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1.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a required cofactor for the synthesis of NO by NOS. Bioavailability of BH4 is a critical factor in regulating the balance between NO and superoxide production by endothelial NOS (eNOS coupling). Crystal structures of the mouse inducible NOS oxygenase domain reveal a homologous BH4-binding site located in the dimer interface and a conserved tryptophan residue that engages in hydrogen bonding or aromatic stacking interactions with the BH4 ring. The role of this residue in eNOS coupling remains unexplored. We overexpressed human eNOS W447A and W447F mutants in novel cell lines with tetracycline-regulated expression of human GTP cyclohydrolase I, the rate-limiting enzyme in BH4 synthesis, to determine the importance of BH4 and Trp-447 in eNOS uncoupling. NO production was abolished in eNOS-W447A cells and diminished in cells expressing W447F, despite high BH4 levels. eNOS-derived superoxide production was significantly elevated in W447A and W447F versus wild-type eNOS, and this was sufficient to oxidize BH4 to 7,8-dihydrobiopterin. In uncoupled, BH4-deficient cells, the deleterious effects of W447A mutation were greatly exacerbated, resulting in further attenuation of NO and greatly increased superoxide production. eNOS dimerization was attenuated in W447A eNOS cells and further reduced in BH4-deficient cells, as demonstrated using a novel split Renilla luciferase biosensor. Reduction of cellular BH4 levels resulted in a switch from an eNOS dimer to an eNOS monomer. These data reveal a key role for Trp-447 in determining NO versus superoxide production by eNOS, by effects on BH4-dependent catalysis, and by modulating eNOS dimer formation.  相似文献   

2.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) serves as a critical co-factor for the endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS). A deficiency of BH4 results in eNOS uncoupling, which is associated with increased superoxide and decreased NO* production. BH4 has been suggested to be a target for oxidation by peroxynitrite (ONOO-), and ascorbate has been shown to preserve BH4 levels and enhance endothelial NO* production; however, the mechanisms underlying these processes remain poorly defined. To gain further insight into these interactions, the reaction of ONOO- with BH4 was studied using electron spin resonance and the spin probe 1-hydroxy-3-carboxy-2,2,5-tetramethyl-pyrrolidine. ONOO- reacted with BH4 6-10 times faster than with ascorbate or thiols. The immediate product of the reaction between ONOO- and BH4 was the trihydrobiopterin radical (BH3.), which was reduced back to BH4 by ascorbate, whereas thiols were not efficient in recycling of BH4. Uncoupling of eNOS caused by peroxynitrite was investigated in cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) by measuring superoxide and NO* using spin probe 1-hydroxy-3-methoxycarbonyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-pyrrolidine and the NO*-spin trap iron-diethyldithiocarbamate. Bolus ONOO-, the ONOO- donor 3-morpholinosydnonimine, and an inhibitor of BH4 synthesis (2,4-diamino-6-hydroxypyrimidine) uncoupled eNOS, increasing superoxide and decreasing NO* production. Exogenous BH4 supplementation restored endothelial NO* production. Treatment of BAECs with both BH4 and ascorbate prior to ONOO- prevented uncoupling of eNOS by ONOO-. This study demonstrates that endothelial BH4 is a crucial target for oxidation by ONOO- and that the BH4 reaction rate constant exceeds those of thiols or ascorbate. We confirmed that ONOO- uncouples eNOS by oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin and that ascorbate does not fully protect BH4 from oxidation but recycles BH3. radical back to BH4.  相似文献   

3.
Tetrahyrobiopterin (BH4) is a required cofactor for the synthesis of nitric oxide by endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS), and BH4 bioavailability within the endothelium is a critical factor in regulating the balance between NO and superoxide production by eNOS (eNOS coupling). BH4 levels are determined by the activity of GTP cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH), the rate-limiting enzyme in de novo BH4 biosynthesis. However, BH4 levels may also be influenced by oxidation, forming 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2), which promotes eNOS uncoupling. Conversely, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) can regenerate BH4 from BH2, but the functional importance of DHFR in maintaining eNOS coupling remains unclear. We investigated the role of DHFR in regulating BH4 versus BH2 levels in endothelial cells and in cell lines expressing eNOS combined with tet-regulated GTPCH expression in order to compare the effects of low or high levels of de novo BH4 biosynthesis. Pharmacological inhibition of DHFR activity by methotrexate or genetic knockdown of DHFR protein by RNA interference reduced intracellular BH4 and increased BH2 levels resulting in enzymatic uncoupling of eNOS, as indicated by increased eNOS-dependent superoxide but reduced NO production. In contrast to the decreased BH4:BH2 ratio induced by DHFR knockdown, GTPCH knockdown greatly reduced total biopterin levels but with no change in BH4:BH2 ratio. In cells expressing eNOS with low biopterin levels, DHFR inhibition or knockdown further diminished the BH4:BH2 ratio and exacerbated eNOS uncoupling. Taken together, these data reveal a key role for DHFR in eNOS coupling by maintaining the BH4:BH2 ratio, particularly in conditions of low total biopterin availability.In vascular disease states such as atherosclerosis and diabetes, endothelial nitric oxide (NO) bioactivity is reduced, and oxidative stress is increased, resulting in endothelial dysfunction. It has become apparent that enzymatic “coupling” of endothelial NO synthase by its cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4)2 plays a key role in maintaining endothelial function. Indeed, the balance between NO and superoxide production by eNOS appears to be determined by the availability of BH4 versus the abundance of 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2, that is inactive for NOS cofactor function and may compete with BH4 for NOS binding (1). Intracellular biopterin levels are regulated principally by the activity of the de novo biosynthetic pathway (Fig. 1). Guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH; EC 3.5.4.16) catalyzes the formation of dihydroneopterin triphosphate from GTP, and BH4 is generated by two further steps through 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase and sepiapterin reductase. GTPCH appears to be the rate-limiting enzyme in BH4 biosynthesis, and overexpression of GTPCH is sufficient to augment BH4 levels in cultured endothelial cells (2). Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy studies have shown that BH4 both stabilizes and donates electrons to the ferrous-dioxygen complex in the oxygenase domain, as the initiating step of l-arginine oxidation (35). In this reaction BH4 forms the protonated trihydrobiopterin cation radical, which is subsequently reduced by electron transfer from NOS flavins. When BH4 availability is limiting, electron transfer from NOS flavins becomes uncoupled from l-arginine oxidation, eNOS generates superoxide rather than NO, BH4 becomes oxidized to catalytically incompetent BH2, and a futile feed-forward cascade of BH4 destruction proceeds (1). Recent studies reveal that BH4 and BH2 bind eNOS with equal affinity and that BH2 can efficiently replace eNOS-bound BH4, resulting in eNOS uncoupling (6). Indeed, we have previously shown that the relative abundance of eNOS versus BH4 together with the intracellular BH4:BH2 ratio, rather than absolute concentrations of BH4, are the key determinants of eNOS uncoupling (7), a hypothesis supported by a recent publication where BH2 levels are elevated after exposure of bovine aortic endothelial cells to DHFR-specific siRNA (8). Thus, mechanisms that regulate the BH4:BH2 ratio independently of overall biopterin levels may play an equally important role in regulating eNOS coupling as the well established role of GTCPH, which regulates de novo BH4 biosynthesis. In addition to key roles in folate metabolism, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR; EC 1.5.1.3) can reduce BH2, thus regenerating BH4 (9, 10). It is, therefore, likely that net BH4 bioavailability within the endothelium reflects the balance between de novo BH4 synthesis, loss of BH4 by oxidation to BH2, and the regeneration of BH4 by DHFR. In human liver extracts DHFR has been shown to reduce BH2 back to BH4 as part of the salvage pathway for biopterin synthesis (11). However, the role of this pathway and the extent to which it regulates intracellular BH4 levels in vivo remains unknown. Recent work by Chalupsky and Cai (2) investigated the functionality of endothelial DHFR in cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells. Exposure to angiotensin II down-regulated DHFR expression, decreased BH4 levels, and increased eNOS uncoupling, which was restored by overexpression of DHFR (2). A recent study also suggests that perturbation of BH4 metabolism differentially affects eNOS phosphorylation sites. Knockdown of DHFR by siRNA inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor-induced dephosphorylation of eNOS at Ser-116, an effect that is completely recovered by the addition of exogenous BH4 (8). However, the requirement for DHFR in regulating intracellular BH4 homeostasis and the quantitative relationships that relate BH4 de novo synthesis versus BH4 recycling to eNOS coupling remain uncertain. Accordingly, we sought to address these questions using both pharmacologic and genetic manipulation of DHFR activity and related these interventions to effects on eNOS coupling. We manipulated DHFR in both endothelial cells and in novel cell lines that stably express an eNOS-GFP fusion protein and where expression of human GTPCH can be regulated by doxycycline in order to test the effects of variations in intracellular BH4 biosynthesis (7). We report that although GTPCH is the key regulator of the total amount of intracellular biopterins, DHFR is critical to eNOS function by determining BH4:BH2 ratio and, thus, in maintaining eNOS coupling. In particular, DHFR is important in preventing “self-propagated” eNOS uncoupling in conditions of low total biopterin levels, when eNOS-dependent oxidation of BH4 that would further exacerbate eNOS uncoupling can be rescued by DHFR.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Schematic representation of the BH4 recycling pathway and eNOS coupling. BH4 is synthesized from GTP via a series of reactions involving GTPCH, 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase, sepiapterin reductase (SR) and DHFR. DHFR activity can be inhibited by MTX. GFRP, GTP cyclohydrolase feedback regulatory protein. PTPS, 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase.  相似文献   

4.
J. Neurochem. (2012) 122, 1211-1218. ABSTRACT: In this study, we used the GTP cyclohydrolase I-deficient mice, i.e., hyperphenylalaninemic (hph-1) mice, to test the hypothesis that the loss of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4) ) in cerebral microvessels causes endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) uncoupling, resulting in increased superoxide anion production and inhibition of endothelial nitric oxide signaling. Both homozygous mutant (hph-1(-/-) ) and heterozygous mutant (hph-1(+/-) mice) demonstrated reduction in GTP cyclohydrolase I activity and reduced bioavailability of BH(4) . In the cerebral microvessels of hph-1(+/-) and hph-1(-/-) mice, increased superoxide anion production was inhibited by supplementation of BH(4) or NOS inhibitor- L- N(G) -nitro arginine-methyl ester, indicative of eNOS uncoupling. Expression of 3-nitrotyrosine was significantly increased, whereas NO production and cGMP levels were significantly reduced. Expressions of antioxidant enzymes namely copper and zinc superoxide dismutase, manganese superoxide dismutase, and catalase were not affected by uncoupling of eNOS. Reduced levels of BH(4) , increased superoxide anion production, as well as inhibition of NO signaling were not different between the microvessels of male and female mice. The results of our study are the first to demonstrate that, regardless of gender, reduced BH(4) bioavailability causes eNOS uncoupling, increases superoxide anion production, inhibits eNOS/cGMP signaling, and imposes significant oxidative stress in the cerebral microvasculature.  相似文献   

5.
In the vasculature, nitric oxide (NO) is generated by endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) in a calcium/calmodulin-dependent reaction. In the absence of the requisite eNOS cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)), NADPH oxidation is uncoupled from NO generation, leading to the production of superoxide. Although this phenomenon is apparent with purified enzyme, cellular studies suggest that formation of the BH(4) oxidation product, dihydrobiopterin, is the molecular trigger for eNOS uncoupling rather than BH(4) depletion alone. In the current study, we investigated the effects of both BH(4) depletion and oxidation on eNOS-derived superoxide production in endothelial cells in an attempt to elucidate the molecular mechanisms regulating eNOS oxidase activity. Results demonstrated that pharmacological depletion of endothelial BH(4) does not result in eNOS oxidase activity, whereas BH(4) oxidation gave rise to significant eNOS-oxidase activity. These findings suggest that the endothelium possesses regulatory mechanisms, which prevent eNOS oxidase activity from pterin-free eNOS. Using a combination of gene silencing and pharmacological approaches, we demonstrate that eNOS-caveolin-1 association is increased under conditions of reduced pterin bioavailability and that this sequestration serves to suppress eNOS uncoupling. Using small interfering RNA approaches, we demonstrate that caveolin-1 gene silencing increases eNOS oxidase activity to 85% of that observed under conditions of BH(4) oxidation. Moreover, when caveolin-1 silencing was combined with a pharmacological inhibitor of AKT, BH(4) depletion increased eNOS-derived superoxide to 165% of that observed with BH(4) oxidation. This study identifies a critical role of caveolin-1 in the regulation of eNOS uncoupling and provides new insight into the mechanisms through which disease-associated changes in caveolin-1 expression may contribute to endothelial dysfunction.  相似文献   

6.
5,6,7,8-Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) is an essential cofactor of nitric oxide synthases (NOSs). Oxidation of BH(4), in the setting of diabetes and other chronic vasoinflammatory conditions, can cause cofactor insufficiency and uncoupling of endothelial NOS (eNOS), manifest by a switch from nitric oxide (NO) to superoxide production. Here we tested the hypothesis that eNOS uncoupling is not simply a consequence of BH(4) insufficiency, but rather results from a diminished ratio of BH(4) vs. its catalytically incompetent oxidation product, 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH(2)). In support of this hypothesis, [(3)H]BH(4) binding studies revealed that BH(4) and BH(2) bind eNOS with equal affinity (K(d) approximately 80 nM) and BH(2) can rapidly and efficiently replace BH(4) in preformed eNOS-BH(4) complexes. Whereas the total biopterin pool of murine endothelial cells (ECs) was unaffected by 48-h exposure to diabetic glucose levels (30 mM), BH(2) levels increased from undetectable to 40% of total biopterin. This BH(2) accumulation was associated with diminished calcium ionophore-evoked NO activity and accelerated superoxide production. Since superoxide production was suppressed by NOS inhibitor treatment, eNOS was implicated as a principal superoxide source. Importantly, BH(4) supplementation of ECs (in low and high glucose-containing media) revealed that calcium ionophore-evoked NO bioactivity correlates with intracellular BH(4):BH(2) and not absolute intracellular levels of BH(4). Reciprocally, superoxide production was found to negatively correlate with intracellular BH(4):BH(2). Hyperglycemia-associated BH(4) oxidation and NO insufficiency was recapitulated in vivo, in the Zucker diabetic fatty rat model of type 2 diabetes. Together, these findings implicate diminished intracellular BH(4):BH(2), rather than BH(4) depletion per se, as the molecular trigger for NO insufficiency in diabetes.  相似文献   

7.
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is responsible for maintaining systemic blood pressure, vascular remodeling and angiogenesis. In addition to producing NO, eNOS can also generate superoxide (O2 -.) in the absence of the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4). Previous studies have shown that bovine eNOS serine 1179 (Serine 1177/human) phosphorylation critically modulates NO synthesis. However, the effect of serine 1179 phosphorylation on eNOS superoxide generation is unknown. Here, we used the phosphomimetic form of eNOS (S1179D) to determine the effect of S1179 phosphorylation on superoxide generating activity, and its sensitivity to regulation by BH4, Ca2+, and calmodulin (CAM). S1179D eNOS exhibited significantly increased superoxide generating activity and NADPH consumption compared to wild-type eNOS (WT eNOS). The superoxide generating activities of S1179D eNOS and WT eNOS did not differ significantly in their sensitivity to regulation by either Ca2+ or CaM. The sensitivity of the superoxide generating activity of S1179D eNOS to inhibition by BH4 was significantly reduced compared to WT eNOS. In eNOS-overexpressing 293 cells, BH4 depletion with 10mM DAHP for 48 hours followed by 50ng/ml VEGF for 30 min to phosphorylate eNOS S1179 increased ROS accumulation compared to DAHP-only treated cells. Meanwhile, MTT assay indicated that overexpression of eNOS in HEK293 cells decreased cellular viability compared to control cells at BH4 depletion condition (P<0.01). VEGF-mediated Serine 1179 phosphorylation further decreased the cellular viability in eNOS-overexpressing 293 cells (P<0.01). Our data demonstrate that eNOS serine 1179 phosphorylation, in addition to enhancing NO production, also profoundly affects superoxide generation: S1179 phosphorylation increases superoxide production while decreasing sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of BH4 on this activity.  相似文献   

8.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a key redox-active cofactor in endothelial isoform of NO synthase (eNOS) catalysis and is an important determinant of NO-dependent signaling pathways. BH4 oxidation is observed in vascular cells in the setting of the oxidative stress associated with diabetes. However, the relative roles of de novo BH4 synthesis and BH4 redox recycling in the regulation of eNOS bioactivity remain incompletely defined. We used small interference RNA (siRNA)-mediated “knockdown” GTP cyclohydrolase-1 (GTPCH1), the rate-limiting enzyme in BH4 biosynthesis, and dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), an enzyme-recycling oxidized BH4 (7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2)), and studied the effects on eNOS regulation and biopterin metabolism in cultured aortic endothelial cells. Knockdown of either DHFR or GTPCH1 attenuated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-induced eNOS activity and NO production; these effects were recovered by supplementation with BH4. In contrast, supplementation with BH2 abolished VEGF-induced NO production. DHFR but not GTPCH1 knockdown increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. The increase in ROS production seen with siRNA-mediated DHFR knockdown was abolished either by simultaneous siRNA-mediated knockdown of eNOS or by supplementing with BH4. In contrast, addition of BH2 increased ROS production; this effect of BH2 was blocked by BH4 supplementation. DHFR but not GTPCH1 knockdown inhibited VEGF-induced dephosphorylation of eNOS at the inhibitory site serine 116; these effects were recovered by supplementation with BH4. These studies demonstrate a striking contrast in the pattern of eNOS regulation seen by the selective modulation of BH4 salvage/reduction versus de novo BH4 synthetic pathways. Our findings suggest that the depletion of BH4 is not sufficient to perturb NO signaling, but rather that concentration of intracellular BH2, as well as the relative concentrations of BH4 and BH2, together play a determining role in the redox regulation of eNOS-modulated endothelial responses.Regulation of endothelial nitric oxide (NO)2 production represents a critical mechanism for the modulation of vascular homeostasis. NO is released by endothelial cells in response to diverse humoral, neural, and mechanical stimuli (14). Endothelial cell-derived NO activates guanylate cyclase in vascular smooth muscle cells, leading to increased levels of cGMP and to smooth muscle relaxation. Blood platelets represent another key target for the actions of endothelium-derived NO (5): platelet aggregation is inhibited by NO-induced guanylate cyclase activation. Many other effects of NO have been identified in cultured vascular cells and in vascular tissues, including the regulation of apoptosis, cell adhesion, angiogenesis, thrombosis, vascular smooth muscle proliferation, and atherogenesis, among other cellular responses and (patho)physiological processes.The endothelial isoform of NO synthase (eNOS) is a membrane-associated homodimeric 135-kDa protein that is robustly expressed in endothelial cells (2, 4, 6, 7). Similar to all the mammalian NOS isoforms, eNOS functions as an obligate homodimer that includes a cysteine-complex Zn2+ (zinc-tetrathiolate) at the dimer interface (810). eNOS is a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent enzyme that is activated in response to the stimulation of a variety of Ca2+-mobilizing cell surface receptors in vascular endothelium and in cardiac myocytes. The activity of eNOS is also regulated by phosphorylation at multiple sites (11) that are differentially modulated following the activation of cell surface receptors by agonists such as insulin and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) (12). The phosphorylation of eNOS at Ser-1179 activates eNOS, but phosphorylation at Thr-497 or Ser-116 is associated with inhibition of eNOS activity (1317). eNOS is reversibly targeted to plasmalemmal caveolae as a consequence of the protein''s N-myristoylation and thiopalmitoylation. The generation of NO by eNOS requires several redox-active cofactors, including nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), flavin mononucleotide (FMN), calmodulin, and tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), which have key roles in the electron flow required for eNOS catalysis. If the flow of electrons within eNOS is disrupted, the enzyme is uncoupled from NO production and other redox-active products are generated, including hydrogen peroxide and superoxide anion radical (18, 19).In vascular disease states such as diabetes, endothelial dysfunction is characterized by a decrease in NO bioactivity and by a concomitant increase in superoxide formation, while eNOS mRNA and protein levels are maintained or even increased. “Uncoupled” eNOS generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), shifting the nitroso-redox balance and having adverse consequences in the vascular wall (20). Several enzymes expressed in vascular tissues contribute to the production and efficient degradation of ROS, and an enhanced activity of oxidant enzymes and/or reduced activity of antioxidant enzymes may cause oxidative stress. Various agonists, pathological conditions, and therapeutic interventions lead to modulated expression and function of oxidant and antioxidant enzymes. However, the intimate relationship between intracellular redox state, eNOS regulation, and NO bioavailability remains incompletely characterized.BH4 is a key redox-active cofactor for activity of all NOS enzymes (21). The exact role of BH4 in NOS catalysis is not yet completely defined, but this cofactor appears to facilitate electron transfer from the eNOS reductase domain and maintains the heme prosthetic group of the enzyme in its redox-active form (18, 22, 23). Moreover, BH4 promotes formation of active NOS homodimers (24) and inhibits the formation of hydrogen peroxide or superoxide by uncoupled eNOS (18, 19). It has been reported that the endothelial dysfunction associated with diabetes is accompanied a decrease in the abundance of bioactive BH4. Supplementation with BH4 has been shown to improve endothelial function in the models of diabetes and hypertension (25, 26, 27). Moreover, BH4 oxidation is seen in vascular cells in the setting of oxidative stress associated with diabetes (28) and hypertension (29).BH4 can be formed either by a de novo biosynthetic pathway or by a salvage pathway. Guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase-1 (GTPCH1) catalyzes the conversion of GTP to dihydroneopterin triphosphate. BH4 is generated by further steps catalyzed by 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase and sepiapterin reductase (30). GTPCH1 appears to be the rate-limiting enzyme in BH4 biosynthesis; overexpression of GTPCH1 is sufficient to augment BH4 levels in cultured endothelial cells (31). On the other hand, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) catalyzes the regeneration of BH4 from its oxidized form, 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2), in several cell types (30, 32). DHFR is mainly involved in folate metabolism and converts inactive BH2 back to BH4 and plays an important role in the metabolism of exogenously administered BH4. However, the relative contributions of endothelial GTPCH1 and DHFR to the modulation of eNOS-dependent pathways are incompletely understood.In these studies, we have used siRNA-mediated “knockdown” of GTPCH1 and DHFR to explore the relative roles of BH4 synthesis and recycling in the modulation of eNOS bioactivity, as well as in the regulation of NO-dependent signaling pathways in endothelial cells.  相似文献   

9.

Background

All three nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isoforms are expressed in atherosclerotic plaques. NOS enzymes in general catalyse NO production. However, under conditions of substrate and cofactor deficiency, the enzyme directly catalyse superoxide formation. Considering this alternative chemistry, the effects of NOS on key events in spontaneous hyperlipidemia driven atherosclerosis have not been investigated yet. Here, we evaluate how endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) modulates leukocyte/endothelial- (L/E) and platelet/endothelial- (P/E) interactions in atherosclerosis and the production of nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide by the enzyme.

Principal Findings

Intravital microscopy (IVM) of carotid arteries revealed significantly increased L/E-interactions in apolipoproteinE/eNOS double knockout mice (apoE−/−/eNOS−/−), while P/E-interactions did not differ, compared to apoE−/−. eNOS deficiency increased macrophage infiltration in carotid arteries and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) expression, both in endothelial and smooth muscle cells. Despite the expression of other NOS isoforms (inducible NOS, iNOS and neuronal NOS, nNOS) in plaques, Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) measurements of NO showed significant contribution of eNOS to total circulating and vascular wall NO production. Pharmacological inhibition and genetic deletion of eNOS reduced vascular superoxide production, indicating uncoupling of the enzyme in apoE−/− vessels.

Conclusion

Overt plaque formation, increased vascular inflammation and L/E- interactions are associated with significant reduction of superoxide production in apoE−/−/eNOS−/− vessels. Therefore, lack of eNOS does not cause an automatic increase in oxidative stress. Uncoupling of eNOS occurs in apoE−/− atherosclerosis but does not negate the enzyme''s strong protective effects.  相似文献   

10.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a required cofactor for the synthesis of NO by endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), and endothelial BH4 bioavailability is a critical factor in regulating the balance between NO and superoxide production (eNOS coupling). Biosynthesis of BH4 is determined by the activity of GTP-cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH). However, BH4 levels may also be influenced by oxidation, forming 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2), which promotes eNOS uncoupling. Conversely, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) can regenerate BH4 from BH2, but whether DHFR is functionally important in maintaining eNOS coupling remains unclear. To investigate the mechanism by which DHFR might regulate eNOS coupling in vivo, we treated wild-type, BH4-deficient (hph-1), and GTPCH-overexpressing (GCH-Tg) mice with methotrexate (MTX), to inhibit BH4 recycling by DHFR. MTX treatment resulted in a striking elevation in BH2 and a decreased BH4:BH2 ratio in the aortas of wild-type mice. These effects were magnified in hph-1 but diminished in GCH-Tg mice. Attenuated eNOS activity was observed in MTX-treated hph-1 but not wild-type or GCH-Tg mouse lung, suggesting that inhibition of DHFR in BH4-deficient states leads to eNOS uncoupling. Taken together, these data reveal a key role for DHFR in regulating the BH4 vs BH2 ratio and eNOS coupling under conditions of low total biopterin availability in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
In the present study, we used the hph-1 mouse, which displays GTP-cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH I) deficiency, to test the hypothesis that loss of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) in conduit and small arteries activates compensatory mechanisms designed to protect vascular wall from oxidative stress induced by uncoupling of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). Both GTPCH I activity and BH(4) levels were reduced in the aortas and small mesenteric arteries of hph-1 mice. However, the BH(4)-to-7,8-dihydrobiopterin ratio was significantly reduced only in hph-1 aortas. Furthermore, superoxide anion and 3-nitrotyrosine production were significantly enhanced in aortas but not in small mesenteric arteries of hph-1 mice. In contrast to the aorta, protein expression of copper- and zinc-containing superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) was significantly increased in small mesenteric arteries of hph-1 mice. Protein expression of catalase was increased in both aortas and small mesenteric arteries of hph-1 mice. Further analysis of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS)/cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signaling demonstrated that protein expression of phosphorylated Ser(1177)-eNOS as well as basal cGMP levels and hydrogen peroxide was increased in hph-1 aortas. Increased production of hydrogen peroxide in hph-1 mice aortas appears to be the most likely mechanism responsible for phosphorylation of eNOS and elevation of cGMP. In contrast, upregulation of CuZnSOD and catalase in resistance arteries is sufficient to protect vascular tissue from increased production of reactive oxygen species generated by uncoupling of eNOS. The results of our study suggest that anatomical origin determines the ability of vessel wall to cope with oxidative stress induced by uncoupling of eNOS.  相似文献   

12.
Protein-protein interactions represent an important post-translational mechanism for endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) regulation. We have previously reported that β-actin is associated with eNOS oxygenase domain and that association of eNOS with β-actin increases eNOS activity and nitric oxide (NO) production. In the present study, we found that β-actin-induced increase in NO production was accompanied by decrease in superoxide formation. A synthetic actin-binding sequence (ABS) peptide 326 with amino acid sequence corresponding to residues 326–333 of human eNOS, one of the putative ABSs, specifically bound to β-actin and prevented eNOS association with β-actin in vitro. Peptide 326 also prevented β-actin-induced decrease in superoxide formation and increase in NO and l-citrulline production. A modified peptide 326 replacing hydrophobic amino acids leucine and tryptophan with neutral alanine was unable to interfere with eNOS-β-actin binding and to prevent β-actin-induced changes in NO and superoxide formation. Site-directed mutagenesis of the actin-binding domain of eNOS replacing leucine and tryptophan with alanine yielded an eNOS mutant that exhibited reduced eNOS-β-actin association, decreased NO production, and increased superoxide formation in COS-7 cells. Disruption of eNOS-β-actin interaction in endothelial cells using ABS peptide 326 resulted in decreased NO production, increased superoxide formation, and decreased endothelial monolayer wound repair, which was prevented by PEG-SOD and NO donor NOC-18. Taken together, this novel finding indicates that β-actin binding to eNOS through residues 326–333 in the eNOS protein results in shifting the enzymatic activity from superoxide formation toward NO production. Modulation of NO and superoxide formation from eNOS by β-actin plays an important role in endothelial function.  相似文献   

13.
Melanoma cell lines and cells corresponding to premalignant melanocytes were established by our group after subjecting a nontumorigenic murine melanocyte lineage, melan-a, to sequential cycles of anchorage blockade. Previous results showed that in melan-a cells the superoxide level increases after such procedure. Superoxide production during melanocyte de-adhesion was inhibited by L-sepiapterin, the precursor of eNOS cofactor BH4, and increased by the inhibitor of BH4 synthesis, DAHP, hence indicating a partial uncoupling state of eNOS. The eNOS uncoupling seems to be maintained in cells derived from melan-a, because they present decreased nitric oxide and increased superoxide levels. The inhibition of superoxide production in Tm5 melanoma cells with L-sepiapterin reinforces their eNOS-uncoupled state. The maintenance of oxidative stress seems to be important in melanoma apoptosis resistance because Mn(III)TBAP, a superoxide scavenger, or L-sepiapterin renders Tm5 cells more sensitive to anoikis and chemotherapy. More importantly, eNOS uncoupling seems to play a pivotal role in melanocyte malignant transformation induced by sustained anchorage impediment, because no malignant transformation was observed when L-NAME-treated melanocytes were subjected to sequential cycles of de-adhesion. Our results show that uncoupled eNOS contributes to superoxide production during melanocyte anchorage impediment, contributing to anoikis resistance and malignant transformation.  相似文献   

14.
《Free radical research》2013,47(10):1173-1183
Abstract

Oxidative stress may cause a loss of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), a co-factor of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), decrease the bioavailability of NO and aggravate ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in diabetic heart. We hypothesized that ascorbic acid (AA) and N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) protect the diabetic heart from I/R injury by increasing BH4/dihydrobiopterin (BH2) ratio and inhibiting uncoupling of NOS. Diabetes mellitus was induced in rats by streptozotocin treatment, and the hearts were isolated and perfused. BH4 and BH4/BH2 ratio decreased in the diabetic heart associated with increased production of superoxide and nitrotyrosine (NT). Treatment with AA or NAC significantly increased BH4/BH2 ratio in the diabetic heart associated with decreased production of superoxide and NT and increased generation of nitrate plus nitrite (NOx). Pre-treatment with AA or NAC before 30 min ischemia followed by 120 min reperfusion improved left ventricular (LV) function and reduced infarct size in the diabetic but not non-diabetic hearts. The NOS inhibitor, L-NAME, inhibited the increase in the generation of superoxide, NT and NOx, but aggravated LV function and increased infarct size in the diabetic heart. L-NAME also abrogated the increase in NOx and improvement of LV function and the infarct size-limiting effect induced by AA or NAC in the diabetic heart. These results suggest that AA and NAC increase BH4/BH2 ratio and prevent NOS uncoupling in the diabetic heart. Resultant increase in the bioavailability of NO renders the diabetic heart toleratant to I/R injury.  相似文献   

15.
《Free radical research》2013,47(12):1496-1513
In endothelial cell dysfunction, the uncoupling of eNOS results in higher superoxide (O2??) and lower NO production and a reduction in NO availability. Superoxide reacts with NO to form a potent oxidizing agent peroxynitrite (ONOO?) resulting in nitrosative and nitroxidative stresses and dismutates to form hydrogen peroxide. Studies have shown superoxide dismutase (SOD) plays an important role in reduction of O2?? and ONOO? during eNOS uncoupling. However, the administration or over-expression of SOD was ineffective or displayed deleterious effects in some cases. An understanding of interactions of the two enzyme systems eNOS and SOD is important in determining endothelial cell function. We analyzed complex biochemical interactions involving eNOS and SOD in eNOS uncoupling. A computational model of biochemical pathway of the eNOS-related NO and O2?? production and downstream reactions involving NO, O2??, ONOO?, H2O2 and SOD was developed. The effects of SOD concentration on the concentration profiles of NO, O2??, ONOO? and H2O2 in eNOS coupling/uncoupling were investigated. The results include (i) SOD moderately improves NO production and concentration during eNOS uncoupling, (ii) O2?? production rate is independent of SOD concentration, (iii) Increase in SOD concentration from 0.1 to 100 μM reduces O2?? concentration by 90% at all [BH4]/[TBP] ratios, (iv) SOD reduces ONOO? concentration and increases H2O2 concentration during eNOS uncoupling, (v) Catalase can reduce H2O2 concentration and (vi) Dismutation rate by SOD is the most sensitive parameter during eNOS uncoupling. Thus, SOD plays a dual role in eNOS uncoupling as an attenuator of nitrosative/nitroxidative stress and an augmenter of oxidative stress.  相似文献   

16.
Several cardiovascular disorders, including atherosclerosis and tolerance to the antianginal drug nitroglycerin (GTN), may be associated with the generation of superoxide anions, which react with nitric oxide (NO) to yield peroxynitrite. According to a widely held view, oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) by peroxynitrite causes uncoupling of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS), resulting in reduced NO bioavailability and endothelial dysfunction under conditions of oxidative stress. In this study we determined the levels of reduced biopterins and endothelial function in cultured cells exposed to peroxynitrite and GTN as well as in blood vessels isolated from GTN-tolerant guinea pigs and rats. BH4 was rapidly oxidized by peroxynitrite and 3-morpholino sydnonimine (SIN-1) in buffer, but this was prevented by glutathione and not observed in endothelial cells exposed to SIN-1 or GTN. Prolonged treatment of the cells with 0.1 mM GTN caused slow NG-nitro-l-arginine-sensitive formation of reactive oxygen species without affecting eNOS activity. Endothelial function and BH4/BH2 levels were identical in blood vessels of control and GTN-tolerant animals. Our results suggest that peroxynitrite-triggered BH4 oxidation does not occur in endothelial cells or GTN-exposed blood vessels. GTN seems to trigger minor eNOS uncoupling that is unrelated to BH4 depletion and without observable consequence on eNOS function.  相似文献   

17.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a ubiquitous pteridine metabolite that serves as a NOS cofactor. Recently, we showed that BH4 efficiently inhibits superoxide generation from the heme group at the oxygenase domain of eNOS. This role indicates that BH4 acts as a redox switch in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, which may have important consequences in the physiology of the endothelium. Here the mechanism by which BH4 inhibits superoxide release from eNOS and the "uncoupling" effects of oxidized BH4 metabolites are presented. The implications of the disparate actions of fully reduced and oxidized BH 4 metabolites in the control of eNOS biochemistry are discussed in the light of clinical data indicating that BH 4 levels are important in the regulation of superoxide levels and of endothelial reactivity.  相似文献   

18.
Complex I (NQR) is a critical site of superoxide () production and the major host of redox protein thiols in mitochondria. In response to oxidative stress, NQR-derived protein thiols at the 51- and 75-kDa subunits are known to be reversibly S-glutathionylated. Although several glutathionylated domains from NQR 51 and 75 kDa have been identified, their roles in the regulatory functions remain to be explored. To gain further insights into protein S-glutathionylation of complex I, we used two peptides of S-glutathionylated domain (200GAGAYICGEETALIESIEGK219 of 51-kDa protein and 361VDSDTLCTEEVFPTAGAGTDLR382 of 75-kDa protein) as chimeric epitopes incorporating a “promiscuous” T-cell epitope to generate two polyclonal antibodies, AbGSCA206 and AbGSCB367. Binding of AbGSCA206 and AbGSCB367 inhibited NQR-mediated generation by 37 and 57%, as measured by EPR spin-trapping. To further provide an appropriate control, two peptides of non-glutathionylated domain (21SGDTTAPKKTSFGSLKDFDR40 of 51-kDa peptide and 100WNILTNSEKTKKAREGVMEFL120 of 75-kDa peptide) were synthesized as chimeric epitopes to generate two polyclonal antibodies, Ab51 and Ab75. Binding of A51 did not affect NQR-mediated generation to a significant level. However, binding of Ab75 inhibited NQR-mediated generation by 35%. None of AbGSCA206, AbGSCB367, Ab51, or Ab75 showed an inhibitory effect on the electron transfer activity of NQR, suggesting that antibody binding to the glutathione-binding domain decreased electron leakage from the hydrophilic domain of NQR. When heart tissue homogenates were immunoprecipitated with Ab51 or Ab75 and probed with an antibody against glutathione, protein S-glutathionylation was enhanced in post-ischemic myocardium at the NQR 51-kDa subunit, but not at the 75-kDa subunit, indicating that the 51-kDa subunit of flavin subcomplex is more sensitive to oxidative stress resulting from myocardial infarction.  相似文献   

19.
Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is a key enzyme in the macrophage inflammatory response, which is the source of nitric oxide (NO) that is potently induced in response to proinflammatory stimuli. However, the specific role of NO production, as distinct from iNOS induction, in macrophage inflammatory responses remains unproven. We have generated a novel mouse model with conditional deletion of Gch1, encoding GTP cyclohydrolase 1 (GTPCH), an essential enzyme in the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) that is a required cofactor for iNOS NO production. Mice with a floxed Gch1 allele (Gch1fl/fl) were crossed with Tie2cre transgenic mice, causing Gch1 deletion in leukocytes (Gch1fl/flTie2cre). Macrophages from Gch1fl/flTie2cre mice lacked GTPCH protein and de novo biopterin biosynthesis. When activated with LPS and IFNγ, macrophages from Gch1fl/flTie2cre mice induced iNOS protein in a manner indistinguishable from wild-type controls, but produced no detectable NO, as judged by L-citrulline production, EPR spin trapping of NO, and by nitrite accumulation. Incubation of Gch1fl/flTie2cre macrophages with dihydroethidium revealed significantly increased production of superoxide in the presence of iNOS expression, and an iNOS-independent, BH4-dependent increase in other ROS species. Normal BH4 levels, nitric oxide production, and cellular redox state were restored by sepiapterin, a precursor of BH4 production by the salvage pathway, demonstrating that the effects of BH4 deficiency were reversible. Gch1fl/flTie2cre macrophages showed only minor alterations in cytokine production and normal cell migration, and minimal changes in basal gene expression. However, gene expression analysis after iNOS induction identified 78 genes that were altered between wild-type and Gch1fl/flTie2cre macrophages. Pathway analysis identified decreased NRF2 activation, with reduced induction of archetypal NRF2 genes (gclm, prdx1, gsta3, nqo1, and catalase) in BH4-deficient Gch1fl/flTie2cre macrophages. These findings identify BH4-dependent iNOS regulation and NO generation as specific requirements for NRF2-dependent responses in macrophage inflammatory activation.  相似文献   

20.
Activation of glomerular mesangial cells (MCs) by angiotensin II (Ang II) leads to extracellular matrix accumulation. Here, we demonstrate that, in MCs, Ang II induces endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) uncoupling with enhanced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and decreased production of NO. Ang II promotes a rapid increase in 3-nitrotyrosine formation, and uric acid attenuates Ang II-induced decrease in NO bioavailability, demonstrating that peroxynitrite mediates the effects of Ang II on eNOS dysfunction. Ang II rapidly up-regulates Nox4 protein. Inhibition of Nox4 abolishes the increase in ROS and peroxynitrite generation as well as eNOS uncoupling triggered by Ang II, indicating that Nox4 is upstream of eNOS. This pathway contributes to Ang II-mediated fibronectin accumulation in MCs. Ang II also elicits an increase in mitochondrial abundance of Nox4 protein, and the oxidase contributes to ROS production in mitochondria. Overexpression of mitochondrial manganese superoxide dismutase prevents the stimulatory effects of Ang II on mitochondrial ROS production, loss of NO availability, and MC fibronectin accumulation, whereas manganese superoxide dismutase depletion increases mitochondrial ROS, NO deficiency, and fibronectin synthesis basally and in cells exposed to Ang II. This work provides the first evidence that uncoupled eNOS is responsible for Ang II-induced MC fibronectin accumulation and identifies Nox4 and mitochondrial ROS as mediators of eNOS dysfunction. These data shed light on molecular processes underlying the oxidative signaling cascade engaged by Ang II and identify potential targets for intervention to prevent renal fibrosis.  相似文献   

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