共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Ascorbic acid enhances endothelial nitric-oxide synthase activity by increasing intracellular tetrahydrobiopterin 总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13
Ascorbic acid enhances NO bioactivity in patients with vascular disease through unclear mechanism(s). We investigated the role of intracellular ascorbic acid in endothelium-derived NO bioactivity. Incubation of porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAECs) with ascorbic acid produced time- and dose-dependent intracellular ascorbic acid accumulation that enhanced NO bioactivity by 70% measured as A23187-induced cGMP accumulation. This effect was due to enhanced NO production because ascorbate stimulated both PAEC nitrogen oxide (NO(2)(-) + NO(3)(-)) production and l-arginine to l-citrulline conversion by 59 and 72%, respectively, without altering the cGMP response to authentic NO. Ascorbic acid also stimulated the catalytic activity of eNOS derived from either PAEC membrane fractions or baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells. Ascorbic acid enhanced bovine eNOS V(max) by approximately 50% without altering the K(m) for l-arginine. The effect of ascorbate was tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4))-dependent, because ascorbate was ineffective with BH(4) concentrations >10 microm or in PAECs treated with sepiapterin to increase intracellular BH(4). The effect of ascorbic acid was also specific because A23187-stimulated cGMP accumulation in PAECs was insensitive to intracellular glutathione manipulation and only ascorbic acid, not glutathione, increased the intracellular concentration of BH(4). These data suggest that ascorbic acid enhances NO bioactivity in a BH(4)-dependent manner by increasing intracellular BH(4) content. 相似文献
2.
Oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin by peroxynitrite: implications for vascular endothelial function. 总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20
Subsaturating levels of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)), an essential cofactor for nitric oxide synthase (NOS), can lead to endothelial dysfunction as a result of decreased production of nitric oxide. Furthermore, insufficient BH(4) can also result in NOS-uncoupled production of reactive oxygen intermediates, such as superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide. Nitric oxide and superoxide react rapidly to form peroxynitrite, which may be the reactive species responsible for many of the toxic effects of nitric oxide. Here we show that BH(4) is a primary target for peroxynitrite-catalyzed oxidation because at pH 7.4, physiologically relevant concentrations of BH(4) are oxidized rapidly by low concentrations of peroxynitrite. Peroxynitrite oxidizes BH(4) to quinonoid 5,6-dihydrobiopterin and a large proportion of the quinonoid isomer readily loses its side chain to form 7,8-dihydropterin which is not a cofactor for nitric oxide synthase. Thus, abnormally low levels of BH(4) can promote a cycle of its own destruction mediated by nitric oxide synthase-dependent formation of peroxynitrite. This mechanism might contribute to vascular endothelial dysfunction induced by oxidative stress. 相似文献
3.
Pignitter M Gorren AC Nedeianu S Schmidt K Mayer B 《Free radical biology & medicine》2006,41(3):455-463
Uncoupling of nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) by deficiency of the substrate L-arginine or the cofactor (6R)-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is known to generate the reactive oxygen species H2O2 and superoxide. Discrimination between these two compounds is usually achieved by spin trapping of superoxide. We measured superoxide formation by uncoupled rat neuronal NOS, which contained one equivalent of tightly bound BH4 per dimer, using 5-(diethoxyphosphoryl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DEPMPO) as a spin trap. As expected, the Ca2+-stimulated enzyme exhibited reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase activity that was accompanied by generation of superoxide and H2O2 in the absence of added L-arginine and BH4. Addition of BH4 (10 microM) did not significantly affect the rate of H2O2 formation but almost completely inhibited the apparent formation of superoxide, suggesting direct formation of H2O2. Although L-arginine (0.1 mM) increased the rate of NADPH oxidation about two-fold, the substrate largely attenuated apparent formation of both superoxide and H2O2, indicating that the spin trap did not efficiently outcompete the reaction between NO and superoxide. The efficiency of DEPMPO to scavenge superoxide in the presence of NO was studied by measuring free NO with a Clark-type electrode under conditions of NO/superoxide cogeneration. Neuronal NOS half-saturated with BH4 and the donor compound 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1) were used as enzymatic and nonenzymatic sources of NO/superoxide, respectively. Neither of the two systems gave rise to considerable NO signals in the presence of 50-100 mM DEPMPO, and even at 400 mM the spin trap uncovered less than 50% of the NO release that was detectable in the presence of 5000 U/ml superoxide dismutase. These results indicate that DEPMPO and all other currently available superoxide spin traps do not efficiently outcompete the reaction with NO. In addition, the similar behavior of nNOS and SIN-1 provides further evidence for NO as initial product of the NOS reaction. 相似文献
4.
Lysophosphatidic acid and receptor-mediated activation of endothelial nitric-oxide synthase 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Both lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) are platelet-derived phospholipids that elicit diverse biological responses. In endothelial cells, S1P stimulates the EDG-1 receptor-mediated activation of the endothelial isoform of nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), but the role of LPA in eNOS regulation is less well understood. We now report that LPA treatment of bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) activates eNOS enzyme activity in a pathway that involves phosphorylation of eNOS on serine 1179 by protein kinase Akt. In contrast to the cellular responses elicited by S1P in COS-7 cells, LPA can stimulate the activation of eNOS and Akt independently of EDG-1 receptor transfection. LPA-stimulated enzyme activation was significantly attenuated in an eNOS mutant lacking the site that is phosphorylated by kinase Akt (eNOS S1179A). In BAEC, activation of eNOS by LPA is completely blocked by pertussis toxin, by the intracellular calcium chelator BAPTA (1,2-bis(aminophenoxy) ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid), and by the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K) inhibitor wortmannin, but is unaffected by U0126, an inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways. Analysis of the LPA dose response for eNOS activation reveals an EC(50) of approximately 40 nM, a concentration well below the potency of LPA at the EDG-1 receptor. Taken together, these results indicate that LPA potently activates eNOS in BAEC in a pathway distinct from the EDG-1 receptor, but mediated by a similar receptor-mediated pathway dependent on pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins and involving activation of the PI3-K/Akt pathway. These studies have identified a role for the phospholipid LPA in eNOS activation, and point out the complementary role of distinct platelet-derived lipids in endothelial signaling pathways. 相似文献
5.
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
6.
Levels of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) bound to nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) were examined during multiple turnovers of the enzyme in the presence of an NADPH-regenerating system. Our findings show that NOS-bound BH(4) does not remain in a static state but undergoes redox reactions. Under these experimental conditions, the redox state of BH(4) was determined by the balance between calcium/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM)-dependent oxidation of BH(4) mediated by the uncoupled formation of superoxide/hydrogen peroxide on the one hand and by reductive regeneration of BH(4) on the other hand. BH(4) oxidation was appreciably increased in the presence of arginine. Levels of NOS-bound BH(4) were also examined under single turnover conditions in the absence of an NADPH-regenerating system and in the presence of added superoxide dismutase and catalase to suppress the accumulation of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. BH(4) oxidation was again dependent on Ca(2+)/CaM. The insensitivity to superoxide dismutase and catalase suggested that the single turnover oxidation of BH(4) did not proceed through superoxide/peroxide, although the involvement of these oxidants could not be definitively excluded. The amount of BH(4) oxidized was highest in the presence of arginine, and this oxidation significantly exceeded that in the presence of N(G)-hydroxy-L-arginine. The findings that single turnover oxidation of BH(4) is stimulated by arginine in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM and that BH(4) is regenerated are consistent with a role for the pterin as an electron donor in product formation; this role remains to be defined. 相似文献
7.
Wei CC Wang ZQ Tejero J Yang YP Hemann C Hille R Stuehr DJ 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(17):11734-11742
Nitric-oxide synthases (NOS) are catalytically self-sufficient flavo-heme enzymes that generate NO from arginine (Arg) and display a novel utilization of their tetrahydrobiopterin (H(4)B) cofactor. During Arg hydroxylation, H(4)B acts as a one-electron donor and is then presumed to redox cycle (i.e. be reduced back to H(4)B) within NOS before further catalysis can proceed. Whereas H(4)B radical formation is well characterized, the subsequent presumed radical reduction has not been demonstrated, and its potential mechanisms are unknown. We investigated radical reduction during a single turnover Arg hydroxylation reaction catalyzed by neuronal NOS to document the process, determine its kinetics, and test for involvement of the NOS flavoprotein domain. We utilized a freeze-quench instrument, the biopterin analog 5-methyl-H(4)B, and a method that could separately quantify the flavin and pterin radicals that formed in NOS during the reaction. Our results establish that the NOS flavoprotein domain catalyzes reduction of the biopterin radical following Arg hydroxylation. The reduction is calmodulin-dependent and occurs at a rate that is similar to heme reduction and fast enough to explain H(4)B redox cycling in NOS. These results, in light of existing NOS crystal structures, suggest a "through-heme" mechanism may operate for H(4)B radical reduction in NOS. 相似文献
8.
Cao S Yao J McCabe TJ Yao Q Katusic ZS Sessa WC Shah V 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2001,276(17):14249-14256
Endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) is regulated in part through specific protein interactions. Dynamin-2 is a large GTPase residing within similar membrane compartments as eNOS. Here we show that dynamin-2 binds directly with eNOS thereby augmenting eNOS activity. Double label confocal immunofluorescence demonstrates colocalization of eNOS and dynamin in both Clone 9 cells cotransfected with green fluorescent protein-dynamin and eNOS, as well as in bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) expressing both proteins endogenously, predominantly in a Golgi membrane distribution. Immunoprecipitation of eNOS from BAEC lysate coprecipitates dynamin and, conversely, immunoprecipitation of dynamin coprecipitates eNOS. Additionally, the calcium ionophore, a reagent that promotes nitric oxide release, enhances coprecipitation of dynamin with eNOS in BAEC, suggesting the interaction between the proteins can be regulated by intracellular signals. In vitro studies demonstrate that glutathione S-transferase (GST)-dynamin-2 quantitatively precipitates both purified recombinant eNOS protein as well as in vitro transcribed (35)S-labeled eNOS from solution indicating a direct interaction between the proteins in vitro. Scatchard analysis of binding studies demonstrates an equilibrium dissociation constant (K(d)) of 27.6 nm. Incubation of purified recombinant eNOS protein with GST-dynamin-2 significantly increases eNOS activity as does overexpression of dynamin-2 in ECV 304 cells stably transfected with eNOS-green fluorescent protein. These studies demonstrate a direct protein-protein interaction between eNOS and dynamin-2, thereby identifying a new NOS-associated protein and providing a novel function for dynamin. These events may have relevance for eNOS regulation and trafficking within vascular endothelium. 相似文献
9.
Geminate recombination of nitric oxide to endothelial nitric-oxide synthase and mechanistic implications. 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
M Négrerie V Berka M H Vos U Liebl J C Lambry A L Tsai J L Martin 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1999,274(35):24694-24702
The nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) catalyzes the oxidation of L-arginine to L-citrulline and NO through consumption of oxygen bound to the heme. Because NO is produced close to the heme and may bind to it, its subsequent role in a regulatory mechanism should be scrutinized. We therefore examined the kinetics of NO rebinding after photodissociation in the heme pocket of human endothelial NOS by means of time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. We show that geminate recombination of NO indeed occurs and that this process is strongly modulated by L-Arg. This NO rebinding occurs in a multiphasic fashion and spans over 3 orders of magnitude. In both ferric and ferrous states of the heme, a fast nonexponential picosecond geminate rebinding first takes place followed by a slower nanosecond phase. The rates of both phases decreased, whereas their relative amplitudes are changed by the presence of L-Arg; the overall effect is a slow down of NO rebinding. For the isolated oxygenase domain, the picosecond rate is unchanged, but the relative amplitude of the nanosecond binding decreased. We assigned the nanosecond kinetic component to the rebinding of NO that is still located in the protein core but not in the heme pocket. The implications for a mechanism of regulation involving NO binding are discussed. 相似文献
10.
Endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) plays important roles in vascular physiology and homeostasis. Whether eNOS catalyzes nitric oxide biosynthesis or the synthesis of reactive oxygen species such as superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and peroxynitrite is dictated by the bioavailability of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) and L-arginine during eNOS catalysis. The effect of BH(4) and L-arginine on oxygen-induced radical intermediates has been investigated by single turnover rapid-freeze quench and EPR spectroscopy using the isolated eNOS oxygenase domain (eNOS(ox)). Three distinct radical intermediates corresponding to >50% of the heme were observed during the reaction between ferrous eNOS(ox) and oxygen. BH(4)-free eNOS(ox) produced the superoxide radical very efficiently in the absence of L-arginine. L-Arginine decreased the formation rate of superoxide by an order of magnitude but not its final level or EPR line shape. For BH(4)-containing eNOS(ox), only a stoichiometric amount of BH(4) radical was produced in the presence of L-arginine, but in its absence a new radical was obtained. This new radical could be either a peroxyl radical of BH(4) or an amino acid radical was in the vicinity of the heme. Formation of this new radical is very rapid, >150 s(-1), and it was subsequently converted to a BH(4) radical. The trapping of the superoxide radical by cytochrome c in the reaction of BH(4)(-) eNOS(ox) exhibited a limiting rate of approximately 15 s(-1), the time for the superoxide radical to leave the heme pocket and reach the protein surface; this reveals a general problem of the regular spin-trapping method in determining radical formation kinetics. Cytochrome c failed to trap the new radical species. Together with other EPR characteristics, our data strongly support the conclusion that this new radical is not a superoxide radical or a mixture of superoxide and biopterin radicals. Our study points out distinct roles of BH(4) and L-arginine in regulating eNOS radical intermediates. BH(4) prevented superoxide formation by chemical conversions of the Fe(II)O(2) intermediate, and l-arginine delayed superoxide formation by electronic interaction with the heme-bound oxygen. 相似文献
11.
Bec N Gorren AFC Mayer B Schmidt PP Andersson KK Lange R 《Journal of inorganic biochemistry》2000,81(3):207-211
We have studied the reaction of reduced nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) with molecular oxygen at -30 degrees C. In the first reaction cycle (from L-Arg to hydroxy-L-Arg), an oxygen adduct complex formed rapidly. Experiments in the absence of the reductase domain demonstrated that this complex was then further reduced by one electron stemming from the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4). Spectral evidence suggested an iron(IV) porphyrin pi-cation radical as an intermediate. The nature of the oxidized BH4 was identified by EPR as a BH3* radical. Within the second cycle (from hydroxy-L-Arg to citrulline and NO), an iron(III)-NO complex could be identified clearly by its spectral characteristics. The strict requirement of BH4 for its formation suggests that BH4 plays a redox role, although transient, also in the second reaction cycle. 相似文献
12.
Maréchal A Mattioli TA Stuehr DJ Santolini J 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2007,282(19):14101-14112
In mammals, nitric oxide (NO) is an essential biological mediator that is exclusively synthesized by nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs). However, NOSs are also directly or indirectly responsible for the production of peroxynitrite, a well known cytotoxic agent involved in numerous pathophysiological processes. Peroxynitrite reactivity is extremely intricate and highly depends on activators such as hemoproteins. NOSs present, therefore, the unique ability to both produce and activate peroxynitrite, which confers upon them a major role in the control of peroxynitrite bioactivity. We report here the first kinetic analysis of the interaction between peroxynitrite and the oxygenase domain of inducible NOS (iNOSoxy). iNOSoxy binds peroxynitrite and accelerates its decomposition with a second order rate constant of 22 x 10(4) m(-1)s(-1) at pH 7.4. This reaction is pH-dependent and is abolished by the binding of substrate or product. Peroxynitrite activation is correlated with the observation of a new iNOS heme intermediate with specific absorption at 445 nm. iNOSoxy modifies peroxynitrite reactivity and directs it toward one-electron processes such as nitration or one-electron oxidation. Taken together our results suggest that, upon binding to iNOSoxy, peroxynitrite undergoes homolytic cleavage with build-up of an oxo-ferryl intermediate and concomitant release of a NO(2)(.) radical. Successive cycles of peroxynitrite activation were shown to lead to iNOSoxy autocatalytic nitration and inhibition. The balance between peroxynitrite activation and self-inhibition of iNOSoxy may determine the contribution of NOSs to cellular oxidative stress. 相似文献
13.
Erwin PA Mitchell DA Sartoretto J Marletta MA Michel T 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2006,281(1):151-157
Endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) undergoes a complex pattern of post-translational modifications that regulate its activity. We have recently reported that eNOS is constitutively S-nitrosylated in endothelial cells and that agonists promote eNOS denitrosylation concomitant with enzyme activation (Erwin, P. A., Lin, A. J., Golan, D. E., and Michel, T. (2005), J. Biol. Chem. 280, 19888-19894). In the present studies, we use mass spectrometry to confirm that the zinc-tetrathiolate cysteines of eNOS are S-nitrosylated. eNOS targeting to the plasma membrane is necessary for enzyme S-nitrosylation, and we report that translocation between cellular compartments is necessary for dynamic eNOS S-nitrosylation. We transfected cells with cDNA encoding wild-type eNOS, which is membrane-targeted, or with acylation-deficient mutant eNOS (Myr-), which is expressed solely in the cytosol. While wild-type eNOS is robustly S-nitrosylated, we found that S-nitrosylation of the Myr- eNOS mutant is nearly abolished. When we transfected cells with a fusion protein in which Myr- eNOS is ligated to the CD8-transmembrane domain (CD8-Myr-), we found that CD8-Myr- eNOS, which does not undergo dynamic subcellular translocation, is hypernitrosylated relative to wild-type eNOS. Furthermore, we found that when endothelial cells transfected with wild-type or CD8-Myr- eNOS are stimulated with eNOS agonist, only wild-type eNOS is denitrosylated; CD8-Myr- eNOS S-nitrosylation is unchanged. These findings indicate that subcellular targeting is a critical determinant of eNOS S-nitrosylation. Finally, we show that eNOS S-nitrosylation can be detected in intact arterial preparations from mouse and that eNOS S-nitrosylation is a dynamic agonist-modulated process in intact blood vessels. These studies suggest that receptor-regulated eNOS S-nitrosylation may represent an important determinant of NO-dependent signaling in the vascular wall. 相似文献
14.
The plasma copper protein ceruloplasmin (CP) was found to inhibit endothelial nitric-oxide synthase activation in cultured endothelial cells, in line with previous evidence showing that the endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation of the aorta is impaired by physiological concentrations of ceruloplasmin. The data presented here indicate a direct relationship between the extent of inhibition of agonist-triggered endothelial nitric oxide synthase activation and CP-induced enrichment of the copper content of endothelial cells. Copper discharged by CP was mainly localized in the soluble fraction of cells. The subcellular distribution of the metal seems to be of relevance to the inhibitory effect of CP, because it was mimicked by copper chelates, like copper-histidine, able to selectively enrich the cytosolic fraction of cells, but not by copper salts, which preferentially located the metal to the particulate fraction. 相似文献
15.
Wei CC Wang ZQ Hemann C Hille R Stuehr DJ 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2003,278(47):46668-46673
Nitric-oxide synthases are flavoheme enzymes that catalyze two sequential monooxygenase reactions to generate nitric oxide (NO) from l-arginine. We investigated a possible redox role for the enzyme-bound cofactor 6R-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) in the second reaction of NO synthesis, which is conversion of N-hydroxy-l-arginine (NOHA) to NO plus citrulline. We used stopped-flow spectroscopy and rapid-freeze EPR spectroscopy to follow heme and biopterin transformations during single-turnover NOHA oxidation reactions catalyzed by the oxygenase domain of inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOSoxy). Significant biopterin radical (>0.5 per heme) formed during reactions catalyzed by iNOSoxy that contained either H4B or 5-methyl-H4B. Biopterin radical formation was kinetically linked to conversion of a heme-dioxy intermediate to a heme-NO product complex. The biopterin radical then decayed within a 200-300-ms time period just prior to dissociation of NO from a ferric heme-NO product complex. Measures of final biopterin redox status showed that biopterin radical decay occurred via an enzymatic one-electron reduction process that regenerated H4B (or 5MeH4B). These results provide evidence of a dual redox function for biopterin during the NOHA oxidation reaction. The data suggest that H4B first provides an electron to a heme-dioxy intermediate, and then the H4B radical receives an electron from a downstream reaction intermediate to regenerate H4B. The first one-electron transition enables formation of the heme-based oxidant that reacts with NOHA, while the second one-electron transition is linked to formation of a ferric heme-NO product complex that can release NO from the enzyme. These redox roles are novel and expand our understanding of biopterin function in biology. 相似文献
16.
17.
Endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) function is fundamentally modulated by protein phosphorylation. In particular, phosphorylation of serine 1179 (bovine)/1177 (human) by Akt has been shown to be the central mechanism of eNOS regulation. Here we revealed a novel role of proteasome in controlling eNOS serine 1179 phosphorylation and function. Rather than affecting eNOS turnover, proteasomal inhibition specifically dephosphorylated eNOS serine 1179, leading to decreased enzymatic activity. Blocking protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) by okadaic acid or PP2A knockdown restored eNOS serine 1179 phosphorylation and activity in proteasome-inhibited cells. Although total PP2A expression and activity in cells were not affected by proteasome inhibitors, proteasomal inhibition induced PP2A ubiquitination and ubiquitinated PP2A translocated from cytosol to membrane. Further biochemical analyses demonstrated that eNOS associated with PP2A on cell membranes. Proteasomal inhibition markedly enhanced PP2A association to eNOS, and this increase of PP2A dephosphorylated eNOS and its upstream kinase Akt. Taken together, these studies identified a novel pathway in which proteasome modulates eNOS phosphorylation by inducing intracellular PP2A translocation. 相似文献
18.
Gonzalez E Kou R Lin AJ Golan DE Michel T 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2002,277(42):39554-39560
The endothelial isoform of nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) undergoes a complex pattern of covalent modifications, including acylation with the fatty acids myristate and palmitate as well as phosphorylation on multiple sites. eNOS acylation is a key determinant for the reversible subcellular targeting of the enzyme to plasmalemmal caveolae. We transfected a series of hemagglutinin epitope-tagged eNOS mutant cDNAs deficient in palmitoylation (palm(-)) and/or myristoylation (myr(-)) into bovine aortic endothelial cells; after treatment with the eNOS agonists sphingosine 1-phosphate or vascular endothelial growth factor, the recombinant eNOS was immunoprecipitated using an antibody directed against the epitope tag, and patterns of eNOS phosphorylation were analyzed in immunoblots probed with phosphorylation state-specific eNOS antibodies. The wild-type eNOS underwent agonist-induced phosphorylation at serine 1179 (a putative site for phosphorylation by kinase Akt), but phosphorylation of the myr(-) eNOS at this residue was nearly abrogated; the palm(-) eNOS exhibited an intermediate phenotype. The addition of the CD8 transmembrane domain to the amino terminus of eNOS acylation-deficient mutants rescued the wild-type phenotype of robust agonist-induced serine 1179 phosphorylation. Thus, membrane targeting, but not necessarily acylation, is the critical determinant for agonist-promoted eNOS phosphorylation at serine 1179. In striking contrast to serine 1179, phosphorylation of eNOS at serine 116 was enhanced in the myr(-) eNOS mutant and was markedly attenuated in the CD8-eNOS membrane-targeted fusion protein. We conclude that eNOS targeting differentially affects eNOS phosphorylation at distinct sites in the protein and suggest that the inter-relationships of eNOS acylation and phosphorylation may modulate eNOS localization and activity and thereby influence NO signaling pathways in the vessel wall. 相似文献
19.
The endothelial isoform of nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) is regulated by a complex pattern of post-translational modifications. In these studies, we show that eNOS is dynamically regulated by S-nitrosylation, the covalent adduction of nitric oxide (NO)-derived nitrosyl groups to the cysteine thiols of proteins. We report that eNOS is tonically S-nitrosylated in resting bovine aortic endothelial cells and that the enzyme undergoes rapid transient denitrosylation after addition of the eNOS agonist, vascular endothelial growth factor. eNOS is thereafter progressively renitrosylated to basal levels. The receptor-mediated decrease in eNOS S-nitrosylation is inversely related to enzyme phosphorylation at Ser(1179), a site associated with eNOS activation. We also document that targeting of eNOS to the cell membrane is required for eNOS S-nitrosylation. Acylation-deficient mutant eNOS, which is targeted to the cytosol, does not undergo S-nitrosylation. Using purified eNOS, we show that eNOS S-nitrosylation by exogenous NO donors inhibits enzyme activity and that eNOS inhibition is reversed by denitrosylation. We determine that the cysteines of the zinc-tetrathiolate that comprise the eNOS dimer interface are the targets of S-nitrosylation. Mutation of the zinc-tetrathiolate cysteines eliminates eNOS S-nitrosylation but does not eliminate NO synthase activity, arguing strongly that disruption of the zinc-tetrathiolate does not necessarily lead to eNOS monomerization in vivo. Taken together, these studies suggest that eNOS S-nitrosylation may represent an important mechanism for regulation of NO signaling pathways in the vascular wall. 相似文献
20.
Sorlie M Gorren AC Marchal S Shimizu T Lange R Andersson KK Mayer B 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2003,278(49):48602-48610
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is an essential cofactor of nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) that serves as a one-electron donor to the oxyferrous.heme complex. 4-Aminotetrahydrobiopterin (4-amino-BH4) is a potent inhibitor of NO synthesis, although it mimics all allosteric and structural effects of BH4 and exhibits comparable redox properties. We studied the reaction of reduced endothelial NOS oxygenase domain with O2 in the presence of 4-amino-BH4 at -30 degrees C by optical and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. With Arg as the substrate, we observed a trihydropteridine radical with a corresponding heme species that was oxyferrous, with a Soret maximum at 428 nm and no EPR signal. With NG-hydroxy-l-arginine (NHA) no pterin radical appeared, whereas an axial ferrous heme.NO complex was formed. The corresponding optical spectra, with Soret bands at 417/423 nm, suggest that the proximal sulfur ligand is protonated. Accordingly, 4-amino-BH4 serves as a one-electron donor to Fe(II).O2 with both Arg and NHA, but the reaction cycle cannot be completed with either substrate. We propose that protonation of Fe(II)O2- is inhibited in the presence of 4-amino-BH4. With Arg, dissociation of O2- and binding of O2 yields Fe(II).O2 and a pteridine radical; with NHA, reaction of the substrate with heme-bound O2- eventually yields Fe(II).NO and reduced 4-amino-BH4. These results suggest that BH4 donates a proton to Fe(II).O2- during catalysis and that inhibition by 4-amino-BH4 may be due to its inability to support this essential protonation step. 相似文献