首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) is a heterodimeric enzyme formed by an alpha subunit and a beta subunit, the latter containing the heme where nitric oxide (NO) binds. When NO binds, the basal activity of sGC is increased several hundred fold. sGC activity is also increased by YC-1, a benzylindazole allosteric activator. In the presence of NO, YC-1 synergistically increases the catalytic activity of sGC by enhancing the affinity of NO for the heme. The site of interaction of YC-1 with sGC is unknown. We conducted a mutational analysis to identify the binding site and to determine what residues were involved in the propagation of NO and/or YC-1 activation. Because guanylyl cyclases (GCs) and adenylyl cyclases (ACs) are homologous, we used the three-dimensional structure of AC to guide the mutagenesis. Biochemical analysis of purified mutants revealed that YC-1 increases the catalytic activity not only by increasing the NO affinity but also by increasing the efficacy of NO. Effects of YC-1 on NO affinity and efficacy were dissociated by single-point mutations implying that YC-1 has, at least, two types of interaction with sGC. A structural model predicts that YC-1 may adopt two configurations in one site that is pseudosymmetric with the GTP binding site and equivalent to the forskolin site in AC.  相似文献   

2.
Although soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) functions in an environment in which O(2), NO, and CO are potential ligands for its heme moiety, the enzyme displays a high affinity for only its physiological ligand, NO, but has a limited affinity for CO and no affinity for O(2). Recent studies of a truncated version of the sGC beta(1)-subunit containing the heme-binding domain (Boon, E. M., Huang, S H., and Marletta, M. A. (2005) Nat. Chem. Biol., 1, 53-59) showed that introduction of the hydrogen-bonding tyrosine into the distal heme pocket changes the ligand specificity of the heme moiety and results in an oxygen-binding sGC. The hypothesis that the absence of hydrogen-bonding residues in the distal heme pocket is sufficient to provide oxygen discrimination by sGC was put forward. We tested this hypothesis in a context of a complete sGC heterodimer containing both the intact alpha(1)- and beta(1)-subunits. We found that the I145Y substitution in the full-length beta-subunit of the sGC heterodimer did not produce an oxygen-binding enzyme. However, this substitution impeded the association of NO and destabilized the NO.heme complex. The tyrosine in the distal heme pocket also impeded both the binding and dissociation of the CO ligand. We propose that the mechanism of oxygen exclusion by sGC not only involves the lack of hydrogen bonding in the distal heme pocket, but also depends on structural elements from other domains of sGC.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Nitric oxide exerts a stimulatory role during postnatal angiogenesis. Although soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) mediates many of the effects of nitric oxide (NO) in the vascular system, the contribution of cGMP-dependent vs cGMP-independent pathways in NO-induced angiogenesis remains unclear. Herein, we determined the effects of a NO donor (sodium nitroprusside; SNP) and a NO-independent sGC activator (BAY 41-2272) in the growth and migration of rat aortic endothelial cells (RAEC). RAEC lack enzymatically active sGC as suggested by their inability to accumulate cGMP upon exposure to SNP. However, treatment of RAEC with SNP promoted a modest increase in their proliferation and migration that was dependent on extracellular signal regulated kinase1/2 activation. Moreover, when RAEC were exposed to vascular endothelial growth factor we observed an increase in migration that was inhibited by NO synthase, but not sGC, inhibition. Infection of cells with adenoviruses containing sGC greatly increased the efficacy of SNP as a mitogenic and migratory stimulus. We conclude that NO is capable of stimulating EC proliferation and mobility in the absence of sGC; however, increased intracellular levels of cGMP following sGC activation greatly amplify the angiogenic potential of NO.  相似文献   

5.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) mediates NO signaling for a wide range of physiological effects in the cardiovascular system and the central nervous system. The α1β1 isoform is ubiquitously distributed in cytosolic fractions of tissues, whereas α2β1 is mainly found in the brain. The major occurrence and the unique characteristic of human sGC α2β1 indicate a special role in the mediation of neuronal communication. We have efficiently purified and characterized the recombinant heme-binding domain of the human sGC α2 subunit (hsGC α2(H)) and heterodimeric α2β1 (hsGC β1(H)-α2(H)) by UV-vis spectroscopy, circular dichrosim spectroscopy, EPR spectroscopy, and homology modeling. The heme dissociation and related NO/CO binding/dissociation of both hsGC α2(H) and hsGC β1(H)-α2(H) were investigated. The two truncated proteins interact with heme noncovalently. The CO binding affinity of hsGC α2(H) is threefold greater than that of human sGC α1(H), whereas the dissociation constant k (1) for dissociation of NO from hsGC α2(H) is sevenfold larger than that for dissociation of NO from hsGC α1(H), although k (2) is almost identical. The results indicate that in comparison with the α1β1 isoform, the brain α2β1 isoform exhibits a distinctly different CO/NO affinity and binding rate in favor of NO signaling, and this is consistent with its physiological role in the activation and desensitization. Molecular modeling and sequence alignments are consistent with the hypothesis that His105 contributes to the different CO/NO binding properties of different isoforms. This valuable information is helpful to understand the molecular mechanism by which human sGC α2β1 mediates NO/CO signaling.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Nitric oxide (NO) is the physiologically relevant activator of the mammalian hemoprotein soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). The heme cofactor of α1β1 sGC has a high affinity for NO but has never been observed to form a complex with oxygen. Introduction of a key tyrosine residue in the sGC heme binding domain β1(1–385) is sufficient to produce an oxygen-binding protein, but this mutation in the full-length enzyme did not alter oxygen affinity. To evaluate ligand binding specificity in full-length sGC we mutated several conserved distal heme pocket residues (β1 Val-5, Phe-74, Ile-145, and Ile-149) to introduce a hydrogen bond donor in proximity to the heme ligand. We found that the NO coordination state, NO dissociation, and enzyme activation were significantly affected by the presence of a tyrosine in the distal heme pocket; however, the stability of the reduced porphyrin and the proteins affinity for oxygen were unaltered. Recently, an atypical sGC from Drosophila, Gyc-88E, was shown to form a stable complex with oxygen. Sequence analysis of this protein identified two residues in the predicted heme pocket (tyrosine and glutamine) that may function to stabilize oxygen binding in the atypical cyclase. The introduction of these residues into the rat β1 distal heme pocket (Ile-145 → Tyr and Ile-149 → Gln) resulted in an sGC construct that oxidized via an intermediate with an absorbance maximum at 417 nm. This absorbance maximum is consistent with globin FeII-O2 complexes and is likely the first observation of a FeII-O2 complex in the full-length α1β1 protein. Additionally, these data suggest that atypical sGCs stabilize O2 binding by a hydrogen bonding network involving tyrosine and glutamine.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric oxide (NO) remains the only firmly established endogenous modulator of soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) activity, but physiological, structural, and biochemical evidence now suggests that in vivo regulation of sGC involves direct interaction with other factors. We searched for such endogenous modulators in human umbilical vein endothelial cells and COS-7 cells. The cytosolic fraction of both cell types stimulated the activity of semipurified sGC severalfold in the absence or presence of a saturating concentration of NO. The cytosolic factor was sensitive to proteinase K and destroyed by boiling, suggesting that it contains a protein component. Size exclusion chromatography revealed peaks of activity between 40 and 70 kDa. The sGC-activating effect was further purified by ion exchange chromatography. In the presence of the benzylindazole YC-1 or NO, the partially purified factor synergistically activated sGC, suggesting that this factor had a mode of activation different from that of YC-1 or NO. Four candidate activators were identified from the final purification step by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry analysis. Using an sGC affinity matrix, one of them, the molecular chaperone Hsp70, was shown to directly interact with sGC. This interaction was further confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation in lung tissues and by co-localization in smooth muscle cells. sGC and Hsp70 co-localized at the plasma membrane, supporting the idea that sGC can be translocated to the membrane. Hsp70 co-purifies with the sGC-activating effect, and immunodepletion of Hsp70 from COS-7 cytosol coincided with a marked attenuation of the sGC-activating effect, yet the effect was not rescued by the addition of pure Hsp70. Thus, Hsp70 is a novel sGC-interacting protein that is responsible for the sGC-activating effect, probably in association with other factors or after covalent modification.  相似文献   

9.
The nitric oxide (NO)/cGMP pathway plays a key role in the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone during the transition from the fetal to the neonatal circulation, and it is impaired in pathophysiological conditions such as pulmonary hypertension. In the present study, we have analyzed the changes in the function and expression of soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) in pulmonary arteries during early postnatal maturation in isolated third-branch pulmonary arteries from newborn (3-18 h of age) and 2-wk-old piglets. The expression of sGC beta(1)-subunit in pulmonary arteries increased with postnatal age both at the level of mRNA and protein. The catalytic region of porcine sGC beta(1) was sequenced, showing a 92% homology with the human sequence. This age-dependent increase in sGC expression correlated with increased vasorelaxant responses to the physiological sGC activator NO and to the exogenous sGC activator YC-1, but not to the membrane-permeable cGMP analog 8-bromoguanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate. In conclusion, an increased expression of sGC in pulmonary conduit arteries from 2-wk-old compared with newborn piglets explains, at least partly, the age-dependent increase in the vasorelaxant response of NO and other activators of sGC.  相似文献   

10.
Exposure of rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (rPASMC) to cytokines leads to nitric oxide (NO) production by NO synthase 2 (NOS2). NO stimulates cGMP synthesis by soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), a heterodimer composed of alpha(1)- and beta(1)-subunits. Prolonged exposure of rPASMC to NO decreases sGC subunit mRNA and protein levels. The objective of this study was to determine whether levels of NO produced endogenously by NOS2 are sufficient to decrease sGC expression in rPASMC. Interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) increased NOS2 mRNA levels and decreased sGC subunit mRNA levels. Exposure of rPASMC to IL-1beta and TNF-alpha for 24 h decreased sGC subunit protein levels and NO-stimulated sGC enzyme activity. L-N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)lysine (NOS2 inhibitor) or 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo-[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (sGC inhibitor) partially prevented the cytokine-mediated decrease in sGC subunit mRNA levels. However, cytokines also decreased sGC subunit mRNA levels in PASMC derived from NOS2-deficient mice. These results demonstrate that levels of NO and cGMP produced in cytokine-exposed PASMC are sufficient to decrease sGC subunit mRNA levels. In addition, cytokines can decrease sGC subunit mRNA levels via NO-independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Soluble guanylyl/guanylate cyclase (sGC), the primary biological receptor for nitric oxide, is required for proper development and health in all animals. We have expressed heterodimeric full-length and N-terminal fragments of Manduca sexta sGC in Escherichia coli, the first time this has been accomplished for any sGC, and have performed the first functional analyses of an insect sGC. Manduca sGC behaves much like its mammalian counterparts, displaying a 170-fold stimulation by NO and sensitivity to compound YC-1. YC-1 reduces the NO and CO off-rates for the approximately 100-kDa N-terminal heterodimeric fragment and increases the CO affinity by approximately 50-fold to 1.7 microm. Binding of NO leads to a transient six-coordinate intermediate, followed by release of the proximal histidine to yield a five-coordinate nitrosyl complex (k(6-5) = 12.8 s(-1)). The conversion rate is insensitive to nucleotides, YC-1, and changes in NO concentration up to approximately 30 microm. NO release is biphasic in the absence of YC-1 (k(off1) = 0.10 s(-1) and k(off2) = 0.0015 s(-1)); binding of YC-1 eliminates the fast phase but has little effect on the slower phase. Our data are consistent with a model for allosteric activation in which sGC undergoes a simple switch between two conformations, with an open or a closed heme pocket, integrating the influence of numerous effectors to give the final catalytic rate. Importantly, YC-1 binding occurs in the N-terminal two-thirds of the protein. Homology modeling and mutagenesis experiments suggest the presence of an H-NOX domain in the alpha subunit with importance for heme binding.  相似文献   

12.
sGC (soluble guanylate cyclase) is the main mediator of NO signalling. Biochemical and physiological studies suggest that, besides NO, in vivo regulation of sGC involves direct interaction with other proteins. Using yeast two-hybrid screening, we identified that the multidomain LGN (Leu-Gly-Asn repeat-enriched protein) interacts with both α1 and β1 sGC subunits. LGN and sGC co-localized in the cell cytoplasm, and the LGN-sGC complex was co-immunoprecipitated from cells expressing both proteins and from native tissues. Their interaction requires the N-terminal tetratricopeptide repeats of LGN, but does not require the N-terminal portions of α1 or β1 sGC subunits. Overexpression of LGN decreases the activity of cellular sGC, whereas knockdown of LGN mRNA and protein correlated with increased sGC activity. Although purified LGN interacts directly with purified sGC, the inhibitory effect in vitro is observed only after supplementation of cell lysate to the reaction. Although resting sGC and sGC activated by the stimulator BAY41-2272 have very similar LGN-IC50 values to the NO-stimulated sGC, they have a much higher Hill coefficient, suggesting co-operative binding with respect to LGN in the low-activated state of sGC. AGS3 (activator of G-protein signalling 3), the closest LGN homologue, also inhibits sGC. The interaction of sGC with these scaffolding proteins may expand the cross-talk between NO/cGMP signalling and other cellular pathways and tailor sGC function to specific tissues or signals.  相似文献   

13.
The use of exogenous nitric oxide (NO) has been shown to alter the regulation of other endothelially derived mediators of vascular tone, such as endothelin-1 (ET-1). However, the interaction between NO and ET-1 appears to be complex and remains incompletely understood. One of the major actions of NO is the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) with the subsequent generation of cGMP. Therefore, we undertook this study to test the hypothesis that NO regulates ET-1 production via the activation of the sGC/cGMP pathway. The results obtained indicated that the exposure of primary cultures of 4-wk-old ovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (4-wk PAECs) to the long-acting NO donor DETA NONOate induced both a dose- and time-dependent decrease in secreted ET-1. This decrease in ET-1 secretion occurred in the absence of changes in endothelin-converting enzyme-1 or sGC expression but in conjunction with a decrease in prepro-ET-1 mRNA. The changes in ET-1 release were inversely proportional to the cellular cGMP content. Furthermore, the NO-independent activator of sGC, YC-1, or treatment with a cGMP analog also produced significant decreases in ET-1 secretion. Conversely, pretreatment with the sGC inhibitor ODQ blocked the NO-induced decrease in ET-1. Therefore, we conclude that exposure of 4-wk PAECs to exogenous NO decreases secreted ET-1 resulting from the activation of sGC and increased cGMP generation.  相似文献   

14.
Nitric oxide (NO) and atrial natriuretic peptides (ANP) activate soluble (sGC) and particulate guanylate cyclase (pGC), respectively, and play important roles in the maintenance of cardiovascular homeostasis. However, little is known about potential interactions between these two cGMP-generating pathways. Here we demonstrate that sGC and pGC cooperatively regulate cGMP-mediated relaxation in human and murine vascular tissue. In human vessels, the potency of spermine-NONOate (SPER-NO) and ANP was increased after inhibition of endogenous NO synthesis and decreased by prior exposure to glyceryl trinitrate (GTN). Aortas from endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) knockout (KO) mice were more sensitive to ANP than tissues from wild-type (WT) animals. However, in aortas from WT mice, the potency of ANP was increased after pretreatment with NOS or sGC inhibitor. Vessels from eNOS KO animals were less sensitive to ANP after GTN pretreatment, an effect that was reversed in the presence of an sGC inhibitor. cGMP production in response to SPER-NO and ANP was significantly greater in vessels from eNOS KO animals compared with WT animals. This cooperative interaction between NO and ANP may have important implications for human pathophysiologies involving deficiency in either mediator and the clinical use of nitrovasodilators.  相似文献   

15.
Cyclic GMP (cGMP) and Ca(2+) regulate opposing mechanisms in (patho)physiological processes reflected in the reciprocal regulation of their intracellular concentrations. Although mechanisms by which cGMP regulates [Ca(2+)](i) have been described, those by which Ca(2+) regulates [cGMP](i) are less well understood. In the present study, Ca(2+) inhibited purified sGC activated by sodium nitroprusside (SNP), a precursor of nitric oxide (NO), employing Mg-GTP as substrate in a concentration-dependent fashion, but was without effect on basal enzyme activity. Ca(2+) inhibited sGC stimulated by protoporphyrin IX or YC-1 suggesting that inhibition was not NO-dependent. In contrast, Ca(2+) was without effect on sGC activated by SNP employing Mn-GTP as substrate, demonstrating that inhibition did not reflect displacement of heme from sGC. Ligand activation of sGC unmasked negative allosteric sites of high (K(i) similar 10(-7) M) and low (K(i) approximately 10(-5) M) affinity for Ca(2+) that mediated noncompetitive and uncompetitive inhibition, respectively. Free Mg(2+) in excess of substrate did not alter the concentration-response relationship of Ca(2+) inhibition at high affinity sites, but produced a rightward shift in that relationship at low affinity sites. Similarly, Ca(2+) inhibition at high affinity sites was noncompetitive, whereas inhibition at low affinity sites was competitive, with respect to free Mg(2+). Purified sGC specifically bound (45)Ca(2+) in the presence of a 1000-fold excess of Mg(2+) and in the absence of activating ligands. These data suggest that sGC is a constitutive Ca(2+) binding protein whose allosteric function is conditionally dependent upon ligand activation.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Electrical stimulation of sensory neurons that innervate receptors on the tailfan of crayfish evokes a reflex response of motor neurons that produce movements of the blades of the tailfan, the uropods. We analyzed the modulatory effects of nitric oxide (NO) on the spike frequency of the reflex response. Bath application of L-arginine and SNAP, which elevate endogenous and exogenous NO levels, increased the frequency of the evoked response, whereas the application of L-NAME and PTIO, which reduce NO levels, decreased the frequency of the response. To determine through what pathway and target NO exerted these effects we bath applied ODQ, an inhibitor of soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC), which decreased the frequency of response, and 8-br-cGMP, which increased the spike frequency of response. To provide further evidence that NO acts via sGC, we elevated NO levels with L-arginine while simultaneously inhibiting sGC with ODQ. This application reduced the response to control levels, indicating that NO in the terminal ganglion of crayfish acts via sGC to modulate cGMP levels, which in turn regulate the responses of the uropod motor neurons.  相似文献   

18.
Although inhaled NO (iNO) therapy is often effective in treating infants with persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN), up to 40% of patients fail to respond, which may be partly due to abnormal expression and function of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). To determine whether altered sGC expression or activity due to oxidized sGC contributes to high pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and poor NO responsiveness, we studied the effects of cinaciguat (BAY 58-2667), an sGC activator, on pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC) from normal fetal sheep and sheep exposed to chronic intrauterine pulmonary hypertension (i.e., PPHN). We found increased sGC α(1)- and β(1)-subunit protein expression but lower basal cGMP levels in PPHN PASMC compared with normal PASMC. To determine the effects of cinaciguat and NO after sGC oxidation in vitro, we measured cGMP production by normal and PPHN PASMC treated with cinaciguat and the NO donor, sodium nitroprusside (SNP), before and after exposure to 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ, an sGC oxidizer), hyperoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen 0.50), or hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)). After treatment with ODQ, SNP-induced cGMP generation was markedly reduced but the effects of cinaciguat were increased by 14- and 64-fold in PPHN fetal PASMC, respectively (P < 0.01 vs. controls). Hyperoxia or H(2)O(2) enhanced cGMP production by cinaciguat but not SNP in PASMC. To determine the hemodynamic effects of cinaciguat in vivo, we compared serial responses to cinaciguat and ACh in fetal lambs after ductus arteriosus ligation. In contrast with the impaired vasodilator response to ACh, cinaciguat-induced pulmonary vasodilation was significantly increased. After birth, cinaciguat caused a significantly greater fall in PVR than either 100% oxygen, iNO, or ACh. We conclude that cinaciguat causes more potent pulmonary vasodilation than iNO in experimental PPHN. We speculate that increased NO-insensitive sGC may contribute to the pathogenesis of PPHN, and cinaciguat may provide a novel treatment of severe pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a heterodimeric hemoprotein that catalyzes the conversion of GTP to cGMP. Upon binding NO to its heme cofactor, purified sGC was activated 300-fold. sGC was only activated 67-fold by nitroglycerin (GTN) and Cys; and in the absence of Cys, GTN did not activate sGC. Electronic absorption spectroscopy studies showed that upon NO binding, the Soret of ferrous sGC shifted from 431 to 399 nm. The data also revealed that activation of sGC by GTN/Cys was not via the expected ferrous heme-NO species as indicated by the absence of the 399 nm heme Soret. Furthermore, EPR studies of the reaction of GTN/Cys with sGC confirmed that no ferrous heme-NO species was formed but that there was heme oxidation. Potassium ferricyanide is known to oxidize ferrous sGC to the ferric oxidation state. Spectroscopic and activity data for the reactions of sGC with GTN alone or with K(3)Fe(CN)(6) were indistinguishable. These data suggest the following: 1) GTN/Cys do not activate sGC via GTN biotransformation to NO in vitro, and 2) in the absence of added thiol, GTN oxidizes sGC.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号