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Surface Charges and Regulation of FMN to Heme Electron Transfer in Nitric-oxide Synthase
Authors:Jesús Tejero  Luciana Hannibal  Anthony Mustovich  Dennis J Stuehr
Institution:From the Department of Pathobiology, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio 44195
Abstract:The nitric-oxide synthases (NOS, EC 1.14.13.39) are modular enzymes containing attached flavoprotein and heme (NOSoxy) domains. To generate nitric oxide (NO), the NOS FMN subdomain must interact with the NOSoxy domain to deliver electrons to the heme for O2 activation during catalysis. The molecular basis and how the interaction is regulated is unclear. We explored the role of eight positively charged residues that create an electropositive patch on NOSoxy in enabling the electron transfer by incorporating mutations that neutralized or reversed their individual charges. Stopped-flow and steady-state experiments revealed that individual charges at Lys423, Lys620, and Lys660 were the most important in enabling heme reduction in nNOS. Charge reversal was more disruptive than neutralization in all cases, and the effects on heme reduction were not due to a weakening in the thermodynamic driving force for heme reduction. Mutant NO synthesis activities displayed a complex pattern that could be simulated by a global model for NOS catalysis. This analysis revealed that the mutations impact the NO synthesis activity only through their effects on heme reduction rates. We conclude that heme reduction and NO synthesis in nNOS is enabled by electrostatic interactions involving Lys423, Lys620, and Lys660, which form a triad of positive charges on the NOSoxy surface. A simulated docking study reveals how electrostatic interactions of this triad can enable an FMN-NOSoxy interaction that is productive for electron transfer.
Keywords:Enzyme Catalysis  Enzyme Mechanisms  Nitric Oxide  Nitric Oxide Synthase  Reductase
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