39 research outputs found

    Deletion of the autoregulatory insert modulates intraprotein electron transfer in rat neuronal nitric oxide synthase

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    AbstractComparative CO photolysis kinetics studies on wild-type and autoregulatory (AR) insert-deletion mutant of rat nNOS holoenzyme were conducted to directly investigate the role of the unique AR insert in the catalytically significant FMN–heme intraprotein electron transfer (IET). Although the amplitude of the IET kinetic traces was decreased two- to three-fold, the AR deletion did not change the rate constant for the calmodulin-controlled IET. This suggests that the rate-limiting conversion of the electron-accepting state to a new electron-donating (output) state does not involve interactions with the AR insert, but that AR may stabilize the output state once it is formed

    The Role of a Conserved Serine Residue within Hydrogen Bonding Distance of FAD in Redox Properties and the Modulation of Catalysis by Ca2+/Calmodulin of Constitutive Nitric-oxide Synthases

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    The crystal structure of the neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) NADPH/FAD binding domain indicated that Ser-1176 is within hydrogen bonding distance of Asp-1393 and the O4 atom of FAD and is also near the N5 atom of FAD (3.7Å). This serine residue is conserved in most of the ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase family of proteins and is important in electron transfer. In the present study, the homologous serines of both nNOS (Ser-1176) and endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) (Ser-942) were mutated to threonine and alanine. Both substitutions yielded proteins that exhibited decreased rates of electron transfer through the flavin domains, in the presence and absence of Ca2+/CaM, as measured by reduction of potassium ferricyanide and cytochrome c. Rapid kinetics measurements of flavin reduction of all the mutants also showed a decrease in the rate of flavin reduction, in the absence and presence of Ca2+/CaM, as compared with the wild type proteins. The serine to alanine substitution caused both nNOS and eNOS to synthesize NO more slowly; however, the threonine mutants gave equal or slightly higher rates of NO production compared with the wild type enzymes. The midpoint redox potential measurements of all the redox centers revealed that wild type and threonine mutants of both nNOS and eNOS are very similar. However, the redox potentials of the FMN/FMNH· couple for alanine substitutions of both nNOS and eNOS are \u3e100 mV higher than those of wild type proteins and are positive. These data presented here suggest that hydrogen bonding of the hydroxyl group of serine or threonine with the isoalloxazine ring of FAD and with the amino acids in its immediate milieu, particularly nNOS Asp-1393, affects the redox potentials of various flavin states, influencing the rate of electron transfer

    Location of Guanidino Nitrogen of l

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    Molecular Consequences and Rescue of Defect

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    This work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences [Grant GM081568]; the Robert A. Welch Foundation [Endowed Chair AQ-0012] (to B. S. S. M.); and the Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (Portugal) [Grant PTDC/SAU-GMG/71911/2006].Patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, exhibiting combined CYP17 and CYP21 deficiency, were shown by Arlt et al. (2004) to harbor a 541T -> G mutation in exon 5 of POR (encoding NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, CYPOR), which resulted in a Y181D substitution that obliterated electron transfer capacity. Using bacterial expression models, we examined catalytic and physical properties of the human CYPOR Y181D variant. As purified, Y181D lacked flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase (NCR) activity but retained normal flavin adenine dinucleotide binding and NADPH utilization. Titration of the purified protein with FMN restored 64% of wild-type (WT) NCR activity in Y181D with an activation constant of similar to 2 mu M. As determined by FMN fluorescence quenching, Y181D had K-d(FMN) = 7.3 mu M. Biplasmid coexpression of CYPOR and CYP1A2, at the physiological ratio of similar to 1:10 in the engineered MK_1A2_POR Escherichia coli strain, showed the compromised capacity of Y181D to support CYP1A2-catalyzed metabolism of the procarcinogens 2-aminoanthracene, 2-amino-3-methylimidazo(4,5-f)quinoline, and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone. Isolated MK1A2_POR membranes confirmed FMN stimulation of Y181D NCR activity with a 1.6 mu M activation constant. CYP1A2 ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase activity of the MK1A2_PORY181D membranes, undetectable in the absence of added FMN, increased to 37% of MK1A2_PORWT membranes with a 1.2 mu M FMN activation constant. Therefore, we conclude that compromised FMN binding is the specific molecular defect causing POR deficiency in patients with Y181D mutation and that this defect, in large part, can be overcome in vitro by FMN addition.publishersversionpublishe
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