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1.
Activation of cerebral guanylate cyclase by nitric oxide.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Mouse cerebral guanylate cyclase was activated by catalase in the presence of sodium azide (NaN3), which is known to form catalase-NO complex, while nitrosamines and nitric oxide (NO gas) were capable of activating cerebral guanylate cyclase in the absence of catalase. The activation of guanylate cyclase by NaN3-catalase or nitrosamines was markedly inhibited by ferrohemoglobin which has a high affinity for NO, but not by ferrihemoglobin. These data suggest that NO or NO containing compounds may activate guanylate cyclase, whereas ferrohemoglobin may exhibit an inhibitory effect on the activation of guanylate cyclase, possibly by interacting with NO or NO containing compounds.  相似文献   

2.
Purification of soluble guanylate cyclase from rat liver resulted in an apparent loss of enzyme activation by nitric oxide that could be restored by dithiothreitol. methemoglobin, bovine serum albumin, or sucrose. Although hemoglobin also permitted some activation with nitric oxide, the effect of other agents to restore enzyme activation was prevented with hemoglobin. As a result of enzyme purification, there is an alteration of the dose-response relationship for nitric oxide activation. After partial enzyme purification, relatively high concentrations of nitric oxide that were stimulatory in crude enzyme preparations had no effect on enzyme activity. However, partially purified or homogeneous enzyme was activated by lower concentrations of nitric oxide. The bell-shaped dose-response curve for nitric oxide was shifted to the left with guanylate cyclase purification. The addition of dithiothreitol, methemoglobin, bovine serum albumin, or sucrose to enzyme markedly broadens the dose-response curve for nitric oxide. Thus, the apparent loss of responsiveness to nitric oxide with purification is a function of increased sensitivity of guanylate cyclase to nitric oxide. Increased sensitivity to nitric oxide with enzyme purification probably results from the removal of heme, proteins, and small molecules that can serve as scavengers or sinks for nitric oxide and prevent excessive oxidation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Free nitric oxide (NO) activates soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), an enzyme, within both pulmonary and vascular smooth muscle. sGC catalyzes the cyclization of guanosine 5'-triphosphate to guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP). Binding rates of NO to the ferrous heme(s) of sGC have been measured in vitro. However, a missing link in our understanding of the control mechanism of sGC by NO is a comprehensive in vivo kinetic analysis. Available literature data suggests that NO dissociation from the heme center of sGC is accelerated by its interaction with one or more cofactors in vivo. We present a working model for sGC activation and NO consumption in vivo. Our model predicts that NO influences the cGMP formation rate over a concentration range of approximately 5-100 nM (apparent Michaelis constant approximately 23 nM), with Hill coefficients between 1.1 and 1.5. The apparent reaction order for NO consumption by sGC is dependent on NO concentration, and varies between 0 and 1.5. Finally, the activation of sGC (half-life approximately 1-2 s) is much more rapid than deactivation (approximately 50 s). We conclude that control of sGC in vivo is most likely ultra-sensitive, and that activation in vivo occurs at lower NO concentrations than previously reported.  相似文献   

5.
D L Vesely  G S Levey 《Enzyme》1978,23(2):140-143
A variety of nitroso chemical carcinogens increase the activity of guanylate cyclase (EC 4.6.1.2), the enzyme catalyzing the production of guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate. In the present report, the first non-nitroso chemical carcinogen, butadiene diepoxide, was shown to activate guanylate in a variety of tissues over the concentration range 1-100 mmol/l. At 20 mmol/l concentration, increases were 2- to 17-fold above control. These observations have potential importance since guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate may be involved in cell growth and malignant transformation.  相似文献   

6.
This study examines in endothelium-denuded bovine pulmonary arteries the effects of increasing heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) activity on relaxation and soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) activation by nitric oxide (NO). A 24-h organ culture with 0.1 mM cobalt chloride (CoCl2) or 30 microM Co-protoporphyrin IX was developed as a method of increasing HO-1 expression. These treatments increased HO-1 expression and HO activity by approximately two- to fourfold and lowered heme levels by 40-45%. Induction of HO-1 was associated with an attenuation of pulmonary arterial relaxation to the NO-donor spermine-NONOate. The presence of a HO-1 inhibitor 30 microM chromium mesoporphyrin during the 24-h organ culture (but not acute treatment with this agent) reversed the attenuation of relaxation to NO seen in arteries co-cultured with agents that increased HO-1. Relaxation to isoproterenol, which is thought to be mediated through cAMP, was not altered in arteries with increased HO-1. Inducers of HO-1 did not appear to alter basal sGC activity in arterial homogenates or expression of the beta(1)-subunit of sGC. However, the increase in activity seen in the presence of 1 microM spermine-NONOate was attenuated in homogenates obtained from arteries with increased HO-1. Since arteries with increased HO-1 had decreased levels of superoxide detected by the chemiluminescence of 5 microM lucigenin, superoxide did not appear to be mediating the attenuation of relaxation to NO. These data suggest that increasing HO-1 activity depletes heme, and this is associated with an attenuation of pulmonary artery relaxation and sGC activation responses to NO.  相似文献   

7.
The principal objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that nitroprusside relaxes vascular smooth muscle via the reactive intermediate, nitric oxide (NO), and that the biologic action of NO is associated with the activation of guanylate cyclase. Nitroprusside, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) and NO elicit concentration-dependent relaxation of precontraced helical strips of bovine coronary artery. Nitroprusside, MNNG and NO also markedly activate soluble guanylate cyclase from bovine coronary arterial smooth muscle and, thereby, stimulate the formation of cyclic GMP. Three heme proteins, hemoglobin, methemoglobin and myoglobin, and the oxidant, methylene blue, abolish the coronary arterial relaxation elicited by NO. Similarly, these heme proteins, methylene blue and another oxidant, ferricyanide, markedly inhibit the activation of coronary arterial guanylate cyclase by NO, nitroprusside and MNNG. The following findings support the view that certain nitroso-containing compounds liberate NO in tissue:heme proteins, which cannot permeate cells, inhibit coronary arterial relaxation elicited by NO, but not by nitroprusside or MNNG; the vital stain, methylene blue, inhibits relaxation by NO, nitroprusside and MNNG; heme proteins and oxidants inhibit guanylate cyclase activation by NO, nitroprusside and MNNG in cell-free mixtures. The findings that inhibitors of NO-induced relaxation of coronary artery also inhibit coronary arterial guanylate cyclase activation suggest that cyclic GMP formation may be associated with coronary arterial smooth muscle relaxation.  相似文献   

8.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is the target of nitric oxide (NO) released by nitric-oxide synthase in endothelial cells, inducing an increase of cGMP synthesis in response. This heterodimeric protein possesses a regulatory subunit carrying a heme where NO binding occurs, while the second subunit harbors the catalytic site. The binding of NO and the subsequent breaking of the bond between the proximal histidine and the heme-Fe(2+) are assumed to induce conformational changes, which are the origin of the catalytic activation. At the molecular level, the activation and deactivation mechanisms are unknown, as is the dynamics of NO once in the heme pocket. Using ultrafast time-resolved absorption spectroscopy, we measured the kinetics of NO rebinding to sGC after photodissociation. The main spectral transient in the Soret band does not match the equilibrium difference spectrum of NO-liganded minus unliganded sGC, and the geminate rebinding was found to be monoexponential and ultrafast (tau = 7.5 ps), with a relative amplitude close to unity (0.97). These characteristics, so far not observed in other hemoproteins, indicate that NO encounters a high energy barrier for escaping from the heme pocket once the His-Fe(2+) bond has been cleaved; this bond does not reform before NO recombination. The deactivation of isolated sGC cannot occur by only simple diffusion of NO from the heme; therefore, several allosteric states may be inferred, including a desensitized one, to induce NO release. Thus, besides the structural change leading to activation, a consequence of the decoupling of the proximal histidine may also be to induce a change of the heme pocket distal geometry, which raises the energy barrier for NO escape, optimizing the efficiency of NO trapping. The non-single exponential character of the NO picosecond rebinding coexists only with the presence of the protein structure surrounding the heme, and the single exponential rate observed in sGC is very likely to be due to a closed conformation of the heme pocket. Our results emphasize the physiological importance of NO geminate recombination in hemoproteins like nitric-oxide synthase and sGC and show that the protein structure controls NO dynamics in a manner adapted to their function. This control of ligand dynamics provides a regulation at molecular level in the function of these enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
Highly purified rat lung soluble guanylate cyclase was activated with nitric oxide or sodium nitroprusside and the degree of activation varied with incubation conditions. With Mg2+ as the action cofactor, about 2- to 8-fold activation was observed with nitric oxide or sodium nitroprusside alone. Markedly enhanced activation (20-40 fold) was observed when 1 muM hemin added to the enzyme prior to exposure to the activating agent. The activation with hemin and sodium nitroprusside was prevented in a dose-dependent manner by sodium cyanide. The level activation was also increased by the addition of 1 mM dithiothreitol, but unlike hemin which had no effect on basal enzyme activity, dithiothreitol led to a considerable increase in basal activity. Activated guanylate cyclase decayed to basal activity within one hour at 2 degrees C and the enzyme could be reactivated upon re-exposure to nitroprusside or nitric oxide. Under basal conditions, Michaelis-Menten kinetics were observed, with a Km for GTP of 140 muM with Mg2+ cofactor. Following activation with nitroprusside or nitric oxide, curvilinear Eadie-Hofstee transformations of kinetic data were observed, with Km's of 22 MuM and 100 MuM for Mg-GTP. When optimal activation (15-40 fold) was induced by the addition of hemin and nitroprusside, multiple Km's were also seen with Mg-GTP and the high affinity form was predominant (22 MuM). Similar curvilinear Eadie-Hofstee transformations were observed with Mn2+ as the cation cofactor. These data suggest that multiple GTP catalytic sites are present in activated guanylate cyclase, or alternatively, multiple populations of enzyme exist.  相似文献   

10.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a physiologically relevant activator of the hemoprotein soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). In the presence of NO, sGC is activated several hundredfold above the basal level by a mechanism that remains to be elucidated. The heme ligand n-butyl isocyanide (BIC) was used to probe the mechanism of NO activation of sGC. Electronic absorption spectroscopy was used to show that BIC binds to the sGC heme, forming a 6-coordinate complex with an absorbance maximum at 429 nm. BIC activates sGC 2-5-fold, and synergizes with the allosteric activator YC-1, to activate the enzyme 15-25-fold. YC-1 activates the sGC-BIC complex, and leads to an increase in both the V(max) and K(m). BIC was also used to probe the mechanism of NO activation. The activity of the sGC-BIC complex increases 15-fold in the presence of NO, without displacing BIC at the heme, which is consistent with previous reports that proposed the involvement of a non-heme NO binding site in the activation process.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the primary NO receptor, is linked to NO binding to the prosthetic heme group. Recent studies have demonstrated that the degree and duration of sGC activation depend on the presence and ratio of purine nucleotides and on the presence of excess NO. We measured NO dissociation from full-length alpha1beta1 sGC, and the constructs beta1(1-194), beta1(1-385), and beta2(1-217), at 37 and 10 degrees C with and without the substrate analogue guanosine-5'-[(alpha,beta-methylene]triphosphate (GMPCPP) or the activator 3-(5'-hydroxymethyl-3'-furyl)-1-benzylindazole (YC-1). NO dissociation from each construct was complex, requiring two exponentials to fit the data. Decreasing the temperature decreased the contribution of the faster exponential for all constructs. Inclusion of YC-1 moderately accelerated NO dissociation from sGC and beta2(1-217) at 37 degrees C and dramatically accelerated NO dissociation from sGC at 10 degrees C. The presence of GMPCPP also dramatically accelerated NO dissociation from sGC at 10 degrees C. This acceleration is due to increases in the observed rate for each exponential and in the contribution of the faster exponential. Increases in the contribution of the faster exponential correlated with higher activation of sGC by NO. These data indicate that the sGC ferrous-nitrosyl complex adopts two 5-coordinate conformations, a lower activity "closed" form, which releases NO slowly, and a higher activity "open" form, which releases NO rapidly. The ratio of these two species affects the overall rate of NO dissociation. These results have implications for the function of sGC in vivo, where there is evidence for two NO-regulated activity states.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Receptor-mediated activation of spermatozoan guanylate cyclase   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The sea urchin egg peptides speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly) and resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Arg-Leu-NH2) bind to spermatozoa of the homologous species (Lytechinus pictus or Arbacia punctulata, respectively) and cause transient elevations of cyclic GMP concentrations (Hansbrough, J. R., and Garbers, D. L. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1447-1452). The addition of these peptides to spermatozoan membrane preparations caused a rapid and dramatic (up to 25-fold) activation of guanylate cyclase. The peptide-induced activation of guanylate cyclase was transient, and the subsequent decline in enzyme activity coincided with conversion of a high Mr (phosphorylated) form of guanylate cyclase to a low Mr (dephosphorylated) form. When membranes were incubated at pH 8.0, the high Mr form was converted to the low Mr form without substantial changes in basal enzyme activity. However, the peptide-stimulated activity of the low Mr form of guanylate cyclase was much less than the peptide-stimulated activity of the high Mr form. Activation of the low Mr form by peptide was not transient and persisted for at least 10 min. In addition, the pH 8.0 treatment that caused the Mr conversion of guanylate cyclase also caused an increase in the peptide-binding capacity of the membranes. We propose a model in which activation of the membrane form of guanylate cyclase is receptor-mediated; the extent of enzyme activation is modulated by its phosphorylation state.  相似文献   

14.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is highly activated by nitric oxide (NO) and is the known mediator of the effects of NO on a variety of physiological processes. The rates at which sGC is activated and deactivated are therefore of wide interest since they determine the duration of a tissue's response to NO. The effect of NO on smooth muscle dissipates in 1-2 min, suggesting that both activation and deactivation are fast. In vitro measurements show that the activation of sGC occurs in less than a second, while the deactivation takes several hours at 20 degrees C. However, recent reports indicate that Mg-GTP, oxyhemoglobin, and reducing and oxidizing agents could deactivate the cyclase in several seconds to minutes, though the effectiveness of each of these agents is in dispute. We investigated the lifetime of NO-sGC in the cytosol of retina by monitoring its enzymatic activity at 20 degrees C. Our results show that Mg-GTP, the substrate of NO-sGC, has no influence on the deactivation. Similarly, reducing agents glutathione and dithiothreitol shortened the half-life of NO-sGC only by about 30%. The greatest effect on the deactivation was caused by scavengers of NO: oxyhemoglobin reduced the half-life of NO-sGC from 106 min to 18 s; another NO scavenger, 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5, 5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (CPTIO), reduced it to 42 s (20 degrees C). Similarly rapid deactivation was observed with the enzyme from bovine lung, immunoprecipitated enzyme from bovine retina, and heme-deficient enzyme from bovine retina reconstituted with heme. On the other hand, YC-1, an activator of sGC, stabilized the activated enzyme, preventing NO dissociation, as was evident from the inability of oxyhemoglobin or CPTIO to deactivate NO-sGC. Calcium, which is known to inhibit NO-sGC, also inhibited the effects of oxyhemoglobin and CPTIO, slowing down the deactivation of the enzyme. Lithium, which is also known to inhibit NO-sGC, had no effect on the deactivation rate of the enzyme. These results, taken together, suggest that two factors with major impact on the lifetime of NO-sGC are the proximity to NO scavengers and the calcium concentration in the cell.  相似文献   

15.
Microbial cytochromes c' contain a 5-coordinate His-ligated heme that forms stable adducts with nitric oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide (CO), but not with dioxygen. We report the 1.95 and 1.35 A resolution crystal structures of the CO- and NO-bound forms of the reduced protein from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans. NO disrupts the His-Fe bond and binds in a novel mode to the proximal face of the heme, giving a 5-coordinate species. In contrast, CO binds 6-coordinate on the distal side. A second CO molecule, not bound to the heme, is located in the proximal pocket. Since the unusual spectroscopic properties of cytochromes c' are shared by soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), our findings have potential implications for the activation of sGC induced by the binding of NO or CO to the heme domain.  相似文献   

16.
Prolactin enhanced guanylate cyclase [E.C.4.6.1.2] two- to threefold in ovary, testis, mammary gland, liver and kidney. Dose response relationships revealed that maximal activation of this enzyme was at a concentration of one nanomolar and that increasing prolactin's concentration to the millimolar range caused no further increase in activity. There was an absolute cation requirement for prolactin's enhancement of guanylate cyclase. Calcium or manganese allowed prolactin to increase guanylate cyclase activity. Greater enhancement of this enzyme's activity by prolactin was observed when manganese was the co-factor. The data in this investigation suggest that guanylate cyclase may play a role in the mechanism of action of prolactin.  相似文献   

17.
Receptor-mediated activation of detergent-solubilized guanylate cyclase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Here for the first time we report the successful detergent-solubilization of the speract (Gly-Phe-Asp-Leu-Asn-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly) receptor and the subsequent activation of guanylate cyclase in response to receptor occupation. Sea urchin sperm membranes treated with a solution containing 0.5% LubrolR PX and 0.5% EmulphogeneR in the presence of MgCl2 and NaF released both the speract receptor and guanylate cyclase activity into solution. The solubilized apparent receptor was not sedimented at 400,000 x g x 15 min and was not retained by glass microfiber filters. In the presence of 125I-GGG(Y2)speract and dissuccinimidyl suberate, a major radioactive band at about Mr = 77,000 and minor bands at Mr = 35,000 and 150,000 were cross-linked. Speract but not resact (Cys-Val-Thr-Gly-Ala-Pro-Gly-Cys-Val-Gly-Gly-Gly-Arg-LeuNH2) competed in the cross-linking reaction. The amount of 125I-GGG(Y2)speract bound to solubilized receptor did not increase in a linear manner as a function of added protein but instead was concave upward. The addition of speract but not resact to the solubilized preparation resulted in the activation of the enzyme guanylate cyclase; the extent of stimulation was dependent on the amount of enzyme protein added and also was concave upward. Approximately 900 nM speract half-maximally activated guanylate cyclase. These data suggest that the speract receptor and guanylate cyclase are closely apposed, even in detergent, or that they are the same molecule.  相似文献   

18.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is an important downstream intracellular target of nitric oxide (NO) that is produced by endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) and inducible NO synthase (iNOS). In this study, we demonstrate that sGC exists in a complex with eNOS and heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) in aortic endothelial cells. In addition, we show that in aortic smooth muscle cells, sGC forms a complex with HSP90. Formation of the sGC/eNOS/HSP90 complex is increased in response to eNOS-activating agonists in a manner that depends on HSP90 activity. In vitro binding assays with glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins that contain the alpha- or beta-subunit of sGC show that the sGC beta-subunit interacts directly with HSP90 and indirectly with eNOS. Confocal immunofluorescent studies confirm the subcellular colocalization of sGC and HSP90 in both endothelial and smooth muscle cells. Complex formation of sGC with HSP90 facilitates responses to NO donors in cultured cells (cGMP accumulation) as well as in anesthetized rats (hypotension). These complexes likely function to stabilize sGC as well as to provide directed intracellular transfer of NO from NOS to sGC, thus preventing inactivation of NO by superoxide anion and formation of peroxynitrite, which is a toxic molecule that has been implicated in the pathology of several vascular diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against bovine lung soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) were prepared and characterized. mAb 3221 recognized both the alpha- and beta-subunits of sGC and had greater binding affinity to the enzyme in the presence of NO. mAb 28131 recognized only the beta-subunit and its affinity did not change with NO. Neither mAb cross-reacted with particulate GC. Cultured Purkinje cells from rats were treated with S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine, an NO donor, and examined by immunocytochemical methods. The immunoreactivity associated with mAb 3221 increased with the cGMP content in a crude extract of cerebellum and the NO2 generated in the culture medium increased.  相似文献   

20.
Hyperammonemia is the main responsible for the neurological alterations in hepatic encephalopathy in patients with liver failure. We studied the function of the glutamate-nitric oxide (NO)-cGMP pathway in brain in animal models of hyperammonemia and liver failure and in patients died with liver cirrhosis. Activation of glutamate receptors increases intracellular calcium that binds to calmodulin and activates neuronal nitric oxide synthase, increasing nitric oxide, which activates soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), increasing cGMP. This glutamate-NO-cGMP pathway modulates cerebral processes such as circadian rhythms, the sleep-waking cycle, and some forms of learning and memory. These processes are impaired in patients with hepatic encephalopathy. Activation of sGC by NO is significantly increased in cerebral cortex and significantly reduced in cerebellum from cirrhotic patients died in hepatic coma. Portacaval anastomosis in rats, an animal model of liver failure, reproduces the effects of liver failure on modulation of sGC by NO both in cerebral cortex and cerebellum. In vivo brain microdialisis studies showed that sGC activation by NO is also reduced in vivo in cerebellum in hyperammonemic rats with or without liver failure. The content of alpha but not beta subunits of sGC are increased both in frontal cortex and cerebellum from patients died due to liver disease and from rats with portacaval anastomosis. We assessed whether determination of activation of sGC by NO-generating agent SNAP in lymphocytes could serve as a peripheral marker for the impairment of sGC activation by NO in brain. Chronic hyperammonemia and liver failure also alter sGC activation by NO in lymphocytes from rats or patients. These findings show that the content and modulation by NO of sGC are strongly altered in brain of patients with liver disease. These alterations could be responsible for some of the neurological alterations in hepatic encephalopathy such as sleep disturbances and cognitive impairment.  相似文献   

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