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1.
Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) inhibit all of the NADPH-dependent reactions catalyzed by neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) including ferricytochrome c reduction, NADPH oxidation, and citrulline formation. Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) also inhibit ferricytochrome c reduction by the independent reductase domain. Zn(2+) affects all activities of the full-length nNOS and the reductase domain to the same extent (estimated IC(50) values from 9 to 31 microm), suggesting Zn(2+) occupation of a single site in the reductase domain. Citrulline formation and NADPH oxidation by the full-length nNOS and ferricytochrome c reduction by the reductase domain are affected similarly by Cu(2+), with estimated IC(50) values ranging from 6 to 33 microm. However, Cu(2+) inhibits ferricytochrome c reduction by the full-length nNOS 2 orders of magnitude more potently, with an estimated IC(50) value of 0.12 microm. These data suggest the possibility that Cu(2+) may interact with nNOS at two sites, one composed exclusively of the reductase domain (which is perhaps also involved in Zn(2+)-mediated inhibition), and another that includes components of both domains. Occupation of the second (higher affinity) site could then promote the selective inhibition of ferricytochrome c reduction in full-length nNOS. Neither the inhibition by Cu(2+) nor that by Zn(2+) is dependent on calmodulin.  相似文献   

2.
The actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of Acanthamoeba myosins I depends on phosphorylation of their single heavy chains by myosin I heavy chain kinase. Kinase activity is enhanced > 50-fold by autophosphorylation at multiple sites. The rate of kinase autophosphorylation is increased approximately 20-fold by acidic phospholipids independent of the presence of Ca2+ and diglycerides. We show in this paper that Ca(2+)-calmodulin inhibits phospholipid-stimulated autophosphorylation of myosin I heavy chain kinase and hence also inhibits the catalytic activity of unphosphorylated kinase in the presence of phospholipid. Ca(2+)-calmodulin does not inhibit kinase activity in the absence of phospholipid. Micromolar Ca(2+)-calmodulin also inhibits binding of myosin I heavy chain kinase to phospholipid vesicles and purified plasma membranes. Proteolytic removal of a 7-kDa NH2-terminal segment from the 97-kDa kinase prevents binding of both calmodulin and phospholipid; therefore, we propose that they bind to the same or overlapping sites. These data provide a mechanism by which Ca2+ could inhibit the actin-activated Mg(2+)-ATPase activity of the myosin I isozymes in vivo and thus regulate myosin I-dependent motile activities.  相似文献   

3.
At least two reaction steps are involved in the activation of purified plasma membrane Ca(2+)-transport ATPase by negatively charged phospholipids depending on the type of phospholipids (Lehotsky et al. 1992). The effect of negatively charged phospholipids on Ca(2+)-stimulated ATPase (cycling activity) was compared with that of p-nitrophenylphosphatase (E2-form activity) catalyzed by Ca(2+)-pump. PIP like PS, activated Ca(2+)-ATPase activity by modifying ATP activation curve with increasing Vmax of the high affinity site. Ca(2+)-ATPase activity reconstituted in PC was stimulated by DMSO(10%) by a factor of 1.36. The activity stimulation by DMSO was only weak in PS and activity was inhibited in PIP. Also, phosphatase activity catalyzed by Ca(2+)-pump was strongly stimulated by DMSO and was differentially affected by phospholipid head group. Positively charged neomycin (5 mmol/l) had no effect on Ca(2+)-ATPase activity reactivated in PC or PS, but the stimulatory action of PIP was suppressed. Relative stimulation of phosphatase activity by PS was not influenced. Both hydrolytic activities catalyzed by Ca(2+)-transport ATPase were differentially affected by organic solvents and polycations with respect to the kind of the phospholipid.  相似文献   

4.
Bucki R  Giraud F  Sulpice JC 《Biochemistry》2000,39(19):5838-5844
Transmembrane phospholipid redistribution (scrambling), leading to exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface, plays a physiological role to induce platelet procoagulant activity and clearance of injured or apoptotic cells. Scrambling is generally attributed to an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) and would be mediated by a protein (scramblase), whose activity could be modulated by cofactors. We reported previously that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) is a positive regulator of Ca(2+)-induced scrambling. We show here, using inside-out vesicles from erythrocyte membranes, that a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain, which interacts with high affinity with PIP(2), inhibited Ca(2+)-induced scrambling, confirming the role of PIP(2). As Ca(2+) is known to interact with PIP(2) and to promote the formation of lateral domains of acidic phospholipids in membranes, we investigated whether PIP(2) domain formation could be involved in scrambling. Spermine, polylysine, and MARCKS (151-175) peptide caused scrambling in parallel to their reported ability to form domains of acidic phospholipids, including PIP(2). Similarly, neomycine, another PIP(2)-interacting polycation, induced scrambling. A PIP(2) antibody was also found to induce scrambling, presumably by a similar mechanism, since phospholipid antibodies are known to promote phospholipid capping. In conclusion, Ca(2+) is not the sole inducer of scrambling, and formation of PIP(2) domains could play a critical role in this process.  相似文献   

5.
We assessed the effects of melatonin, N(1)-acetyl-N (2)-formyl-5-methoxykynuramine (AFMK) and N(1)-acetyl-5-methoxykynuramine (AMK) on neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) activity in vitro and in rat striatum in vivo. Melatonin and AMK (10(-11)-10(-3) m), but not AFMK, inhibited nNOS activity in vitro in a dose-response manner. The IC(50) value for AMK (70 microm) was significantly lower than for melatonin (>1 mm). A 20% nNOS inhibition was reached with either 10(-9) m melatonin or 10(-11) m AMK. AMK inhibits nNOS by a non-competitive mechanism through its binding to Ca(2+)-calmodulin (CaCaM). The inhibition of nNOS elicited by melatonin, but not by AMK, was blocked with 0.05 mm norharmane, an indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase inhibitor. In vivo, the potency of AMK to inhibit nNOS activity was higher than that of melatonin, as a 25% reduction in rat striatal nNOS activity was found after the administration of either 10 mg/kg of AMK or 20 mg/kg of melatonin. Also, in vivo, the administration of norharmane blocked the inhibition of nNOS produced by melatonin administration, but not the inhibition produced by AMK. These data reveal that AMK rather than melatonin is the active metabolite against nNOS, which may be inhibited by physiological levels of AMK in the rat striatum.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium and calmodulin both regulate the skeletal muscle calcium release channel, also known as the ryanodine receptor, RYR1. Ca(2+)-free calmodulin (apocalmodulin) activates and Ca(2+)-calmodulin inhibits the ryanodine receptor. The conversion of calmodulin from an activator to an inhibitor is due to Ca(2+) binding to calmodulin. We have previously shown that the binding sites for apocalmodulin and Ca(2+)-calmodulin on RYR1 are overlapping with the Ca(2+)-calmodulin site located slightly N-terminal to the apocalmodulin binding site. We now show that mutations of the calcium binding sites in either the N-terminal or the C-terminal lobes of calmodulin decrease the affinity of calmodulin for the ryanodine receptor, suggesting that both lobes interact with RYR1. Mutation of the two C-terminal Ca(2+) binding sites of calmodulin destroys calmodulin's ability to inhibit ryanodine receptor activity at high calcium concentrations. The mutated calmodulin, however, can still bind to RYR1 at both nanomolar and micromolar Ca(2+) concentrations. Mutating the two N-terminal calcium binding sites of calmodulin does not significantly alter calmodulin's ability to inhibit ryanodine receptor activity. These data suggest that calcium binding to the two C-terminal calcium binding sites within calmodulin is responsible for the switching of calmodulin from an activator to an inhibitor of the ryanodine receptor.  相似文献   

7.
N(omega)propyl-l-arginine (NPA) and S-ethyl-N-[4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]isothiourea (TFMPITU) inhibit selectively the neuronal nitric oxide (NO) synthase (nNOS) isoform. In the presence of Ca(2+) and calmodulin (CaM), NPA and TFMPITU produce a time- and concentration-dependent suppression of nNOS catalyzed NO formation. This suppression of activity occurs by a first order kinetic process as revealed from linear Kitz-Wilson plots but does not depend on catalytic turnover since it occurs in the absence of NADPH. Following full suppression of NO synthetic activity by either NPA or TFMPITU, NO synthesis can be restored slowly by excess arginine or by dilution, indicating that the effects of these agents are reversible. This behavior is consistent with a dissociation of NPA and TFMPITU from nNOS slowed by a conformational transition produced by Ca(2+) CaM-binding. NPA and TFMPITU bind to nNOS rapidly producing a heme-substrate interaction as revealed by difference spectrophotometry. At physiological conditions (100 microM extracellular arginine), NPA and TFMPITU inhibit Ca(2+)-dependent NO formation by GH(3) pituitary cells with IC(50) values of 19 and 47 microM, respectively, but require millimolar concentrations to inhibit NO formation by cytokine-induced RAW 264.7 murine macrophages. The inhibition of NO formation by these agents in GH(3) cells is rapidly reversible and not due to suppression of cellular arginine uptake.  相似文献   

8.
Both apocalmodulin (Ca(2+)-free calmodulin) and Ca(2+)-calmodulin bind to and regulate the activity of skeletal muscle Ca(2+) release channel (ryanodine receptor, RYR1). Both forms of calmodulin protect sites after amino acids 3630 and 3637 on RYR1 from trypsin cleavage. Only apocalmodulin protects sites after amino acids 1982 and 1999 from trypsin cleavage. Ca(2+)-calmodulin and apocalmodulin both bind to two different synthetic peptides representing amino acids 3614-3643 and 1975-1999 of RYR1, but Ca(2+)-calmodulin has a higher affinity than apocalmodulin for both peptides. Cysteine 3635, within the 3614-3643 sequence of RYR1, can form a disulfide bond with a cysteine on an adjacent subunit within the RYR1 tetramer. The second cysteine is now shown to be between amino acids 2000 and 2401. The close proximity of the cysteines forming the intersubunit disulfide to the two sites that bind calmodulin suggests that calmodulin is binding at a site of intersubunit contact, perhaps with one lobe bound between amino acids 3614 and 3643 on one subunit and the second lobe bound between amino acids 1975 and 1999 on an adjacent subunit. This model is consistent with the finding that Ca(2+)-calmodulin and apocalmodulin each bind to a single site per RYR1 subunit (Rodney, G. G., Williams, B. Y., Strasburg, G. M., Beckingham, K., and Hamilton, S. L. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 7807-7812).  相似文献   

9.
Phospholipase D (PLD) is a major plant phospholipase family involved in many cellular processes such as signal transduction, membrane remodeling, and lipid degradation. Five classes of PLDs have been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana, and Ca(2+) and polyphosphoinositides have been suggested as key regulators for these enzymes. To investigate the catalysis and regulation mechanism of individual PLDs, surface-dilution kinetics studies were carried out on the newly identified PLDdelta from Arabidopsis. PLDdelta activity was dependent on both bulk concentration and surface concentration of substrate phospholipids in the Triton X-100/phospholipid mixed micelles. V(max), K(s)(A), and K(m)(B) values for PLDdelta toward phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidylethanolamine were determined; phosphatidylethanolamine was the preferred substrate. PLDdelta activity was stimulated greatly by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)). Maximal activation was observed at a PIP(2) molar ratio around 0.01. Kinetic analysis indicates that PIP(2) activates PLD by promoting substrate binding to the enzyme, without altering the bulk binding of the enzyme to the micelle surface. Ca(2+) is required for PLDdelta activity, and it significantly decreased the interfacial Michaelis constant K(m)(B). This indicates that Ca(2+) activates PLD by promoting the binding of phospholipid substrate to the catalytic site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Two neuropeptides have been isolated and identified from the secretions of the skin glands of the Stony Creek Frog Litoria lesueuri. The first of these, the known neuropeptide caerulein 1.1, is a common constituent of anuran skin secretions, and has the sequence pEQY(SO3)TGWMDF-NH2. This neuropeptide is smooth muscle active, an analgaesic more potent than morphine and is also thought to be a hormone. The second neuropeptide, a new peptide, has been named lesueurin and has the primary structure GLLDILKKVGKVA-NH2. Lesueurin shows no significant antibiotic or anticancer activity, but inhibits the formation of the ubiquitous chemical messenger nitric oxide from neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) at IC(50) (16.2 microm), and is the first amphibian peptide reported to show inhibition of nNOS. As a consequence of this activity, we have tested other peptides previously isolated from Australian amphibians for nNOS inhibition. There are three groups of peptides that inhibit nNOS (IC(50) at microm concentrations): these are (a) the citropin/aurein type peptides (of which lesueurin is a member), e.g. citropin 1.1 (GLFDVIKKVASVIGGL-NH(2)) (8.2 microm); (b) the frenatin type peptides, e.g. frenatin 3 (GLMSVLGHAVGNVLG GLFKPK-OH) (6.8 microm); and (c) the caerin 1 peptides, e.g. caerin 1.8 (GLFGVLGSIAKHLLPHVVPVIAEKL-NH(2)) (1.7 microm). From Lineweaver-Burk plots, the mechanism of inhibition is revealed as noncompetitive with respect to the nNOS substrate arginine. When the nNOS inhibition tests with the three peptides outlined above were carried out in the presence of increasing concentrations of Ca(2+) calmodulin, the inhibition dropped by approximately 50% in each case. In addition, these peptides also inhibit the activity of calcineurin, another enzyme that requires the presence of the regulatory protein Ca(2+) calmodulin. It is proposed that the amphibian peptides inhibit nNOS by interacting with Ca(2+)calmodulin, and as a consequence, blocks the attachment of this protein to the calmodulin domain of nNOS.  相似文献   

11.
The neuronal and endothelial nitric-oxide synthases (nNOS and eNOS) differ from inducible NOS in their dependence on the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. Both nNOS and eNOS are activated by the reversible binding of calmodulin (CaM) in the presence of Ca(2+), whereas inducible NOS binds CaM irreversibly. One major divergence in the close sequence similarity between the NOS isoforms is a 40-50-amino acid insert in the middle of the FMN-binding domains of nNOS and eNOS. It has previously been proposed that this insert forms an autoinhibitory domain designed to destabilize CaM binding and increase its Ca(2+) dependence. To examine the importance of the insert we constructed two deletion mutants designed to remove the bulk of it from nNOS. Both mutants (Delta40 and Delta42) retained maximal NO synthesis activity at lower concentrations of free Ca(2+) than the wild type enzyme. They were also found to retain 30% of their activity in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM, indicating that the insert plays an important role in disabling the enzyme when the physiological Ca(2+) concentration is low. Reduction of nNOS heme by NADPH under rigorous anaerobic conditions was found to occur in the wild type enzyme only in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. However, reduction of heme in the Delta40 mutant occurred spontaneously on addition of NADPH in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM. This suggests that the insert regulates activity by inhibiting electron transfer from FMN to heme in the absence of Ca(2+)/CaM and by destabilizing CaM binding at low Ca(2+) concentrations, consistent with its role as an autoinhibitory domain.  相似文献   

12.
Cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channels operate as transduction channels in photoreceptors and olfactory receptor neurons. Direct binding of cGMP or cAMP opens these channels which conduct a mixture of monovalent cations and Ca(2+). Upon activation, CNG channels generate intracellular Ca(2+) signals that play pivotal roles in the transduction cascades of the visual and olfactory systems. Channel activity is controlled by negative feedback mechanisms that involve Ca(2+)-calmodulin, for which all CNG channels possess binding sites. Here we compare the binding properties of the two LQ-type calmodulin binding sites, both of which are thought to be involved in channel regulation. They reside on the isoforms CNGB1 and CNGA4. The CNGB1 subunit is present in rod photoreceptors and olfactory receptor neurons. The CNGA4 subunit is only expressed in olfactory receptor neurons, and there are conflicting results as to its role in calmodulin-mediated feedback inhibition. We examined the interaction of Ca(2+)-calmodulin with two recombinant proteins that encompass either of the two LQ sites. Comparing binding properties, we found that the LQ site of CNGB1 binds Ca(2+)-calmodulin at 10-fold lower Ca(2+) levels than the LQ site of CNGA4. Our data provide biochemical evidence against a contribution of CNGA4 to feedback inhibition. In accordance with previous work on photoreceptor CNG channels, our results indicate that feedback control is the exclusive role of the B-subunits in photoreceptors and olfactory receptor neurons.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) is a key player in the neurotransmitter release process. Rabphilin-3A is a neuronal C2 domain tandem containing protein that is involved in this process. Both its C2 domains (C2A and C2B) are able to bind PIP2. The investigation of the interactions of the two C2 domains with the PIP2 headgroup IP3 (inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate) by NMR showed that a well-defined binding site can be described on the concave surface of each domain. The binding modes of the two domains are different. The binding of IP3 to the C2A domain is strongly enhanced by Ca(2+) and is characterized by a K(D) of 55 microM in the presence of a saturating concentration of Ca(2+) (5 mM). Reciprocally, the binding of IP3 increases the apparent Ca(2+)-binding affinity of the C2A domain in agreement with a Target-Activated Messenger Affinity (TAMA) mechanism. The C2B domain binds IP3 in a Ca(2+)-independent fashion with low affinity. These different PIP2 headgroup recognition modes suggest that PIP2 is a target of the C2A domain of rabphilin-3A while this phospholipid is an effector of the C2B domain.  相似文献   

14.
A major function of human neutrophils (PMN) during inflammation is formation of oxygen radicals through activation of the respiratory burst enzyme, NADPH oxidase. Stimulus-induced production of both phosphatidic acid (PA) and diglyceride (DG) has been suggested to mediate oxidase activity; however, transductional mechanisms and cofactor requirements necessary for activation are poorly defined. We have utilized PMN permeabilized with Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin to elucidate the signal pathway involved in eliciting oxidase activity and to investigate whether PA or DG act as second messengers. PMN were permeabilized in cytoplasmic buffer supplemented with ATP and EGTA for 15 min before addition of NADPH and various cofactors. Oxidase activation was assessed by superoxide dismutase inhibitable reduction of ferricytochrome C; PA and DG levels were measured by radiolabeled product formation or by metabolite mass formation. Both superoxide (O2-) and PA formation were initiated by 10 microM GTP gamma S; addition of cytosolic levels of calcium ions (Ca2+, 120 nM) enhanced O2- and PA formation 1.5-2 fold. DG levels showed little change during these treatments. PA formation preceded O2- production and varying GTP gamma S levels had parallel effects on O2- and PA formation. However, while PA formation and oxidase activation occurred in tandem at Ca2+ levels of < 1 microM, higher calcium enhanced PA formation but inhibited O2- production. Removal of ATP completely blocked O2- production but had little effect on PA formation; in contrast, if ATP was replaced with ATP gamma S, parallel production of PA and O2- occurred in the absence of other cofactors. Finally, while inhibition of PA production by ethanol pretreatment led to inhibition of O2- formation in PMN treated with GTP gamma S alone, in cells stimulated with a combination of GTP gamma S and Ca2+, ethanol continued to inhibit PA formation but had no effect on O2- production. Our results do not support a role for DG in the signal transduction path leading to oxidase activation and, while we show a close correlation between oxidase activation and PA production under many physiologic conditions, we also demonstrate that PA is not sufficient to induce oxidase activation and O2- formation can occur when PA production is inhibited.  相似文献   

15.
Ni(2+), a toxic and carcinogenic pollutant and one of the leading causes of contact dermatitis, is shown to inhibit neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in a competitive, reversible manner with respect to the substrate l-arginine (K(i) = 30 +/- 4 microM). The IC(50) values were dependent on calmodulin (CaM) concentration, but proved independent of Ca(2+), tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) and other essential cofactors. Ni(2+) also inhibited CaM-dependent cytochrome c reduction, NADPH oxidation, and H(2)O(2) production by nNOS. Overall, the action profile of Ni(2+) was suggestive of an unusual, double-acting inhibitor of nNOS affecting l-arginine-binding and Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent enzyme activation.  相似文献   

16.
Photoreactive azido ruthenium (AzRu) has been recently shown to specifically interact with Ca(2+)-binding proteins and to strongly inhibit their Ca(2+)-dependent activities. Upon UV irradiation, AzRu can bind covalently to such proteins. In this study, AzRu was used to localize and characterize Ca(2+)-binding sites in the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC). AzRu decreased the conductance of VDAC reconstituted into a bilayer while Ca(2+), in the presence of 1M NaCl, but not Mg(2+), prevented this effect. AzRu had no effect on mutated E72Q- or E202Q-VDAC1 conductance, and [(103)Ru]AzRu labeled native but not E72Q-VDAC1, suggesting that these residues are required for AzRu interaction with the VDAC Ca(2+)-binding site(s). AzRu protected against apoptosis induced by over-expression of native but not E72Q- or E202Q- murine VDAC1 in T-REx-293 cells depleted of endogenous hVDAC1. Chymotrypsin and trypsin digestion of AzRu-labeled VDAC followed by MALDI-TOF analysis revealed two AzRu-bound peptides corresponding to E72- and E202-containing sequences. These results suggest that the VDAC Ca(2+)-binding site includes E72 and E202, located, according to a proposed VDAC1 topology model, on two distinct cytosolic loops. Furthermore, AzRu protection against apoptosis involves interaction with these residues. Photoreactive AzRu represents an important tool for identifying novel Ca(2+)-binding proteins and localizing their Ca(2+)-binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
Rat liver microsomes catalyze the oxidative denitration of N omega-hydroxy-L-arginine (NOHA) by NADPH and O2 with formation of citrulline and nitrogen oxides like NO and NO2-. Besides NO2- and citrulline, whose simultaneous formation is linear for at least 20 min, the formation of NO could be detected under the form of its P450 and P420-Fe(II) complexes by UV-visible and EPR spectroscopy. Classical inhibitors of NO-synthases, like N omega-methyl-and N omega-nitro-arginine, fail to inhibit the microsomal oxidation of NOHA to citrulline and NO2-. On the contrary classical inhibitors of hepatic cytochromes P450 like CO, miconazole, dihydroergotamine and troleandomycin, strongly inhibit this monooxygenase reaction. These results show that the oxygenation of NOHA by NADPH and O2 with formation of citrulline and NO can be efficiently catalyzed by cytochromes P450 (with rates up to 1.5 turnovers per min for the cytochromes of the 3A subfamily).  相似文献   

18.
A complex phospholipid from bovine vitreous body with a strong Ca(2+)-mobilizing activity has been recently isolated to homogeneity by our group. In this work, a sequential analysis of its transmembrane signaling pathway has been undertaken to characterize the intracellular mechanisms responsible for the Ca(2+) rise. The results show that this phospholipid induces, in a dose-dependent manner (ED(50) of around 0.25 microgram/ml), a Ca(2+) mobilization from inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-insensitive intracellular stores, with no participation of extracellular Ca(2+). Upon repeated administration, it shows no signs of autologous desensitization, does not induce heterologous desensitization of the L-alpha-lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) receptor but is desensitized by the previous administration of LPA. The Ca(2+)-mobilizing activity requires a membrane protein, is blocked after preincubation of the cells with pertussis toxin and phorbol esters, as well as by U73122 (an inhibitor of phospholipases C/D), R59022 (a diacylglycerol kinase inhibitor), and D609 (which inhibits phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C). Upon administration of this phospholipid, the intracellular levels of phosphatidic acid (PA) rise with a time course that parallels that of the Ca(2+) mobilization, suggesting that PA could be responsible for this Ca(2+) signal. Exposure to AACOCF(3) (a specific inhibitor of phospholipase A(2)) does not modify the Ca(2+) rise, ruling out the possibility that the PA generated could be further converted to LPA by the action of phospholipase A(2). Based on the experimental data obtained, a signaling pathway involving a phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C coupled to diacylglycerol kinase is proposed. This compound may represent a new class of bioactive lipids with a putative role in the physiology of the vitreous body.  相似文献   

19.
C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene and D(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene derivatives inhibit citrulline and NO formation by all three nitric oxide synthase isoforms in a manner fully reversible by dilution. The inhibition of citrulline formation by C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene occurs with IC(50) values of 24, 17, and 123 microM for the neuronal, endothelial, and inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isoforms, respectively. As measured at 100 microM l-arginine, neuronal NOS-catalyzed nitric oxide formation was inhibited 50% at a concentration of 25 microM C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene. This inhibition was a multisite, positively cooperative inhibition with a Hill coefficient of 2.0. C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene inhibited the arginine-independent NADPH-oxidase activity of nNOS with an IC(50) value of 22 microM but had no effects on its cytochrome c reductase activity at concentrations as high as 300 microM. The inhibition of nNOS activity by C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene reduced the maximal velocity of product formation but did not alter the EC(50) value for activation by calmodulin. C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene reduced the maximal velocity of citrulline formation by inducible NOS without altering the K(m) for l-arginine substrate or the EC(50) value for tetrahydrobiopterin cofactor. As measured by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, fully inhibitory concentrations of C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene did not produce a dissociation of nNOS dimers into monomers. These observations are consistent with the proposal that C(3)-tris-malonyl-C(60)-fullerene inhibits the inter-subunit transfer of electrons, presumably by a reversible distortion of the dimer interface.  相似文献   

20.
To determine the mechanism of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT)-induced oxidative stress involving neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), we examined alterations in enzyme activity and gene expression of nNOS by TNT, with an enzyme preparation and rat cerebellum primary neuronal cells. TNT inhibited nitric oxide formation (IC(50) = 12.4 microM) as evaluated by citrulline formation in a 20,000 g cerebellar supernatant preparation. A kinetic study revealed that TNT was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADPH and a noncompetitive inhibitor with respect to L-arginine. It was found that purified nNOS was capable of reducing TNT, with a specific activity of 3900 nmol of NADPH oxidized/mg/min, but this reaction required CaCl(2)/calmodulin (CaM). An electron spin resonance (ESR) study indicated that superoxide (O(2)(.-)) was generated during reduction of TNT by nNOS. Exposure of rat cerebellum primary neuronal cells to TNT (25 microM) caused an intracellular generation of H(2)O(2), accompanied by a significant increase in nNOS mRNA levels. These results indicate that CaM-dependent one-electron reduction of TNT is catalyzed by nNOS, leading to a reduction in NO formation and generation of H(2)O(2) derived from O(2)(.-). Thus, it is suggested that upregulation of nNOS may represent an acute adaptation to an increase in oxidative stress during exposure to TNT.  相似文献   

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