.4 was estimated. The peroxynitrite-induced loss of enzyme activity was accompanied by a concentration-dependent oxidation of protein sulfhydryl groups. Peroxynitrite-modified tryptophan hydroxylase was resistant to reduction by arsenite, borohydride, and dithiothreitol, suggesting that sulfhydryls were oxidized beyond sulfenic acid. Peroxynitrite also caused the nitration of tyrosyl residues in tryptophan hydroxylase, with a maximal modification of 3.8 tyrosines/monomer. Sodium bicarbonate protected tryptophan hydroxylase from peroxynitrite-induced inactivation and lessened the extent of sulfhydryl oxidation while causing a 2-fold increase in tyrosine nitration. Tetranitromethane, which oxidizes sulfhydryls at pH 6 or 8, but which nitrates tyrosyl residues at pH 8 only, inhibited tryptophan hydroxylase equally at either pH. Acetylation of tyrosyl residues with N-acetylimidazole did not alter tryptophan hydroxylase activity. These data suggest that peroxynitrite inactivates tryptophan hydroxylase via sulfhydryl oxidation. Modification of tyrosyl residues by peroxynitrite plays a relatively minor role in the inhibition of tryptophan hydroxylase catalytic activity.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: cDNAs encoding the full-length sequence for tryptophan hydroxylase, and deletion mutants consisting of the regulatory (amino acids 1–98) or catalytic (amino acids 99–444) domains of the enzyme, were cloned and expressed as glutathione S -transferase fusion proteins in E. coli . The recombinant fusion proteins could be purified to near homogeneity within minutes by affinity chromatography on glutathione-agarose. The full-length enzyme and the catalytic core expressed very high levels of tryptophan hydroxylase activity. The regulatory domain was devoid of activity. The full-length enzyme and the catalytic core, while adsorbed to glutathione-agarose beads, obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and the kinetic properties of each recombinant enzyme for cofactor and substrate compared very closely to native, brain tryptophan hydroxylase. Both active forms of the glutathione S -transferase-tryptophan hydroxylase fusion proteins had strict requirements for ferrous iron in catalysis and expressed much higher levels of activity ( V max) than the brain enzyme. Analysis of full-length tryptophan hydroxylase and the catalytic core by molecular sieve chromatography under nondenaturing conditions revealed that each fusion protein behaved as a tetrameric species. These results indicate that a truncated tryptophan hydroxylase, consisting of amino acids 99–444 of the full-length enzyme, contains the sequence motifs needed for subunit assembly. Both wild-type tryptophan hydroxylase and the catalytic core are expressed as apoenzymes which are converted to holoenzymes by exogenous iron. The tryptophan hydroxylase catalytic core is also as active as the full-length enzyme, suggesting the possibility that the regulatory domain exerts a suppressive effect on the catalytic core of tryptophan hydroxylase.  相似文献   

4.
Tryptophan hydroxylase in the pineal gland of the rat was found to undergo a diurnal rhythm in activity with an elevated activity at night. The rhythm was abolished in constant light. Cycloheximide (15 mg/kg, i.p.), administered both at night and during the day, caused a rapid decay in activity suggesting that tryptophan hydroxylase was subject to a rapid turnover in vivo. The primary site of control appeared to be at the level of translation since actinomycin D had no effect. Some relevant properties of the enzyme were studied. Thiol-containing compounds were shown to substantially protect pineal tryptophan hydroxylase from inactivation at 0°C but provided little protection at higher temperatures. The inactivation process appeared to be independent of oxygen. The activity of the enzyme, lost after ageing at 0°C. could be recovered by incubation with dithiothreitol under anaerobic conditions. Fresh enzyme, or enzyme inactivated at 37°C could not be activated by this process. A re-examination of the action of p-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA) on pineal tryptophan hydroxylase revealed that an irreversible inactivation occurred within 6h (25% of initial activity) followed by a recovery within 24 h. The rapid turnover of the enzyme is the probable reason for the failure of previous studies to observe an irreversible inhibition of this enzyme by PCPA.  相似文献   

5.
The following three potent inhibitors of hepatocytic proteolysis were investigated to see if they would inhibit the intracellular inactivation of enzymes: chymostatin and leupeptin (proteinase inhibitors) and methylamine (a lysosomotropic weak base). Chymostatin inhibited the inactivation of two of the three enzymes tested: tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5) and tryptophan oxygenase (tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase, EC 1.13.11.11). Leupeptin had no effect on any of the enzymes, whereas methylamine had only a weak inhibitory effect on tyrosine aminotransferase inactivation. Apparently proteolytic cleavage (probably by a non-lysosomal proteinase, since only chymostatin is effective) is involved in the inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase and tryptophan oxygenase. The third enzyme, benzopyrene hydroxylase (flavoprotein-linked mono-oxygenase, EC 1.14.14.1), is probably inactivated by a non-proteolytic mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
S Knapp  A J Mandell  W P Bullard 《Life sciences》1975,16(10):1583-1593
Using both radioisotopic and fluorometric techniques to measure the activity of midbrain soluble enzyme, we have demonstrated that calcium activates tryptophan hydroxylase. The observed activation apparently results from an increased affinity of the enzyme for both its substrate, tryptophan, and the cofactor 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropteridine (6-MPH4). The calcium activation of tryptophan hydroxylase appears to be specific for both enzyme and effector: other brain neurotransmitter biosynthetic enzymes, such as aromatic amino acid decarboxylase(s) and tyrosine hydroxylase, are not affected by calcium (at concentrations ranging from 0.01 mM to 2.0 mM); other divalent cations, such as Ba++, Mg++, and Mn++, have no activating effect on tryptophan hydroxylase. This work suggests that increases in brain serotonin biosynthesis induced by neural activation may be due to influx of Ca++ associated with membrane depolarization and resulting activation of nerve ending tryptophan hydroxylase.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Tryptophan hydroxylase, the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter serotonin, is activated by protein kinase A and calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. One important aspect of the regulation of any enzyme by a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cascade, and one that is lacking for tryptophan hydroxylase, lies in the identification of its site of phosphorylation by protein kinases. Recombinant forms of brain tryptophan hydroxylase were expressed as glutathione S -transferase fusion proteins and exposed to protein kinase A. This protein kinase phosphorylates and activates full-length tryptophan hydroxylase. The inactive regulatory domain of the enzyme (corresponding to amino acids 1–98) was also phosphorylated by protein kinase A. The catalytic core of the hydroxylase (amino acids 99–444), which expresses high levels of enzyme activity, was neither phosphorylated nor activated by protein kinase A. Conversion of serine-58 to arginine resulted in the expression of a full-length tryptophan hydroxylase mutant that, although remaining catalytically active, was neither phosphorylated nor activated by protein kinase A. These results indicate that the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by protein kinase A is mediated by the phosphorylation of serine-58 within the regulatory domain of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In endothelial cells, the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is stimulated by sheer stress or growth factors that stimulate release of nitric oxide (NO). We hypothesized that NO might act as an endogenous activator of AMPK in endothelial cells. Exposure of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) to NO donors caused an increase in phosphorylation of both Thr-172 of AMPK and Ser-1177 of endothelial nitric oxide synthase, a downstream enzyme of AMPK. NO-induced activation of AMPK was not affected by inhibition of LKB1, an AMPK kinase. In contrast, inhibition of calcium calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase abolished the effect of NO in HUVECs. NO-induced AMPK activation in HeLa S3 cells was abolished by either 1H-(1,2,4)-oxadiazole[4,3-a]quinoxalon-1-one, a potent inhibitor for guanylyl cyclase, or 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid tetrakis (acetoxymethyl ester) (BAPTA-AM), an intracellular Ca(2+) chelator, indicating that NO-induced AMPK activation is guanylyl cyclase-mediated and calcium-dependent. Exposure of HUVECs or isolated mice aortas to either calcium ionophore A23187 or bradykinin significantly increased AMPK Thr-172 phosphorylation, which was abolished by N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase. Finally, A23187- or bradykinin-enhanced AMPK activation was significantly greater in aortas from wild type mice than those in the aortas of endothelial nitric oxide synthase knock-out mice. Taken together, we conclude that NO might act as an endogenous AMPK activator.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract— The activity of soluble tryptophan hydroxylase from rat brain stem was increased in presence of mm concentrations of calcium. Similarly to that observed by treating the enzyme with sodium dodecyl sulphate or trypsin, this activation resulted mainly from an increased affinity of tryptophan hydroxylase for both its substrate, tryptophan, and the cofactor 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropteridine (6-MPH4). In addition, the optimal pH for the enzymic activity was shifted from 7.6 to 7.9 following activation by calcium, sodium dodecyl sulphate or trypsin.
Under the assay conditions used for measuring tryptophan hydroxylase activity, calcium also stimulated a neutral proteinase. This latter enzyme could be eliminated from the solution of tryptophan hydroxylase by filtration through Sephadex G 200. The resulting partially purified tryptophan hydroxylase could be activated by calcium only when the neutral proteinase was included in the assay mixture. In support of this conclusion, the effect of calcium on tryptophan hydroxylase was very small in the new born rat when the activity of the neutral proteinase was low. In addition, the activating effect of Ca2+ could be antagonized not only by a chelating agent like EGTA but also (partially) by specific inhibitors of proteinases such as benzethonium and PMSF.
These results strongly suggest that the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by calcium is the consequence of a partial proteolysis of the enzyme by the calcium-dependent neutral proteinase. Therefore, the physiological significance of this irreversible effect is doubtful.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of (6R)- and (6S)-tetrahydrobiopterin (BPH4), tetrahydroneopterin, and 6-methyltetrahydropterin on the activity of tryptophan hydroxylase were investigated in rat raphe slices. The activity of tryptophan hydroxylase was estimated by measurement of 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) formation under inhibition of aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase with use of HPLC-fluorometric detection. (6R)-BPH4 (the naturally occurring form) at 42 microM, tetrahydroneopterin at 50 microM, and 6-methyltetrahydropterin at 100 microM increased tryptophan hydroxylase activity to 350, 145, and 146% of control values, respectively. (6S)-BPH4, however, had no significant effects on tryptophan hydroxylase activity. These results suggest that tryptophan hydroxylase is subsaturating in vivo for the naturally occurring cofactor, (6R)-BPH4, and that the concentration of (6R)-BPH4 may play an important role for the regulation of tryptophan hydroxylase activity in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Nitric Oxide Reversibly Suppresses Xanthine Oxidase Activity   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The effects of nitric oxide (NO) on xanthine oxidase (XOD) activity and the site(s) of the redox center(s) affected were investigated. XOD activity was determined by superoxide (O2-) generation and uric acid formation. NO reversibly and dose-dependently suppressed XOD activity in both determination methods. The suppression interval also disclosed a dose-dependent prolongation. The suppression occurred irrespective of the presence or absence of xanthine; indicating that the reaction product of NO and O2-, peroxynitrite, is not responsible for the suppression. Application of synthesized peroxynitrite did not affect XOD activity up to 2 μM. Methylene blue, which is an electron acceptor from Fe/S center, prevented the NO-induced inactivation. The results indicate that NO suppresses XOD activity through reversible alteration of the flavin prosthetic site.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: We examined nitric oxide (NO)-induced cell death in NG108-15 cells using NO donors. Both sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and S -nitroso- N -acetylpenicillamine caused lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) leakage from NG108-15 cells. NO is known to increase the amount of radioisotopic labeled glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) in the presence of [32P]NAD and to inhibit the enzyme activity. To clarify the relationship between the NO-induced inhibition of GAPDH activity and cell death, we studied the effect of koningic acid (KA), a potent selective inhibitor of GAPDH. Both SNP and KA elicited LDH leakage, chromosomal condensation, and fragmentation of nuclei in NG108-15 cells. Gel electrophoretic analysis of cellular DNA extracted from SNP- and KA-treated cells revealed the internucleosomal DNA fragmentation typical of apoptosis in these cultures. The results suggested that in NG108-15 cells, (a) the inhibition of GAPDH activity results in apoptosis and (b) SNP-induced cell death is partly due to the NO-induced inhibition of GAPDH, perhaps by stimulating the binding of NAD to GAPDH.  相似文献   

14.
Role of calmodulin in the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Tryptophan hydroxylase can be activated 2.0- to 2.5-fold in vitro by ATPa dn Mg2+. This apparent phosphorylation effect is not dependent on cyclic nucleotides but is dependent on the presence of calcium. The activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by ATP-Mg2+ reduces the apparent Km of the enzyme for its cofactor, 6-methyltetrahydropterin, from 0.21 to 0.09 mM. The addition of certain antipsychotic drugs known to bind to calmodulin in a phosphorylation reaction mixture prevents the activation to tryptophan hydroxylase by ATP-Mg2+ in the concentration-dependent fashion. External addition of purified calmodulin protects the enzyme from the drug-induced effects. Preparation of calmodulin-free tryptophan hydroxylase by affinity chromatography on fluphenazine-Sepharose 4B yields an enzyme that is no longer activated by ATP-Mg2+, whereas the readdition of calmodulin to a calmodulin-free enzyme restores the responsiveness of tryptophan hydroxylase to ATP-Mg2+. This restoration is dependent on Ca2+. Taken together, these results indicate that the activation of tryptophan hydroxylase by phosphorylating conditions is dependent on both calcium and calmodulin.  相似文献   

15.
The activity of tryptophan hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.4) from rat brain was significantly decreased 1 h following a single systemic injection of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) when assessed ex vivo by radioenzymatic assay or in vivo by the quantitation of 5-hydroxytryptophan accumulation following central L-aromatic amino acid decarboxylase inhibition. Recovery of enzymatic activity in vivo, which occurred within 24 h of low-dose MDMA treatment, appeared not to involve synthesis of new enzyme protein, because the return of enzymatic activity was not prevented by prior cycloheximide. Acutely MDMA-depressed cortical tryptophan hydroxylase activity could be completely restored in vitro by a prolonged (20-24 h) anaerobic incubation in the presence of dithiothreitol and Fe2+ at 25 degrees C; partial reconstitution occurred when 2-mercapto-ethanol was substituted for dithiothreitol. Cortical tryptophan hydroxylase acutely inactivated by methamphetamine or p-chloroamphetamine could be similarly reactivated. MDMA-inactivated cortical tryptophan hydroxylase derived from rats killed later than 3 days after drug treatment could not be significantly reactivated under the conditions described above, indicating the development of irreversible enzymatic damage. Kinetic analysis of enzyme reactivation revealed an approximate doubling of enzyme Vmax with no change in enzyme affinity for either substrate, tryptophan, or pterin cofactor. These studies suggest that MDMA and its congeners inactivate central tryptophan hydroxylase by inducing oxidation of key enzyme sulfhydryl groups. The reactivation capacity of drug-inactivated enzyme at various times after MDMA treatment may provide a means of assessing the development of MDMA-induced neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

16.
Moran GR  Phillips RS  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》1999,38(49):16283-16289
Tryptophan hydroxylase is a pterin-dependent amino acid hydroxylase that catalyzes the incorporation of one atom of molecular oxygen into tryptophan to form 5-hydroxytryptophan. The substrate specificity and hydroxylation regiospecificity of tryptophan hydroxylase have been investigated using tryptophan analogues that have methyl substituents or nitrogens incorporated into the indole ring. The products of the reactions show that the regiospecificity of tryptophan hydroxylase is stringent. Hydroxylation does not occur at the 4 or 6 carbon in response to changes in substrate topology or atomic charge. 5-Hydroxymethyltryptophan and 5-hydroxy-4-methyltryptophan are the products from 5-methyltryptophan. These products establish that the hydroxylating intermediate is sufficiently potent to hydroxylate benzylic carbons and that the direction of the NIH shift in tryptophan hydroxylase is from carbon 5 to carbon 4. The effects on the V/K values for the amino acids indicate that the enzyme is most sensitive to changes at position 5 of the indole ring. The V(max) values for amino acid hydroxylation differ at most by a factor of 3 from that observed for tryptophan, while the efficiencies of hydroxylation with respect to tetrahydropterin consumption vary 6-fold, consistent with oxygen transfer to the amino acid being partially or fully rate limiting in productive catalysis.  相似文献   

17.
Tryptophan hydroxylase requires Fe2+ for in vitro enzyme activity. In this study, the intracellular activity of tryptophan hydroxylase was assessed by applying 3-hydroxybenzylhydrazine (NSD-1015), an inhibitor of aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase, to monolayer cultures of RBL2H3 cells, a serotonin producing mast cell line. The effect of manipulating intracellular 'free' iron levels on enzyme activity was analyzed by administration of iron chelators. Desferrioxamine (DFO) suppressed the intracellular enzyme activity. Salicylaldehyde isonicotinoyl hydrazone (SIH) also suppressed enzyme activity, but stimulated it when administered in the Fe-bound form. Hemin also stimulated enzyme activity, which progressively increased over several hours to more than sixfold the initial level. DFO and SIH inhibited the hemin stimulatory effect when administered simultaneously with hemin. Both suppression and stimulation with these chelators took place without a significant decrease or increase in the amount of enzyme. These results indicate that there was an inadequate supply of Fe2+ in the cells to support full activity of tryptophan hydroxylase.  相似文献   

18.
The 26S proteasome plays a fundamental role in almost all eukaryotic cells, including vascular endothelial cells. However, it remains largely unknown how proteasome functionality is regulated in the vasculature. Endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS)-derived NO is known to be essential to maintain endothelial homeostasis. The aim of the present study was to establish the connection between endothelial NO and 26S proteasome functionality in vascular endothelial cells. The 26S proteasome reporter protein levels, 26S proteasome activity, and the O-GlcNAcylation of Rpt2, a key subunit of the proteasome regulatory complex, were assayed in 26S proteasome reporter cells, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), and mouse aortic tissues isolated from 26S proteasome reporter and eNOS knockout mice. Like the other selective NO donors, NO derived from activated eNOS (by pharmacological and genetic approach) increased O-GlcNAc modification of Rpt2, reduced proteasome chymotrypsin-like activity, and caused 26S proteasome reporter protein accumulation. Conversely, inactivation of eNOS reversed all the effects. SiRNA knockdown of O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT), the key enzyme that catalyzes protein O-GlcNAcylation, abolished NO-induced effects. Consistently, adenoviral overexpression of O-GlcNAcase (OGA), the enzyme catalyzing the removal of the O-GlcNAc group, mimicked the effects of OGT knockdown. Finally, compared to eNOS wild type aortic tissues, 26S proteasome reporter mice lacking eNOS exhibited elevated 26S proteasome functionality in parallel with decreased Rpt2 O-GlcNAcylation, without changing the levels of Rpt2 protein. In conclusion, the eNOS-derived NO functions as a physiological suppressor of the 26S proteasome in vascular endothelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
20.
I ndirect evidence indicates that the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of brain 5-HT is the concentration of tryptophan in brain and not, as previously considered (G reen and S awyer , 1966), tryptophan hydroxylase. In fact this enzyme has a Km for its substrate much higher than the concentration of tryptophan normally present in the mammalian brain (J equier , L ovenberg and S joerdsma , 1967; J equier , R obinson , L ovesberg and S joerdsma , 1969; M cgeer , P eters and M cgeer , 1968). Tryptophan is the only amino acid circulating in plasma which is highly bound to serum proteins (M cmenamy and O ncley , 1958). We have previously shown that the free fraction of serum tryptophan controls the concentration of brain tryptophan and, therefore, 5-HT synthesis as well (T agliamonte , B iggio and G essa , 1971d; G essa , B iggio and T agliamonte , 1972). Salicylate has been shown to displace tryptophan from its protein binding in plasma and to raise the free tryptophan concentration (M carthur and D awkins , 1969; S mith and L akatos , 1971). These considerations prompted us to study the effect of salicylate on tryptophan concentrations and 5-HT metabolism in brain.  相似文献   

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