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1.
Nitric oxide is generated in vivo by nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) during the conversion of L-Arg to citrulline. Using a variety of biological systems and approaches emerging evidence has been accumulated for the occurrence of a mitochondrial NOS (mtNOS), identified as the alpha isoform of neuronal or NOS-1. Under physiological conditions, the production of nitric oxide by mitochondria has an important implication for the maintenance of the cellular metabolism, i.e. modulates the oxygen consumption of the organelles through the competitive (with oxygen) and reversible inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase. The transient inhibition suits the continuously changing energy and oxygen requirements of the tissue; it is a short-term regulation with profound pathophysiological consequences. This review describes the identification of mtNOS and the role of posttranslational modifications on mtNOS' activity and regulation.  相似文献   

2.
The present study shows that rat liver and brain mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) are functionally associated with mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I. When complex I is activated, mtNOS exerts high activity and generates nitric oxide, whereas inactivation of complex I leads mtNOS to abandon its NOS activity. Functional association of mtNOS with complex I is potentially important in regulating mtNOS activity and mitochondrial functions.  相似文献   

3.
Nitric oxide is a potent modulator of mitochondrial respiration, ATP synthesis, and KATP channel activity. Recent studies show the presence of a potentionally new isoform of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzyme in mitochondria, although doubts have emerged regarding the physiological relevance of mitochondrial NOS (mtNOS). The aim of the present study were to: (i) examine the existence and distribution of mtNOS in mouse tissues using three independent methods, (ii) characterize the cross-reaction of mtNOS with antibodies against the known isoforms of NOS, and (iii) investigate the effect of hypoxia on mtNOS activity. Nitric oxide synthase activity was measured in isolated brain and liver mitochondria using the arginine to citrulline conversion assay. Mitochondrial NOS activity in the brain was significantly higher than in the liver. The calmodulin inhibitor calmidazolium completely inhibited mtNOS activity. In animals previously subjected to hypoxia, mtNOS activity was significantly higher than in the normoxic controls. Antibodies against the endothelial (eNOS), but not the neuronal or inducible isoform of NOS, showed positive immunoblotting. Immunogold labeling of eNOS located the enzyme in the matrix and the inner membrane using electron microscopy. We conclude that mtNOS is a constitutively active eNOS-like isoform and is involved in altered mitochondrial regulation during hypoxia.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Different mitochondrial nitric-oxide synthase (mtNOS) isoforms have been described in rat and mouse tissues, such as liver, thymus, skeletal muscle, and more recently, heart and brain. The modulation of these variants by thyroid status, hypoxia, or gene deficiency opens a broad spectrum of mtNOS-dependent tissue-specific functions. In this study, a new NOS variant is described in rat brain with an M(r) of 144 kDa and mainly localized in the inner mitochondrial membrane. During rat brain maturation, the expression and activity of mtNOS were maximal at the late embryonic stages and early postnatal days followed by a decreased expression in the adult stage (100 +/- 9 versus 19 +/- 2 pmol of [(3)H]citrulline/min/mg of protein, respectively). This temporal pattern was opposite to that of the cytosolic 157-kDa nNOS protein. Mitochondrial redox changes followed the variations in mtNOS activity: mtNOS-dependent production of hydrogen peroxide was maximal in newborns and decreased markedly in the adult stage, thus reflecting the production and utilization of mitochondrial matrix nitric oxide. Moreover, the activity of brain Mn-superoxide dismutase followed a developmental pattern similar to that of mtNOS. Cerebellar granular cells isolated from newborn rats and with high mtNOS activity exhibited maximal proliferation rates, which were decreased by modifying the levels of either hydrogen peroxide or nitric oxide. Altogether, these findings support the notion that a coordinated modulation of mtNOS and Mn-superoxide dismutase contributes to establish the rat brain redox status and participate in the normal physiology of brain development.  相似文献   

6.
An apparent discrepancy arises about the role of calcium on the rates of oxygen consumption by mitochondria: mitochondrial calcium increases the rate of oxygen consumption because of the activation of calcium-activated dehydrogenases, and by activating mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS), decreases the rates of oxygen consumption because nitric oxide is a competitive inhibitor of cytochrome oxidase. To this end, the rates of oxygen consumption and nitric oxide production were followed in isolated rat liver mitochondria in the presence of either L-Arg (to sustain a mtNOS activity) or N(G)-monomethyl-L-Arg (NMMA, a competitive inhibitor of mtNOS) under State 3 conditions. In the presence of NMMA, the rates of State 3 oxygen consumption exhibited a K(0.5) of 0.16 microM intramitochondrial free calcium, agreeing with those required for the activation of the Krebs cycle. By plotting the difference between the rates of oxygen consumption in State 3 with L-Arg and with NMMA at various calcium concentrations, a K(0.5) of 1.2 microM intramitochondrial free calcium was obtained, similar to the K(0.5) (0.9 microM) of the dependence of the rate of nitric oxide production on calcium concentrations. The activation of dehydrogenases, followed by the activation of mtNOS, would lead to the modulation of the Krebs cycle activity by the modulation of nitric oxide on the respiratory rates. This would ensue in changes in the NADH/NAD and ATP/ADP ratios, which would influence the rate of the cycle and the oxygen diffusion.  相似文献   

7.
The biochemistry of the mitochondrial production of nitric oxide is reviewed to gain insight into the basic role of this radical in mitochondrial and cellular oxidative metabolism. The mitochondrial production of nitric oxide is catalyzed by a nitric-oxide synthase (mtNOS). This enzyme has the same cofactor and substrate requirements as other constitutive nitric-oxide synthases. Its occurrence was demonstrated in various mitochondrial preparations from different organs and species using diverse approaches (oxidation of oxymyoglobin, electron paramagnetic resonance in conjunction with spin trap, radiolabeled L-arginine, immunohistochemistry, nitric-oxide electrode). MtNOS has been identified as the alpha isoform of nNOS, acylated at a Thr or Ser residue, and phosphorylated at the C-terminal end. Endogenous nitric oxide reversibly inhibits oxygen consumption and ATP synthesis by competitive inhibition of cytochrome oxidase. Nitric oxide is the first molecule that fulfills the requirement for a cytochrome oxidase activity modulator: it is a competitive inhibitor, produced endogenously at a fair rate near the target site, at concentrations high enough to exhibit an inhibitory effect on cytochrome oxidase. The role of the mitochondrial nitric oxide production is discussed in terms of the physiological (modulating oxygen gradients into tissues) and pathological (abrogation of oxygen gradient modification, apoptosis, protein nitrative/oxidative stress) implications.  相似文献   

8.
We measured the contribution of mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) and respiratory chain enzymes to reactive nitrogen species (RNS) production. Diaminofluorescein (DAF) was applied for the assessment of RNS production in isolated mouse brain, heart and liver mitochondria and also in a cultured neuroblastoma cell line by confocal microscopy and flow cytometry. Mitochondria produced RNS, which was inhibited by catalysts of peroxynitrite decomposition but not by nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitors. Disrupting the organelles or withdrawing respiratory substrates markedly reduced RNS production. Inhibition of complex I abolished the DAF signal, which was restored by complex II substrates. Inhibition of the respiratory complexes downstream from the ubiquinone/ubiquinol cycle or dissipating the proton gradient had no effect on DAF fluorescence. We conclude that mitochondria from brain, heart and liver are capable of significant RNS production via the respiratory chain rather than through an arginine-dependent mtNOS.  相似文献   

9.
Male rats exposed for 21 days to high altitude (4,340 m) responded with arrest of weight gain and increased hematocrit and testosterone levels. High altitude significantly (58%) increased heart mitochondrial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (mtNOS) activity, whereas heart cytosolic endothelial NOS (eNOS) and liver mtNOS were not affected. Western blot analysis found heart mitochondria reacting only with anti-inducible NOS (iNOS) antibodies, whereas the postmitochondrial fraction reacted with anti-iNOS and anti-eNOS antibodies. In vitro-measured NOS activities allowed the estimation of cardiomyocyte capacity for NO production, a value that increased from 57% (sea level) to 79 nmol NO.min(-1).g heart(-1) (4,340 m). The contribution of mtNOS to total cell NO production increased from 62% (sea level) to 71% (4340 m). Heart mtNOS activity showed a linear relationship with hematocrit and a biphasic quadratic association with estradiol and testosterone. Multivariate analysis showed that exposure to high altitude linearly associates with hematocrit and heart mtNOS activity, and that testosterone-to-estradiol ratio and heart weight were not linearly associated with mtNOS activity. We conclude that high altitude triggers a physiological adaptive response that upregulates heart mtNOS activity and is associated in an opposed manner with the serum levels of testosterone and estradiol.  相似文献   

10.
Nitric oxide (nitrogen monoxide, NO) exerts a wide profile of its biological activities via regulation of respiration and respiration-dependent functions. The presence of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in mitochondria (mtNOS) was recently reported by us (Ghafourifar and Richter, FEBS Lett. 418, 291-296, 1997) and others (Giulivi et al., J. Biol. Chem. 273, 11038-11043, 1998). Here we report that NO, provided by an NO donor as well as by mtNOS stimulation, regulates mitochondrial matrix pH, transmembrane potential and Ca2+ buffering capacity. Exogenously-added NO causes a dose-dependent matrix acidification. Also mtNOS stimulation, induced by loading mitochondria with Ca2+, causes mitochondrial matrix acidification and a drop in mitochondrial transmembrane potential. Inhibition of mtNOS's basal activity causes mitochondrial matrix alkalinization and provides a resistance to the sudden drop of mitochondrial transmembrane potential induced by mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. We conclude that mtNOS plays a critical role in regulating mitochondrial delta(pH).  相似文献   

11.
Oxygen dependence of mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase activity   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The effect of O(2) concentration on mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) activity and on O(2)(-) production was determined in rat liver, brain, and kidney submitochondrial membranes. The K(mO(2)) for mtNOS were 40, 73, and 37 microM O(2) and the V(max) were 0.51, 0.49, and 0.42 nmol NO/minmg protein for liver, brain, and kidney mitochondria, respectively. The rates of O(2)(-) production, 0.5-12.8 nmol O(2)(-)/minmg protein, depended on O(2) concentration up to 1.1mM O(2). Intramitochondrial NO, O(2)(-), and ONOO(-) steady-state concentrations were calculated for the physiological level of 20 microM O(2); they were 20-39 nM NO, 0.17-0.33 pM O(2)(-), and 0.6-2.2 nM ONOO(-) for the three organs. These levels establish O(2)/NO ratios of 513-1000 that correspond to physiological inhibitions of cytochrome oxidase by intramitochondrial NO of 16-25%. The production of NO by mtNOS appears as a regulatory process that modulates mitochondrial oxygen uptake and cellular energy production.  相似文献   

12.
The existence of mitochondrial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (mtNOS) has been controversial since it was first reported in 1995. We have addressed this issue by making direct microsensor measurements of NO production in the mitochondria isolated from mouse hearts. Mitochondrial NO production was stimulated by Ca2+ and inhibited by blocking electrogenic Ca2+ uptake or by using NOS antagonists. Cardiac mtNOS was identified as the neuronal isoform by the absence of NO production in the mitochondria of mice lacking the neuronal but not the endothelial or inducible isoforms. In cardiomyocytes from dystrophin-deficient (mdx) mice, elevated intracellular Ca2+, increased mitochondrial NO production, slower oxidative phosphorylation, and decreased ATP production were detected. Inhibition of mtNOS increased contractility in mdx but not in wild-type cardiomyocytes, indicating that mtNOS may protect the cells from overcontracting. mtNOS was also implicated in radiation-induced cell damage. In irradiated rat/mouse urinary bladders, we have evidence that mitochondrially produced NO damages the urothelial "umbrella" cells that line the bladder lumen. This damage disrupts the permeability barrier thereby creating the potential to develop radiation cystitis. RT-PCR and Southern blot analyses indicate that mtNOS is restricted to the umbrella cells, which scanning electron micrographs show are selectively damaged by radiation. Simultaneous microsensor measurements demonstrate that radiation increases NO and peroxynitrite (ONOO-) production in these cells, which can be prevented by transfection with manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) or instillation of NOS antagonists during irradiation or irradiation of bladders devoid of mtNOS. These studies demonstrate that mtNOS is in the cardiomyocytes and urothelial cells, that it is derived from the neuronal isoform, and that it can be either protective or detrimental.  相似文献   

13.
Mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase is not eNOS, nNOS or iNOS   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Recent studies indicated that there is a distinct mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) enzyme, which may be identical to the other known NOS isoforms. We investigated the possible involvement of the endothelial, the neuronal, and the inducible NOS isoforms (eNOS, nNOS, iNOS, respectively) in mitochondrial NO production. Mouse liver mitochondria were prepared by Percoll gradient purification from wild-type and NOS knockout animals. NOS activity was measured by the arginine conversion assay, NO production of live mitochondria was visualized by the fluorescent probe DAF-FM with confocal microscopy and measured with flow cytometry. Western blotting or immunoprecipitation was performed with 12 different anti-NOS antibodies. Mitochondrial NOS was purified by arginine, 2,5 ADP and calmodulin affinity columns. We observed NO production and NOS activity in mitochondria, which was not attenuated by classic NOS inhibitors. We also detected low amounts of eNOS protein in the mitochondria, however, NO production and NOS activity were intact in eNOS knockout animals. Neither nNOS nor iNOS were present in the mitochondria. Furthermore, we could not find mitochondrial targeting signals in the sequences of either NOS proteins. Taken together, the presented data do not support the hypothesis that any of the known NOS enzymes are present in the mitochondria in physiologically relevant levels.  相似文献   

14.
Mouse brain mitochondria have a nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) of 147 kDa that reacts with anti-nNOS antibodies and that shows an enzymatic activity of 0.31-0.48 nmol NO/min mg protein. Addition of chlorpromazine to brain submitochondrial membranes inhibited mtNOS activity (IC50 = 2.0 +/- 0.1 microM). Brain mitochondria isolated from chlorpromazine-treated mice (10 mg/kg, i.p.) show a marked (48%) inhibition of mtNOS activity and a markedly increased state 3 respiration (40 and 29% with malate-glutamate and succinate as substrates, respectively). Respiration of mitochondria isolated from control mice was 16% decreased by arginine and 56% increased by NNA (Nomega-nitro-L-arginine) indicating a regulatory activity of mtNOS and NO on mitochondrial respiration. Similarly, mitochondrial H2O2 production was 55% decreased by NNA. The effect of NNA on mitochondrial respiration and H2O2 production was significantly lower in chlorpromazine-added mitochondria and absent in mitochondria isolated from chlorpromazine-treated mice. Results indicate that chlorpromazine inhibits brain mtNOS activity in vitro and can exert the same action in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
The possible existence of a mitochondrially localized nitric oxide (NO) synthase (mtNOS) is controversial. To clarify this, we studied the ability of intact mitochondria to generate NO and the effect of mitochondrial NO on respiration. Respiratory rates and oxygen kinetics (P(50) values) were determined by high-resolution respirometry in skeletal-muscle mitochondria from control mice and mice injected with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In the presence of the NOS substrate L-arginine, mitochondria from LPS-treated mice had lower respiration rates and higher P(50) values than control animals. These effects were prevented by the NOS inhibitor L-NMMA. Our results suggest that mitochondrially derived NO is generated by an LPS-inducible NOS protein other than iNOS and modulates oxygen consumption in mouse skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

16.
Lack of mitochondrial nitric oxide production in the mouse brain   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Based on our initial finding that the nitric oxide (NO) sensitive fluorochrome diaminofluorescein (DAF) was localized to mitochondria in cultured primary neurons, we investigated whether brain mitochondria produce NO through a mitochondrial NO synthase (mtNOS) enzyme. Isolated brain mitochondria were loaded with DAF and subjected to flow cytometry analysis. Neither the application of NOS inhibitors nor the genetic disruption of either NOS gene diminished the DAF-fluorescence. However, peroxynitrite scavengers reduced the mitochondrial DAF fluorescence, indicating that the DAF signal is not specific to NO. Chemiluminescence detection in the head space gas and a Clark-type NO-sensitive electrode in the solution failed to detect NO release in brain mitochondria. NOS activity in mitochondria was only 1% of the whole brain NOS activity level, which may be attributed to extramitochondrial contamination. Extensive immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation experiments failed to show the presence of endothelial, neuronal, or inducible NOS in mouse brain mitochondria using a variety of primary antibodies. Arginine, calmodulin or 2,5-ADP affinity purification protocols successfully concentrated eNOS and nNOS from full brain tissue but failed to show any signal in mitochondria. We conclude that mouse brain mitochondria do not contain NOS isoforms, nor do they produce NO through a NOS-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Summary.  In isolated rat heart mitochondria, L-arginine is oxidized by a nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) achieving maximal rates at 1 mM L-arginine. The NOS inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (NAME) inhibits the increase in NO production. Extramitochondrial free magnesium inhibited NOS production by 59% at 3.2 mM. The mitochondrial free Mg2+ concentration increased to different extents in the presence of L-arginine (29%), the NO donor (S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine) (105%) or the NOS inhibitors L-NAME (48%) or NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) (53%). Under hypoxic conditions, mtNOS activity was inhibited by Mg2+ by up to 50% after 30 min of incubation. Reoxygenation restored the activity of the mtNOS to pre-hypoxia levels. The results suggest that in heart mitochondria there is an interaction between Mg2+ levels and mtNOS activity which in turn is modified by hypoxia and reoxygenation. Received April 2, 2001 Accepted September 21, 2001  相似文献   

18.
Although nitric oxide (NO) is a known modulator of cell respiration in vascular endothelium, the presence of a mitochondria-specific nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) in these cells is still a controversial issue. We have used laser scanning confocal microscopy in combination with the NO-sensitive fluorescent dye DAF-2 to monitor changes in NO production by mitochondria of calf vascular endothelial (CPAE) cells. Cells were loaded with the membrane-permeant NO-sensitive dye 4,5-diaminofluorescein (DAF-2) diacetate and subsequently permeabilized with digitonin to remove cytosolic DAF-2 to allow measurements of NO production in mitochondria ([NO]mt). Stimulation of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake by exposure to different cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations (1, 2, and 5 µM) resulted in a dose-dependent increase of NO production by mitochondria. This increase of [NO]mt was sensitive to the NOS antagonist L-N5-(1-iminoethyl)ornithine and the calmodulin antagonist calmidazolium (R-24571), demonstrating the endogenous origin of NO synthesis and its calmodulin dependence. Collapsing the mitochondrial membrane potential with the protonophore FCCP or blocking the mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter with ruthenium red, as well as blocking the respiratory chain with antimycin A in combination with oligomycin, inhibited mitochondrial NO production. Addition of the NO donor spermine NONOate caused a profound increase in DAF-2 fluorescence that was not affected by either of these treatments. The mitochondrial origin of the DAF-2 signals was confirmed by colocalization with the mitochondrial marker MitoTracker Red and by the observation that disruption of caveolae (where cytoplasmic NOS is localized) formation with methyl--cyclodextrin did not prevent the increase of DAF-2 fluorescence. The activation of mitochondrial calcium uptake stimulates mtNOS phosphorylation (at Ser-1177) which was prevented by FCCP. The data demonstrate that stimulation of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake activates NO production in mitochondria of CPAE cells. This indicates the presence of a mitochondria-specific NOS that can provide a fast local modulatory effect of NO on cell respiration, membrane potential, and apoptosis. nitric oxide; nitric oxide synthase; calcium; endothelium; mitochondria  相似文献   

19.
The production of NO by heart mitochondria was 0.7-1.1 nmol NO/min.mg protein, an activity similar to the ones observed in mitochondrial membranes from other organs. Heart mtNOS seems to contribute with about 56% of the total cellular NO production. The immunological nature of the mtNOS isoform of cardiac tissue remains unclear; in our laboratory, heart mtNOS reacted with an anti-iNOS anti-body. Heart mtNOS expression and activity are regulated by physiological and pharmacological effectors. The state 4/state 3 transition regulates heart mtNOS activity and NO release in intact respiring mitochondria: NO production rates in state 3 were 40% lower than in state 4. Heart mtNOS expression was selectively regulated by O(2) availability in hypobaric conditions and the activity was 20-60% higher in hypoxic rats than in control animals, depending on age. In contrast, NADH-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome oxidase activities were not affected by hypoxia. The activity of rat heart mtNOS decreased 20% on aging from 12 to 72 weeks of age. On the pharmacological side, mitochondrial NO production was increased after enalapril treatment (the inhibitor of the angiotensin converting enzyme) with modification of heart mtNOS functional activity in the regulation of mitochondrial O(2) uptake and H(2)O(2) production. Thus, heart mtNOS is a highly regulated mitochondrial enzyme, which in turn, plays a regulatory role through mitochondrial NO steady state levels that modulate O(2) uptake and O(2)(-) and H(2)O(2) production rates. Nitric oxide and H(2)O(2) constitute signals for metabolic control that are involved in the regulation of cellular processes, such as proliferation and apoptosis.  相似文献   

20.
In autonomic-blocked rats treated with NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 7.5 mg/kg), heart rate increased 18% and mean arterial pressure increased 48%. Thyroidectomy, along with autonomic blockade, hampered the chronotropic response but did not modify the effect on blood pressure. After 150 min of autonomic blockade, the experimental end point, total nitric oxide (NO) production by heart NO synthases (NOS) decreased 61%: from 54 to 21 nmol NO.min-1.g heart-1. Mitochondrial NOS (mtNOS) and sarcoplasmic reticulum endothelial NOS activities decreased 74% and 52%, respectively. Mitochondria isolated from whole heart showed a well-coupled oxidative phosphorylation with high respiratory control and ADP-to-O ratios, decreased mtNOS activity (55-60%), and decreased mtNOS protein expression (70%). Immunohistochemistry with anti-inducible NOS antibody linked to gold particles localized mtNOS at the inner mitochondrial membranes. Histochemical right atrial NOS (NADPH-diaphorase) decreased 55% after heart denervation. The effects of autonomic denervation on the NO system were partially prevented by thyroidectomy performed simultaneously with autonomic blockade. Western blot analysis indicated a very rapid mtNOS protein turnover (half time=120 min) with a process of protein expression that was upregulated by thyroidectomy and a degradation process that was downregulated by the autonomic nervous system. The observations suggest that NO-mediated pathways contribute to pacemaker heart activity, likely through the NO steady-state levels in the right atrium and the whole heart.  相似文献   

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